Ontario Community Newspapers

Port Perry Star (1907-), 12 Mar 1936, p. 7

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\ : aL of . "Even during the Tittle rains the | SEER SLi a I men dues Jae » sudden floods from the skies.change| Magnesia. oo 2Y 'a great tonic. It will make you feel' the streams from mere trickles to PHILLIPS' === J|lj | young i pi by creating for you new raging torrents, which sweep away Mill 4 / " ores hah aud SHAE at BN ( bridges, make. fords impassable, |" g / : } ) Pr Ur ~~ 1 he undermine banks and drown . live. He of. agresea. Azan Harold F. Ritchie & Co. Lud A stock, Every water course and gully ; y to ™ becomes a boiling 'millrace. Small + eeks overflow and undrained, level pr ~. : "Tareas turn into swamps. "The Contester' vi The swamps and standing pools of : \ 3 / ws Rooms excellent breeding plac- A WEEKLY BULLETIN SERVICE "" es for malarial mosquitoes. Later, FOR: CONTESTANTS, ARTISTS AND AUTHORS ES during the big rains, the steaming, This Service consists of International Prise Contests, Markets for Car- socked earth and huanid atmospheres 'toons, 1ilustrations, Borders, Designs for Magazines, Advertising, make it easier for other diseases to Greeting Cards. and. Verses, Articles, Limericks, Poems, Blogans, and take hold, : : $ Storles, When the big rains arrive the 93,50 for 1 year, $1.50 for 8 months, $1.00 for 3 months, 50 for 1 month, natives stay indoors as much as ae and a sample sheet .10. + possible, Those who travel are fend a 3c. stamped, addressed envelope for other money making ideas. usually protected by huge' mats of Eo . : : plaited grass, which they wrap GIFF BAKER, 39 LEE AVENUE, TORONTO, CAN. around "their shoulders in the shape cada i d | + Cana's Exports To Great Britain | _-the little rains are downpours. ©. 682,840, as "boots in great gluey gobs and forms x= L 5 p ¥ RSENS Rk ig Riaaad Suis --. - es SV] Sr Pr a er Tr SEE rll ri AR ih on GA 4 ' Show Tnerease (Thirty P.C. Gain, -- Goods| Shipped to U.S. Also, Show | - Higher Value. OTTAWA -- Canada's exports to the United "Kingdom in January show an increase of more than 30 per cent. over. the corresponding month last year, according _to figures released by Minister of Trade and Commerce W. D. Euler.' Last month's exports totalled $21,- against $16,611,036 in January, 1934, making an increase of $5,071,804 or 30%% per cent, Exports to the United States also showed a satisfactory increase. In the past month they totalled $20,- 129,564, compared with $17,629,101 last year, an increase of $2,600,463 or almost 15 per cent. The minister merce regards these figures as an answer to critics of the reciprocal "trade pact with the United States. Contrary to their predictions that trade with the United Kingdom would be adversely effected by the trade agreement, Mr.. Euler pointed out, exports to the United Kingdom|- have increased at even a greater rate than those to the United States. "Our - exports to these two coun- "ries 'are about 80 per cent. of our ex- _portsyto all countries," said Mr. Eul- er, "and the importance of this large gain is -a' significant demonstration of the effectiveness of the trade pol- jcies of the present government. Our total exports in January were $53, 538,000 which was a 22 per cent. ad- vance over the exports of a year ago." ; : "This sharp advance in.our trade," said Mr, Euler, "is most encouraging also when it is remembered that our interior and lake- ports are closed down during = these severe .winter months." ; Nii Ethiopia's Rain No Mere Drizzle '(From a National Geographic & Bulletin, Washington) {Rainy days are beginning in Ethi- 'opia, and they're bringing cheer to Haile Selassie's soldiers. Cloudy skies 'mean the "little rains" are on the 'way, hampering, Italian military movements with entanglements of - plain, old-fashioned mud, bombard- merits of hailstones and barrages of water that make raging torrents out of dry river beds and insignificant streams, "Mud and rain always have been the bane of armies, but mud and rain in Ethiopia cause more difficulty in travelling, perhaps, than almost anywhere else. In Ethiopia it is literally_true that "it never rains but it pours". Even "The longer it rains the deeper becomes the mud---mud that sticks to men's