NE fae ' Fes Lr CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING BABY CHICKS FOR SALE PHOTOGRAVHY SPEOIALLY LOW PRICES ON started chicks two and three weeks old, cockerels, pullets and non-sex- ed Also eight week to laying pul- lets. Send for catalogue aad reduc- ed pricelist. Top Notch Chickeries, Guelph, Ontario. JULY AND AUGUST CHICKS available if you let us have your order now. Dayolds, pullets, non- sexed, cockerels, Bray Hutchery, 130 John N., Hamilton, Ont, HEAVY BREED PULLET 17c. . Sussex, Sussex x Hamp, Rock x Hump. New Hamp. and Barred Rock pullets 17¢. ; Book your order NOW. §1.00 per 100 deposit. Order from this Ad. Hurondale Chick Hatehery, London, Ontarlo IMMEDIATE DELIVERY ON TWO and three week old started chicks fu non-sexed pullets or cockerels, fn pure breeds and hybrids. Also eight week old to laying pullets, Free catalogue and pricelist, Tweddle Chick Hatcheries Limited, Fergus, Ontario: LAKEVIEW CHICKS Specialized Breeding Plant Of 5,000 Breeders Pook your order for July. With the scarcity of meat, there will be a big demand for Poultry and Fees this Fall and Winter at attractive prices. It will pay you to put tn an extra brood of chicks this year. Prompt Delivery -- With a capacity of 60,000 Lakeview chicks week- lv. we expect we can glve prompt delivery, but to be safe, book your order at once for July. Grade A -- Large Type White Leg- horns, Sussex x Leghorn, Rock x Leshorn, Leghorn x New Hamp, mixed 111% ce, pullets 20¢., cox 6e. EB Rocks, Rock x Humps, New Hamps., Sussex, Sussex Humps, mixed $12.75, pullets $17.00, cox $14.75. Send deposit of $1.00 per 100. We guarantee 1006, live de- liverv, Order from and enclose this ad. Large White Leghorns -- Day old and started up to 4 weeks old. Lakeview Leghorns ure the large type mated with cockerels from I'd. stock -- "Real Egg Machines." Bend for Weekly LIst -- of speclal prices on day old chicks, pullets, and cockerels and started chicks. July and Fall Hatched -- Book your erder for July or ["all Hatched chicks now. > Specinl Started Chicks -- All (wo weeks old heavy breed mix- ed chicks, 17c. pullets 22c., heavy breeds, cockerels 17¢, also 3 to 4 week old pullets and cockerels. LAKEVIEW POULTRY FARM, Wein Bros., Exeter, Ontario. PULLIITS BEl1GHT WIHEKS to laying for immediate delivery, Also twa and three week old start- ed chicks, Free catalogue. Tweddle Chick Hatcheries, Limited, Fergus, Ontario. LARGE TYPE LEGHORNS 10c. Leghorn pullety 2lc. All Breeders double bloodtested and backed by high pedigreed foundation stock, Many Hurondale customers report best chicks | ever had. Walter Morton, Dryden, -- We were well pleased with the pullets we re- ceived last year. Pullets lald well. Heavy Breed Pullets 17c. Sussex x N. Hamp, Rock, x New Hump, Barred Rocks, Pure Sussex and New Hampshire pullets 17c. Pure Sussex mixed lc, Sussex x N. Hamp. Rock x Hump. Rocks and New Humps, mixed 1Zc. Sus- sex x Leghorn, Rock x Leghorn and: [Leghorn x New Hamp. mixed 11c., pullets 2Uc. Assorted pulleta 16c., 'assorted mixed 9c. Cockerel and started prices on request. Order from and enclose this Ad. $100 per 100, deposit. : HURONDALE CHICK HATCHERY, London, Ont. RELIABLE CHICKS JULY PRICES ON BABY CHICKS, Barred Rocks $9.76. Hamp, X BR, $10.26. STARTED CHICKS, 8 weeks, Sussex, Barred Rocks, Leghorn pullets, HYBRIDS Leg- horn X BR. Hamp X BR. Prompt shipment Mlilern's Chlek "Hutchery, Fergus, Ont, : DYEING AND CLEANING HAVE YOU ANYTHING NERDS dyeing or cleaning? Write to us for information. We are glad to answer your questions. Department H. Parker's Dye Works Limited, 791 Yonge Street, Toronto, Ontarlo. FOB BALE ATTENTION FARMERS For Sale: Regulur Tractor Tires, lug treads, suituble for bolting on steel wheels, front wheels -- $5.00 each, reur wheels -- $10.00 each, . 