quagmires in which pack animals sink nelplessly up to their bellies. Hard-surfaced highways are still practically noa-existent in Ethiopia. The little rains, or karaya, now on the way, are less hampering to travel than the big rains, or dofe, which halt practically" "all traffic (except the railroad) in Ethiopia between June and September. During the little rains there is a hard shower during part of almost every day, but afterward a brilliant sun dispels the clouds and the air becomes dry until the next storm. The little rains begin in earnest in February and last until: April or May. : Records at Addis Ababa show that the average rainfall of 20 years jumps from half an inch in January : to 1.89 inches in February, 2.76 in March, 8.42 in April and 2.98 in May. (Maximum raiifall for this 20-year period is 12.08 inches in. August, during the big rains.) of trade and com- '. Twelve Toronto I WAKE UP YOUR LIVER BILE-- And You'll Jump Out of Bed in the ~~ Morning Rarin' to Go vel : Jug flver should ur outdwo into you 4 Is daily, If this bile Rt faving Fag ay food deesn't digest, t EE td Td ER [ . Youget cons " Bolaona go. into the body, i . feel sour. the world looks punk, A mere bowel movement doesn'talways get ot the cause. You need something that works on the liver as well, It takes those old Carter's Little Liver Pills to get these two of bile flowing freely and make yoa les] 'up and up", Harmless and gentle, t et hile be ! Sow freely, They the wory calomel but have no calomel or mercury them. Ask for Carter's Little Liver Pils by mame! Stubbornly. réfuse anything Crop Hit By Poison Plant Honey EDMONTON.--Vetch; a poisonous plant that thrives in Southeastern Alberta, was responsible for a 400,- 000 pound slump in the province's honey production last year. Annual report of the Department of Agri- culture said field bee losses from pollen obtained from veteh ranged from 50 to 90 per cent. The honey yield was placed at 1,100,000 pounds. * v) ""If the Japanese navy is called upon to fight the combined power of America and Great Britain I am con- fident we will win, even if the ratio 11928-1932 period. confyol programs the total area of | yy, had corn, wheat and cotton harvested (ng youth part of Sweden. was about 30,000,000 acres below Value of Field Crops In United States nL ' The aggregate value of the field crops from farms in the United | States in 1935 was $5,118,444,000' '| exceeding by $389,000,000 or seven per cent. the value of the crops in 1934. The harvested area of 44. of the principal crops is estimated at 827,661,000 acres, an increase of 41,000,008 acres or more than 14 per cent. over. the greatly reduced' acréage in 1934, but & decrease of: 28,0000,00 or eight per cent., from the acreage harvested during the Due in part. to the 1928 to 1932 average. The acreage of oats and barley, the im- portant feed grains other than corn, was just about average in 1935, The to rust and the slightly below aver- age yields of corn, "sorghum: and potatoes were more than offset by the heavy yields of hay, and. the slightly above average yields of cot- ten, annual legumes, rice and tobac- co," . ' The total production of corn for 1935 has been placed at 2,202,852,- 000 bushels; wheat 608,199,000 bushels; barley 292,249,000 bushels. - Prices received for the 1935 crops are about 13 per cent. below those is 10 to 1."--Admiral Takahashi. © . WE received for the 1934 crops. RE sna -- : Here © There E ver Y wh er (4 2 4A brothey to every other Scout, without regard to race or creed A{ ( 0 ( >a Scouts, In smart Rover uniform, acted as uslrers at the opening of the Ontario Legisla- ture, King's Scouts or. Rovers have performed this function at Provincial Parliament openings for a number of years, , So Reports presented at the 25th An. nual Meeting of the Provincial Boy Scouts Association at London, Febru- ary 16th, showed a total membership at the end of 1935 of 30,045. This was an increase of 4,070. The total com- prises 11,977 Wolf Cubs, 14,836 Scouts 1,046 Raver (Senior) Scouts, 183 Sea Scouts, 214 Lone Scouts and 2,293 lea- ders. During last summer 231 Boy 'Scout camps were held, and attended by a total of 6,316 boys. Not one serious accident or case -of serious illness was reported. Now Science Explains Why So Many People : Past 40 Feel That They're Slipping Losing Their Grip" onThings Many people 'round 40 think they're "growing old." They feel tired a lot ..« "weak." Have headaches, dizzi- ness, stomach upsels. Well, scientists say the cause of all this, in a great many cases, is simply an acid condition of the stomach. Nothing more... .. . All you have to do is to neutralize the excess stomach acidity. When you lave. one of these acid stomach upsets, take Phillips' Milk . of Magnesia after meals and before going to bed. 'Thal's alll Try this. Soon: you'll feel like another person! 'Take #¢ither the familiar liquid 'PHILLIPS' " or the convenient. new Phillips' Milk of Magnesia Tablets. Made in Canada, ALSO IN TABLET FORM: [SS Phillips" Milk of Magnesia Tab- lets are now on sale at all drug stores everywhere, Each tiny tab- Tet is the equivalent of The total number of Boy Scouts iu the world at the end of 1933, as re- ported .by the International Scout Bu. reau at London, was 2,505,963. This was an increase over 1934 of 206,874. England has 366,763 -Scouts, Scotland 66,674, Wales 15,668, Ulster 7,194, and Irish Free State, 2,124, In tho British Empire an increase of 34,013 Scouts brought the total to 939,203. : A. Boy Scout Jamboree_similar to those held in various parts of Canada last summer, brought 3,000* Scouts from all parts of South Africa greet Lord Batlen:Powell at East Lon. don, Cape Colony. Boys were present from the €ape, Natal, Orange Free State, Transvaal, Southern-and Nor. thern Rhodesia, Nyasaland, and other sections of southern Africa. A new form of public service for Rover Scouts was found by the Rover Crews of Malden and. Coombe Urban England, when an epidemic of the measles threatened. Rovers who had had the malady contributed their blood for an innoculation campaign. A cross-country ski hike during February's sub-zero .blizzard weather from Parry Sound fo Ottawa, through Algonquin Park, with a brief rail break Madawaska to Renfrew, was an achievement- of Assistant Scoutmaster Tom Marwood of the 1st Parry Sound Scout Troop. Notwithstanding heavy, powdery snow, and unbroken trails, a daily average of 30 miles was main- tained, with a high figure of 36 for one day. . BN OLD PEOPLE FEEL YOUNG. Just because more years than you care to count. have fled by on your life's. calendar is no reason for feeling old. Age, after all, isn't a matter of cars. It is 2, matter of health. Stay vigorous and you stay young. But how, you ask, Do it the way thousands of people of advancing Yosss do. Take Wincarnis regularly. Vincarnis is a delicious wine, free from drugs, that brings you all the valuable elements of grapes combined with the highest grade beef and guaranteed malt extract. Its invigor- ating effect is almost. magical--yet perfectly natural, : : hese valuable elements in Wincarnis give your ageing system exactly the stimulating nourishment it requires. They soothe your nerves, enrich your blood, and flood your whole body. _with almost youthful buoyancy and vigour. : : ' low yield of spring wheat was due! to], rere ey Ee LESSONS FROM SWEDEN (By Prof. S. B. McCready) Sa EE a RA Sh Ch a Editor's. Note: This is the seventh of a series of "articles which were published récently in the Harriston "Review." While written specially for the "Review" and addressed to residents of M nto Township particu- larly, we believe they will be found interesting to many of the, readers of "this papes bécause the problems of the farm folk of Minty Township are the same.p yhlems that' confront rural people throughout the province. three interesting days in The Int. ernatignal Folk High Sclrool which J attended in Denmark® was€locuted al Lllsinore famous as the site of Kron- berg Castle, the scene of Shake. |speare's play of Hamlet, A half hour sail on the ferry across the 'Scund, lands one in Sweden. Mr, Pet. er Manniche, Principal of the Schoo! | arvanged three excursions sg that his students assembled from all pavts of ithe world might get a.glimpse of the Swedish life and culture. Later Mrs. McCready joined a party of English and Scottish teachers on a five-day' tour to _Gotenborg and Stdekholm while T toured Denmark further to visit Folk High Schools. The first excursion was ty see a