0. B, Toronto. Whén ordering, state height! and width of wheel, National Rubber Co. Ltd, b Wiilt- shire Ave, Toronto, Ont, up to - FOR THIS FALL'S HUNTING, RE glstered pointer puppies. Perfection Pointer Kennel, 1679 York Bt, Windsor, Ont, "IRIs , LARGE NAMED VARI eties, beautiful colors, exquisite fragrance, Write today for price st. Mrs. Freeman Barker, Sun- shine Hollow, Iris Gardens, R.R. 2, Gormley, Ontarlo. MODEL 85 CLETRAO TRACTOR, power take off and starter, 46 horse power, 12-inch tread, ex- llent condition. $1,800. Ww. C. les, 26 Ontarfo St, St, Catharines, Ontario. FILMS DEVELOPED 25 CTS, GUA. ranteed one day service. NO WAIT=- ING. Bay Photo Service, North Bay. TIME TESTED QUALITY SERVICE and SATISFACTION Your films property developed and printed 6 OR 8 EXPOSURE ROLLS i¥bc. REPRINTS 8 for bc, FINEST ENLARGING SERVICE. You may not get all the films you want this year, but you cun get all the quality and service you deslre by sending your films to IMPERIAL PHOTO SERVICR Station 1, Toronto. NROSBORN FARM scorT (89 1} Shorthorns for sale -- 3 registered Shorthorn bulls, 12 months old, dark roans, Rosewood and Clipper family. Well grown, low down, thick fleshing, from good milking dams. Fully accredited. Price $150.00 each, Mail orders a specialty, satig- faction guaranteed. IE. F. R. Os- borne, Newcastle, Ont, SILVER PLATING FLUID, EASILY made and sold. Vast market. For- mula and sales plan One Dollar, De- tails free, Krysto Products Co. SANTA CRUZ, Cal. THE NEW IMPROVED HAY DIVIDER Can be ritted to swath board of any mower Will replace help usually needed to fork hay behind mower in heavy crops. Also save time, as there is no clogging of knife or knife guard. Guaranteed satisfac- tion. $7.50 f.o.b. Bristol, Que. Sole Mfgr and distributor for Canada and U.S. Local Spare ime Agents Wanted. A. Arble, Bristol, Que. TUBES AND RADIO PPAIUTS HARD TO GET ELECTRICAL Illectronic supplies of all kinds; list for stamp. Economy Dlistribut- ors, Kingston, Ontarlo. FARMS FOR SALE GET BETTER PICTURES AT LOWER PRICE PROMPT MAIL SERVICE Any Size Roll -- 6 or 8 Exposures. DEVELOPED AND PRINTED 25c 3 MOUNTED ENLARGEMENTS 2b5c Slze 4x6" In Benutiful Easel Mounts Enlargements 4x6" on ivory tinted mounts; 7x9" (no Gold, Sliver, Clr- cassfan Walnut or Black Ebony finish frames, 9c each. [f enlarge- ment coloured, 79¢ each. Reprints Made From Your Negatives 3c. Each DEPT. M STAR SNAPSHOT SERVICE Box 120, I'ost Office A, 'l'oronto Print Name and Address Plainly. HAPPY FOURSOME! WITH BACH 2bc order or more you receive: (1) coupon for two 6 x 7 heavy paper enlargements; (2) one of the prints "edge tinted'?; (3) "double seal" film wrapper; (4) quality unlimited. Films developed and printed 25¢; reprints, eight for 25c. Fresh films available. Victory Studio, Saskatoon 7, W., Sask, THACHERS WANTED PROTESTANT TEACHER FOR 8.8, No 1, Duyton. Apply stating salary and qualifications and phone num- ber to Leonard Cameron, Sec'y, Dayton, Ontario LARGE DAIRY FARM IN VILLAGE 86 miles from Montreal. 40 head of cattle. Large quantity timber pulp and wood. Price $30,000.00, Box 99, 73 Adelaide \W., Toronto. THIS IS THE WAY to get started on farm; stock, implements, crops, all for $4,000 cash or trade on good house. Write Elwood Ferrier, not farm, Corbetton, Ont. 50 ACRES GARDEN LAND on mixed farming; house, barn and chicken house; poor health reason. Byron Stapleton, Wallacetown, Ont, HAIRDRESSING LEARN HAIRDRESSING THE Robertson method Information on request regarding classes. Robert- son's Halrdressing Academy, 137 Avenue Road, Toronto. "HELP WANTED COOK - GENERAL, COMI'ETENT, small home; country woman pre- ferred, high wages if qualified, Box 103, 73 Adelaide W., Toronto. HOUSEKEEPER ny BUSINIISS girl near Toronto, to help care for aged mother. Box 104, 73 Ade- laide W,, Toronto. DIETITIAN Wanted at Muskoka Hospital, Sal- ary $166.60 per month or $140.00 per month with full maintenance. One month's vacation with pay at the end of one year's service. Blue Cros Plan available. Permanency for the right person. Apply to Sup- erintendent, Muskoka Hospital, Gravenhurst, Ont. WANTED TYPIST WITH BOOK- keeping experlence. Glve full in- formation and wages expected, Apply