country school and church in a Swe. dish rural community. We went by train on Sunday to the nearby vail- way station and from thera quite a number of the ¢lass were conveyed in farmers' wagons "or automobiles, Some of us walked through the love. Iy countryside. The students were di- vided up into small parties and en. tertained to afternoon tea at farm homes. There was an interpreter for each group. " It was my gqpod foitune to be in the party entertained in the home of the head teacher of the, school; Mr. Oscar Bokelund. There was a fine residence alongside the school for his use but he did not occupy it. He had his home on a nearby 20.acre farm. Ilis widow. ed sister occupied his part of the teacher's residence." He was a man of about 45 years of age and he had J tanght in the school over As in Denmark, the Swedish country | schools are state schools and the tea- Fars are as well paid as teachers in the towns. We had fea in the garden at his home and afterwards Inspect- ed his stables and farm. The assist- ant teacher had her quarters In a se- parated part of the school teacher's residence, a Viterwards: all the groups assembl. od at the school for supper. The pas- tor of the Lutheran Church adjoining "*he school, and ten or twelve repre- sentative farmers of the district join- ed with us and made us feel very wel. come. Both the chureh and the school were attractive and in splendid re- pair. Like all the cemeteries which 1 saw in Denmark, th, cemetery at this rural centre was faultlessly kept. One has a feeling in such visits that theif country is an old-fashioned country. Not like Minto, only sixty years or so from the bush. The teacher's res- idence was quite new however and the two.roomed school up to date. Swed. en has better country schools than Ontario. } The second excursion into Sweden was an all day trip by motor bus up into the hills to a famous tourist re- sort. Here we Yad a never-to-be for- gotten Swedish dinner. On the way to the resort we paid a short visit to an old "Swedish--castlo -occupied--by the same family sitic 1750. There was a 9000.acre estate, most of it under forest management by five trained foresters. The young owner of 745, tate was a very fine iin mod.' ern. He spoke excelient English." On the return trip we spent an in- teresting hour Inspecting an up-to- date paper hox and printing establish- ment in a-country village about the size ot Clifford. There were about 70 employecs. Most of fhe homes in (he. village appeared to have consider able land attached to them.'T do not know how far industry is decentraliz- ed info country villages in Sweden, but fancy there is more of it than we have in Ontario. Hydro.vleetrie pow. cr is cheap and available everywhere in Sweddan. Many thigk we need a back-to-the-village _pglidy In Ontario. "The third Swedish excursion was perhaps of most interest and profit, Tt was a visit to the famous Svalof Plant Breeding Institution, On this occasion our party was a small one. It consisted of a teacher from Eng: land; another from Virginia, U.S., and myself. The Svalof Institute is per- haps the most famous experimental farm for crop improvement in the world. Students from all countries 20 years. LE Li hl POULTRY RAISERS Check ROUP (Bronchial Flu) With a Few Drops of « of glorified beehives. - a vr = } hiid » i" study tliére. It§ development of. im- proved varieties of oats, barley, wheat potatoes, ugar beets, etc, has been exceptionally noteworthy. Its exper. imental) plots are more extensive than thuse gt either Guelph or Ottawa. Be. sides, there are branch stations in eight other localities, The Institute is under the mapagement of the Swe. dish Seed Association, the Board: of Administration of which is compris- ed of five members elected by. the Swedish government and © two men. bers elected by the Association. For the distribution of tie fmprov- ed varieties and high grade qualify of the same, at fair prices to all the Swedish farmers, the General Swed. ish Seed Company has been qrganiz. ed. It is given the monopoly of prop- agating and distributing all improv. ed varieties released by the, Svalof Institute. 'The most exacting control of the purity and quality of seed is in- sisted upon and its dividend restricted '0 6 per cent. It is not a money-mak- ing but a service monopoly. 1 do not think I ever saw field crops so uni. formly high class as those on Swedish farms and this Svalof Institute and jts subsidiary Sced Company explain why it is possible. The Company uses S000 acres at Svalof and elsewhere wooproducing requirements, Supposing every Minto farmer edd procure at a fair price every season all his requirements of seed wheat, seed outs, seed barley, alfalfa, grass, potatoes, mangels, turnips and sugar its weed PLUG § beets which he could be absolutely sure was the very choleest seed pro. | curable anywhere? Wouldn't the va. | lue of the Township field crops like-! ly take a jump? And it might be so it we could eflucate ourselves te the practical sort Jof wisdom and co-oper- ation that thd Swedes have attained, There is nft space to tell of our and the Apricultdyal High School near the Svaldl Tuftithe. They have over 50 Folk igh Schools and over 40 AgricnltaizNd MWigh Schools in Sweden for their population of about: 6,000... are County Schools, We were told of a nearby swine. ! breeding station where 300 sows were kept, but unfortunately did not have! time to visit it. Jt was from such an! establishment that our Dominion De- | partment of Agriculture recently pro. cured its Landrace pigs for educat.' ional comparisons. The Danish auth. ! orities would not permit of the ex.' port of breeding stock. i In the next article 1 shall write of | recent edvcational reforms in Scot. | land hc cl Make High Quality Fertilizers in Canada ' - | Fertilizers wre manufactured in Canada on a much larger scale than! is generally known, Sulphate of | ammonia, ammonium phosphate, su- perphosphate, eyanamid, organics | and mixed fertilizers are all made in different parts of the Dominion in; large quantitiey: The capacity of Canadian plan{s for the maiufae- ture of these products is much greater than prospective aomestic requirements for some time. As the | industry is comparatively new mn Canada the latest equipment and | processes of nmnufacture are in uze, | resulting in high quality products: As Canadian crop production be- comes more intensified and diversi- fied move fertilizers will likely be used, but the extent to which these products ave used in the Dominion! is rather small in comparison with' other countries, For example: the annul requirements in Canada ab- sorb only about 200,000 tons In the United States 3,750,000 tons ave | used; 1,500,000 in Great Britain; 3,500,000 in Franee, and 6,000,000 tons in Germany, r In One Minute For quick relief from the itching of phnp- les, blo®ches, eczema, rashes and other skin eruptions, apply Dr. Dennis' pure, cooling, | liquid, antiseptic D. D. D. Prescription. Thisty years' world-wide success. Its gentle oils soothe the irritated and inflamed skin, thus aiding nature itself to heal the disor- der. No fuss--no mugs. Clear, greaseless and stainless--dries up almost immediate- Iv. Stops the most intense itching instantly, Try D. D. D. now. A 35c¢ trial bottle, at drug stores, will prove it--or money back. D. D. D. Prescription is made by the own- ers of Taran Baws, OR young girls Feel Tired? ' ah growing into womanhood, for 7 women in middle lite going through the : "change," or those | who. suffer from headache, weakening | drains, backache and | nervousness, Dr, ; Pierce's Favorite Prescription is fust the vegetable tonic ii Mis. Robert Bryant of 11 Glanville Ave, Brantford, Ont, said; "What Ng nder- ful medicine Dr, Pierce's Favorite Prescrip- tion is fot weak, run-down women, or at least it proved so in my case, I felt tied and weary, and had such pains acts my back and in my sides, Dr, Pierce's Favorite Prescription soon restored me to good health, 1 felt fine, as only a healthy person can Buy, of your neighliorhood druggist today, Backache ? Li visit to the spNadid Folk High School4----- of Japanese was, STOPS ITCHING | |: with on DIXIE is the thrifty man's smoke. You cut it as you use it and | the plug remains fresh to the last cut. ] a | MOKING TOBACCO COD LIVER OIL USED IN SALVE Rm Successful "Tests Reported by Russian Doctors y _-- CHICAGO. Cod Liver Oil, lone a 000, Unlike those in Denmark, they. potent defence against disease, was p offered to medicine in a new