Tweddle Chick Hatcheries Limited, Fergus, Ontario, GENERAL STAFF NURSES Operating Room Nurses $100.00 ER MONTH, PLUS FULL maintenance, 3 weeks' vacation with pay and a $60 bonus at the completion 'of each year of service, Pension plan. 1 day sick leave with pay per month, accumulative, Bus service to clty street car lines. Ap- ply: Superintendent of Nurses, Tor- onto Hospital" for---- Tuberculosis, Phone JU. 1163. MEDICAL A TRIAL--EVERY;SUFFERER OF Rbeumatic, Palins or Neurltis should try Dixon's Remedy. Munro's Drug Store, 335 Elgin, Ottawa. Iostpald $1.00, STOMACH AND THREAD WORMS often are the cause of Ill health in humans, a)l ages, No ore Immune! Why not find out if this is your trouble, Interesting particulars --- Free! Write Mulveney's Remedien Specialists, Toronto %, ARTHUR'S ECZEMA OINTMENT. Try it. It works. Arthur's Eczema Ointment, ona of the most effective ointments known for the relief of eczema: b0c., %0c. and $1.76. For In- formation write (harles Arthur, 82 Sprace HIN Rd, Toronto, Ont. HAVE YOU HEARD ABOUT NDIX- on's Neuritis and Rheumatic Palin Rentedy? It gives good results, Munro's Drug Store, 335 Elgin, Ot- tawn, Postpald £1.00, BRASS VALVES, SAFETY VALVES, Gauges, oil steam, grease cups, Carburetor, Reconditioned. 1b Broek, Dundas, Ont, CARPENTRY -- NEW BOOK. Complete data on stairs, roofs, Llrusses, interior and exterlor finish. A mine of Inform- ation for those Interested In con- struction. Sent postpaid, Three dol- lars, Masterprint Compnny, Toron- to 14, Canada. CHEAP OIL HEAT and PLENTY OF 17, in your cook stoye Quebec or jacket heater; by using the .LARTLE GIANT OAL BURNER NO COM -NO ASHES--NO WQQD TO CARRY ' Burns cheap fuel oil, distillate, dle- ael, range ofl or kerosene Money back if proven unsatis- factory. VERY CHEAP, BUT VERY EF- FECTIVE. 411" in below and return to:-- "THOMPSON'S" Research Products Division, 58 Esplanade E., Toronto 1, Ont. Pie e shi e one Little Giant Oil Livi ool 4 Which I enclose deppsit of $315.00 apd balance to be C.OD, $32. NAME UE ERNIE EE Pune PRRERE E I ' ADDRESS .. oii FLECIRIO MOTORS NEW, USED bought, sold, rebuilt: belts, pulleys, brushes, Allen Electric Company Ltd, 2326 Dufferin 8t., Toronto, Unt, framing walls, . COPPORTUNITIES © FOR MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS FRED A BODDINGTON NUYS: sells, exchanges musical Instru- ments 111 Church, Toronto 2. MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS ne- paired and refinished. Violins, Uke- lele expertly repaired. Minor re- aira on Ranjos, Mandolins and uitare, For particulars write A. C. McGarvey, rrville, Ontario WOMEN GLENVALIEL, ONT, TEM, CO. RE quires 1st cluss teacher for publie school, Protestant, duties commence Sept. 1, State quanfications and salary expected to S. P, Peterson, Glenvale, Ont. TOWNSHIP PUBLIC SCHOOL Area No. 1, Cumberland, requires teacher for Junior Room, Vars, Ap- ply stating qualifications, experi ence and salary expected, also name of last inspector. D. J, Mec- Rae, Sec.-Treas., Leonard, Ontario. HASTINGS NORTH, 38 QUALIFIED Protestant teachers for Area No. 2. Monteagle and Herschel, Salary $1300.00 if fully qualified. Apply to G. H. Woodeox, Sec.-Treas, LR. 1, Hybla, Ont. ISLAND FALLS, NORTHERN ONTARIO (North of Cochrane) A Consolidated one room, grade schodl, requires Protestant experi- enced female teacher for grades 1 to 9. Number of pupils 18. Music and social service, including chil- dren's Sunday School class, helpful, Salury $1600.00, starting September 3rd, 1946. Apply in writing to Her- bert LL. Sanborn, Secretary, 408 University Avenue, Toronto 2, Ont. WANTED MILLER REAL ESTATE, 186 Oshawa Boulevard, Oshawa, wants resort property, unimproved, wood- ed, good beach, near highway, i WANTED TO PURCHASE PULLETS Barred Rocks, New Hampshires White Leghorns any ag: from [] weeks up to laying. Good prices paid. Apply to Box No. 95, 73 Adelaide \W. Toronto. CASH FOR YOUR USED CHEMICAL TOILET BOWLS Knustine and other makes urgently required. Highest prices