form' recently. A paste whieh heals weunds on the body's surface, The revolutionary contribution came from two Sovieg physicians, Dr. V. I. Lost and Dr. I. G. Kochergin, of" Gorkin, Russia. ' Vitamins A and D, the source of the oil's power in building resistance when administered internally as a liquid tonic, are -equally effective when applied externally in paste form, the Russians announced.: TEST ON 263 CASES Successful use of the salve in 20% cases of the following types was claimed in a report received by the American Medical Association from the Journal Novyy Khivargicheskiy Avkhiv: Fresh superficial wounds, Older wounds which have started to fester, } Chronie ulcers, _HBurns.. ' Frost bite. Severe injuries to the extremities. Healing of open stumps of arins and legs after amputations. The salve was made with ¥00 cubic centimeters of cod liver oil, 100 grafs of petroleum, 1.5 cbic centi- meters of a preparation containing vitaminsy and 10 cubic centimeters The Russians said vifamin D in the oil stimulated the growth of eranulations---part of the process.of healing wounds -- and repaired the epithelium, the outermost layer of the mucons membrane, v ¢ pl "What is the matter with Europe that every nation should - hate and fear and suspect fd every other? Benito Mussolini. ® INVENTORS | AN OFFER TO EVERY INVENTOR. SY List of wanted foventions and full information sent free. THE. RAMSAY Simpie home positively star expensively, Pov to 1 Arnold, remedy whieh will new hair growing: in- full instructions send Craik, Sask. BANISH RHEUMATISM 2he Take PHOSFERINE. Thou- sands. endorse this great British tonic for the quick, sure way it ends.rheumatic aches and stiff- ness, and sbothes the nerves. PHOSFERINE builds you up. + Gives you new energy. Helps you leep like a log. Start with SFERINE now--just a few tiny, economical drops each day. FOR _. "Fatigue -- Sleeplessness -- General Debility --Retarded Convalescence -- Nerves -Annemic Condition - Indigestion-- Rheu- matism -- Grippe -- Neuralgia -- Neuritis = Loss of Appetite . 46 TAKE ; THE CREAT BRITISH TONIC . At Your Drug Store--In Liquid or Tablet Form at the following reduced prices * 3 Sizes = 50c - $1.00 - $1.50 The paste also slowed down the | The $1.00 size is nearly four times the 50g sire activity in pus producing bactefin, and (he $1.50 rire is Iwice the $1.00 size. >A " ! } - the Soviet experimenters found. | _ een gas oo They considered it probable that in- jured body tissues suffered from a Jack" of cupplv or an increased des man, ~ LIVE STOCK MA Pi vn thi shop vilietive 'a wr The ton IS ITH ITH liom OW Hed, Write--Wire--gqr Telephone L¥ndhurst 1143 THE UNITED FARMERS CO-OPERATIVE COMPANY, LIMITED LIVE STOCK COMMISSION DEPT, Union Stock Yards, West Toronto Catarrhal Deafness ~ May Be Overcome If vou have catawrrhal deadness or head noises go to your druggist and get 1ooz. of Parmint (double strength) and add to it '¢ pint of hot water and a little sugar. Take 1 tablespoon. ful four times a day. This will oftey & from the distressing Tiead noises Clogged nostrils chould open," breath. ing become easy and the mucous «top dropping into the throat, lf is easy to prepare, costs little and is pleas ant to take. Anyone who has catary hal deafness or head noists <hould give this prescription a trial. "\ ' The Health Restoring COD LIVER OIL "PLUS Easy Digestibility - back to health need strength and viality piving foods. SCOTT'S EMUL- SION [is dn emulsion of pure encrgy-packed Cod Liver Oil PLUS bone-building Hypophos- "phites of Lime and Soda. [( is four to five times more easily digested than the highest grade ¥ Cod Liver Oil. These are PLUS VALUES vou get only in SCOTT'S EMULSION SCOTT'S Tovalids strap gig THE DIGESTIBLE COD LIVER OIL WITH THE PLUS VALUES FOR SALE BY YOUR DRUGGIST LER] J Q 60. CYCLE--110 VOLT--C. G. FE. MOTOR CIN EXCELLENT CONDITION, rog INFORMATION APPLY ~ Wilson Publishing Co., 73 Adelaide St. Wa, Toronto - Classified Advertising Company, World I'atent ALLOYS 2g Bank Sueet, Ottawa, Canada, BALDNESS TREATED 3ALbHEADLD MEN LAT LAST A Value of cos EMULSION | | Le v on " Ne RRA ay Pe i dae] a a OR Acs ue A oo , Tr " - Ji ' WE Ed rials tne Gr vs - = Fd Th, wv > ~ 1 "L

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