pald, Write 194 Galley Avenue, Toronto, MACHINERY NEW AND USED Of Every Description Phone EL. 1371 H. W. PETRIE CO. LTD 147 Front 8t. W. -- Toronto "WE BUY & SFLL" WANTED ! Local [] [] Carpenter -- Contractors ¢ In Every Town and County Throughout Ontario ff VALUABLE distributorship awaits an enterprising Carpen- ft ter-Contractor in this district, [} [] 1} ] [] ] Must be capable of handling both the sales and the Installa- tion of a new, patented weath- erstripping. Exclusive rights will be granted. Big demand for » product, no competition, large- volume business, Write or wire: THE FLEXOTITE CO. Dept. W., 23473 Danforth Ave, Toronto, 13, . - - - - - - - - - - - - WOMEN who SUFFE MONTHLY 7 should try this very effective medicine to relieve pain and tired, nervous, cranky feelings, of days -- when due to female functional monthly disturbances, Worth trying! LYDIA E. FINKGAM S Coron BE A HAIRDRESSER JOIN CANADA'S LEADING SCHOOL Great Opportunity Learn Hairdressing Plensunt dig-.ified profession, good wages, thousands suceessful Marvel graduntes. America's Rreatest sys. tem. [llustrated catalogue free, Write or call MARVEL HAIRDRESSING' SCHOOLS 368 Bloor 8t. W, Toronto, Branches: 44 King 8t. Hamilton & 74 Rideau Street, Ottawa, PATENTS FETHERSTONHAUGH & COMPANY Patent Solicitors. Established 1840; 14 King West, Toronto. Booklet of Information on request, PERSONAL WHY ALWAYS WORK FOR OTH- ers? Manufacture plastic objects fn your own private home, The demand Is big, Capital required $5.00, Write us, R, Mercier, 3862 St, Andre St, Montreal 24, Que, of Insect Heat Rash Quicki Stop itching ot insect bites, heat rash, eczema, hives, pimples, scales, Py athlete n Ue sea Lon" 5B se quick.-acting, e ng, ant tic '. PRESCRIPTION, Greaseloss crialors teh 0, BD BRE ob es Smallest Machine Tool Moscow radio reported recently perfection of the smallest machine tool in the world. Using a diamond drill, the tool can be used to hore holes as small as .00025 millimeters --about ,0001 inch, the dispatch said. It was built by the Experi- mental Research Institute for metal cutting lathes, A New Nation: The Philippines First President of Republic Takes Office On July 4 The youngest independent nation in the world is the Phillipine Re- public, whose birth in Manila on July 4 coincided with the 170th birthday anniversary of the United States. More than three centuries of Spanish rule had done little to advance the Philippines toward self-government; only forty-cight years after Admiral George Dewey sank the Spanish fleet in Manila Bay, the Philippines were free, says the New York Times. The Stars and Stripes fluttered down from its mast in front of the great cream and gold reviewing stand on Dewey Boulevard in the capital city of Manila, as Manuel A. Roxas took oflice as first Presi- dent of the republic, President Roxas takes office with an empty national treasury and an enormous budgetary deficit. But the most 'critical problem that he and the 18,000,000 inhabitants of the 7,000 islands of the Philippines are facing is an imminent shortage of staple foodstuffs that might even reach famine proportions. With most sugar mills destroyed during the war, sugar production for 1945-46 was less than one-tenth of domestic requirements, and for the coming year will still be only 50 per cent of needs. Rice produc tion has been crippled because work animals were caten by the Japanese; locusts have plagued the country. The Philippine Army has just been presented with $30,000,000 worth of equipment by the United States. Other American aid to the Philippines has come in the form of Congressional authorization of $620,000,000 in grants for recon struction necessitated by the war, "Electric Eye" Separates Seeds The "electric eye", widely known for its kindly service in opening and closing doors for railroad passengers heavily laden with baggage, has, among its many other uses, one that has been unheralded. This latter use is in picking yellow corn out of white corn, Since it is desirable to keep the two sceds separate, it was found that the "electric cye" could do the job much faster and more ac- curately than the human cye and hand." In describing the system at work on a western farm, the Rural Electrification Administra- tion says the cquipment can sort 700 to 800 bushels of seed in twen- ty four hours, while previously it had taken forty-six persons work- ing sixteen hours to sort 200 bushels. The "clectric eye" assembly has sixteen units, each of which picks up sixty sceds a second. The eye then "looks at" cach sced from two sides and if either side is other than while the seed is ejected by a small plunger, which moves s0 rapidly it is back in place by the time the next seed is before the "eye". Sarawak Now Crown Colony Sarawak, rich and romantic Borneo kingdom of the white rajalis, has become a British crown colony. King George issued a statement stying: "I extend a warm. wel- come" to the people of Sarawak and pledge Britait to "promote your welfare and to bring Sarawak to a higher stage of social and economic development than has hitherto been possible." Christopher William Dawson, formerly of the Mayalan civil service, was appointed chief secre- tary of Sarawak pending appoint- ment of a governor. Sarawak, North Borneo state with 500,000 inhabitants and 300,- 000 acres of rubber plantations, was ceded to Britain by its last white Rajah, 71-year-old Sir Charles. Vyner Brooke, under .n agreement whereby he and his three daughters and some local officials receive the proceeds of a $4,000,000 trust fund established from Sarawak funds. The rich kingdom has been in the Brooke family since 1840, when the Sultan of Brunei gave it to Sir James Brooke for quelling an attack by head-hunters. Pocket Sun Dials Pocket sun dials are being pro- duced in the Soviet zone of Ger- many because of the watch short- age--but there's a complication, ac- cording to Radio Hamburg, : Different dials are required for cach part of the country to make the timepieces practical, Even' so, the broadcast said, 10,- 000 pocket sundials- are being manufactured each month. They were developed by a German in- ventor, ISSUE 29-1946 WINNER OF THE GOLD CUP EY NE ITERATION A SRE NR 0 Se A gS Lcorge victory over Dick Metz of Chicago in an 8-hole playoff. lrazio of Los Angeles holds the Gold Cup, emblematic of Canadian golfing supremacy, after a single stroke Seagram Both finished regulation rounds of the Canadian Open Golf Championship' over Montreal Beaconsfield course with scores of 278. 4 SPOTS OF SPORTS By FRANK MANN HARRIS There's an old newspaper adage which runs "The gustomer's always wirte, especial when you're wrong." And gh a recent letter a reader putsed mild blast on sports- writers #f general, and this one in particular, for what he considers a highly inconsistent attitude. »* * v "You guys give millions of dol- lacs worth of advance publicity to something like the louis-Conn thing, and create a whole lot of interest ini" hie says. "Then, just as soon as it turns out to be a stinkeroo, yon all try to act so very wise, trying to make out that you knew all the time it was bound to be a flop." * * « Then he goes on to inquire why the sports pages should give so much free space to building up pro- fessional sporting events, which are strictly money-making schemes and nothing else but, when such space is denied to other business enterprises. "I'd just like to know what sort of a reception would be given to a man trying to develop, say, a plumbing business, if he went into a newspaper and asked for the same kind of free publicity they give to the hockey business," our correspondent concludes. . * * Well, we think it can truthfully be said that we, personally, devote little or no space to advance bally- hoo of any sort. But don't ever get the idea that this is because our code of cthics, whatever they may be, is any more strict than those of any of our contemporaries. It is simiply because, in a weekly column of this kind, such stuff would be of little interest to our readers--or value to the promoters, for that matter. * * * As to the vast amount of "press agent stuff" appearing in most daily papers, it's rather hard to say just "where the line should be drawn. A great deal of such material is- written by highly-paid experts, artists in their line, and is a whole lot more entertaining than most run-of-the-mill sports copy. And you may rest assured that if the sports-page reader didn't want such stuff--didn't expect it-- then it wouldn't he there. * * * And that last sentence gets down fairly close to the knuckle of the matter. When a Toronto journal- ist, the late H. J. I'. Good, for the first time gathered together on one page all the sports news which had formerly been scattered through- out tl... paper, he really started something. For that was the begin- ning of the modern sports depart- ment which--with the possible ex- ception of front-page headlines and the comic-strips--is probably the most widely and avidly-read scc- tion of any metropolitan journal, * ' + And now the reader has come "to expect--dnd the newspaper aims to supply him with--two, three or even four pages of sports, and this not just at such times as actual happenings justify this amount of space, but cach and cvery day, week in and week out. "And this is sometimes quite a problem For instance, on a Monday morning a sports editor may have 'an all- England tennis final, a Diamond Sculls result, a National golf.cham- pionship, a fifty-grand, stake 'race, and a dozen other really outstand- ing cvents to deal with, "T'wenty- four hours later all the news avail- able. may be that Boston and Brooklyn continue to lead their respective loops, and that Connie oo. ("A Six Bit Critic") > 00 Mack of Plaladelphia and Conny Smythe of Toronto hoth confident ly expect to have better teams next scison, a - * - Yet, in spite of this, that same vast acreage of white space still yawns---those two, three or four pages must be filled. And if, at such a moment, the harassed sports ehitor fmds on his desk a nice, hutiorous, highly -readable article about a coming championship fight, who can blame lam for shipping it in? Not-us, you may be sure. But we do think that all such material should be, in some manner, tagped as what it is, so that a reader will be in no doubt as to its source, and in no danger of mistaking it for actual news. For while we have nothing but respect for a good agent who frankly admits that he is one, for the other sort-- the kind who try to put across slobbery publicity in the guise of signed personal opinion--well, it's too blessed hot night now to discuss them. * * * press So, for mo particular reason, here's the very old tale of Finkel- stein, who stacted playing the stock market and who, as sometimes happens, did very well at it for a while. And then, as also sometimes happens, the market took a sudden turn for the worse; and one morn- ing Finkelstein was called on the phone by his excited broker, with a demand for further margins. * + + But Vinkelstein remained quite calm. "Listen, Mister," he said; "would you mind taking a look by the books and seeing how stood it my account one week ago today?" So the broker, after taking a look, reported that--a week previously Mr. IY, had had a credit balance of some six thousand dollars. "Vell," said Finkelstein, "did I call you up then?" And hung upl The Race Between Wages and Prices The tragic delusion that the number of dollars a man earns really matters is debauching a continent, says the Financial Post. How many dollars he carns is of only relative importance. What is important is how much comfort and security he can get with his carnings; how much his dollars will buy. Ilach succeeding brings more dollars, threateners of strikes presumably feel they are making progress; that their cconomic status is im- proving. ) In dog-racing, the whippet never catches the electric hare. It is the same in the race between wages and prices. The inflation spiral is now whirling upward. Produc- tion--a vast torrent of goods and services that people want and' need--is the only fire extinguisher to stop the holocaust, but produc- tion is choked off with strike dis locations and industrial strife. New Tomato major strike Strikers and A superman of the tomato patch has heen Announced by Wisconsin agricultural experts, a tomato said to be larger, tastier, hardier than the best of current varieties, says This Week. The fruity grow to -uniform size, then ripen evenly and the plants are immune to blos- som-end rot and have resistance to other comnion vine diseases. The yield averages 30 percent more than the present "best" tomatoes per acre, Scientists Save Canada's Wheat Experimental F arms Service Develops New Strain Which Resists Rust To Canada's wheat farmers, rust is as fearsome a word as death or taxes --and once it was just as in mevitable, says Tine Magazine, When the fungus attacks wheat, the crop is destroyed. But after the black year 1935, when 85,000,000 bushels were fost to rust, Canada's Dominion Experimental Farms Service developed two "rustproof" wheat strams, Renown and Regent, Last week, the Service announced that rust, adapting itself to new conditions as Nature usually does, attacking the rustproof stramns. But Canada's wheat crop was ne hittle danger. Reason: the Service has developed a new wheat stram, Redman, which resists both the old and the new type of rust. Seed Ready Next Spring This year some 30,000 bushels of the new Redman seed will be ready for planting next spring. So, too, probably, will seed for another new stram, Rescue wheat, which the de- structive wheatstem sawfly (annual damage: $20,000,000) attacks in van, has year, as the 1105. cele- brates ats soth birthday, it could boast that it had made Canadian wheat the world's toughest, All told, 15 hardy 1.5. varieties of cereal crops now tlourssh bravely on the prams is now Fos) trie umph mats shaping Canadian Working through its central tarms in Ottawa branch tarms and laboratones elsewhere, 19S) has proved aguon and apn that virtu- ally any plant or anal can be developed to suit Canada's conditions, Many Experiments Successful Fhe tlavor of Canadian apples, the quality of Canadian bacon are the outcome ot patient 10S, ex- periments. Not so long ago farmers were sure bees couldn't weather "Canadian winters. ESD worked on bees, toughened them and upped Wheat as only one record ot apticultare, and scores of aprcultural there honey output cighteen-told. When thiyrasimg dropped to a mere 6,000 acres a year, LIS, bred better straans, showed how to mechameze the process, raised the acreage to the current 47,000, To tobacco farmers EFS. was Just as mood a Samaritan. Te adapt- ed amported tobacco plants to Canadian soils and temperatures, turned the tp ot southern Untario into a spot of Vga, It taught farm wives to relieve the bleakness ot the pramies with blooms and lawns. Its own tarm near Saska- toon has turt so lush that farmers come trom mmles around, take off their shoes and stockings, luxuri- ate mm ther bare feet nits velvety softness ' Save Billions for Farmers Currently FCS which develop- ed the cattalo, 1s working on a sinlar problem mm sheep. Western ranchers want a breed of sheep which combines good mutton with toughness and good wool. E.I.S, believes it is hot on the trail with Rommnolet and Canadian Corriedale, two of its own breeds that are still beng biologically molded. He and his staff of some 500 cx- perts spend only $3,250,000 a year, But they have saved and made bil- lions of dollars for Canadian farmers. PEDAL - PUSHER CBR This original design is by Louis of London, English tailor.. Three- quarter length trousers have smart masculine creases and cuffs. Sleeves less top and trousers are one piece with tan leather belt encircling the waist. Hired Help In China, Japan and other parts of the Orient, large sca birds known as cormorants have been trained to fish for man, <2 . Teh, a ~~ a pr a pt to »