The Colborne Express (Colborne Ontario), 9 May 1935, p. 7

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THE COLBORNE EXPRESS, COLBORNE, ONfj THURSDAY, MAY 9, 1935 A SIGHT BETTER! LARGE PLUG Fresh from start to finish Costs so little, too; Jr I IV Cut !t as you like jt' J^g \^ It's Dixie Plug for you! PLUG SMOKING TOBACCO icat i iarly sky, showing clouds and reflections Lesson No. 24, changes the seen to yachts. Then more contrast i boats as used on Lake Ontario a shown by the use of paddle steamer end modern turbine engine ships i. No. ichts i We went back ag; Lessen No. 26. Small dinghys, both j pleasure and racing yachs and also steam ships were illustrated, also ; decorative bit of design suitable fo . The satisfaction resultii i purchase of lamb in any r.y cuts lias steadily ii ! volume of sales so that t ;r increasing number of are becoming regular users c THE FEED SITUATION IN CANADA whic who could lean foment that any No doubt you several factors the fesd situj 1935, says tl Situation and Outlook" cetel: i ppc: we started this Sketch ate tha. the time has been profitably spent. e too, continued doing the .e-son No. 2, be carrying hese lines and developing simple borders. „ Then we Lesson No. 27 tal study of battleships, of "The British Navy i rated here. Lesson Wooden Ships sin;: S Of < fe< t. the apple thickn. heigh*, breadth rrayoi Id-'. Picturesque Pioneer Dies In Victoria VICTORIA--Mrs. Mary Ann Croft, 70, one of the most picturesque pioneers of the British Columbia coast and for 30 years keepers of Discovery Island lighthouse in Gulf of Georgia, is dead. Classified Advertising AM OFFER TO EVERY INVENTOR. List of wanted Inventions and full Information sent free. The Burniaj Company, World Patent Attor Bank Street, Ottawa, Canada FASMS FOB SALE rnded. HUB CHICKS FOB SALE CHICKS, 8 CENTS pullets 30e. Complete catalogue tiled. St. Agatha Hatchery, The lines and ; were drawn with pen an 1 d the apple with lead pencil •ay on pencil. continuing the study of technique we practiced I tones in lines, shading a and cylinder. We also gave you some problems to draw with each lesson and answered any questions which our students required assistance with, as they were confronted with various problems. With the work of Lesson No. 4, we assembled crayon lines into a pictorial effect representing portions of a brick wall, a stone coping, and some foliage. As one problem for this lesson you were asked to assemble the wall, coping and foliage to form a composition in pictorial effect, which we illustrated in Lesson No. 6, to show the finished result. In Lesson No. 5, we studied the use of spread lines for pictorial ef- ^0^11 p rinilirn^ects You were ask,ed to make a I He, rAKMfcK|pen iine a h^-^ , reproduction of a dish of apples. - The method of enlarging and re- I ducing the size of a sketch was ex-The mild, sunny days or late , piainea in Lesson No. 6, by using a March and early April will be worth rectangie and a diagonal line. We more than $3,000,000 this year to the , a]s0 gtudied the cqM dure farmers of southeastern Quebec and ; of how tQ j h , the Province of Ontario. • from the previobus ]eJnP The output of maple sugar in Can- , Lesson No_ 7j bl.ought out the ada averages around 5,000,000 lbs. i proDiem of (lrawing ^,oa """■lally at the present time, and Notes on Viking Ships were print- j d in Lesson No. 29. Also a splendid xample of a combination of pen' ines with the use of the crayon pen-il in illus'-iating a modern liner 1 gainst the sea and sky. In Lessons No. 29 and No. 32 I outlin When her father, Richard Brinn, was appointed lighthouse keeper at Discovery Island in the '70's, Mary Ann went there to live and she took over from her father at the turn of the century. She maintained the light until her retirement in 1932. Last October, Mrs. Croft was honored by the King with the Imperial Service Medal for devotion to duty. MAPLE SYRUP CROP IS WORTH MILLIONS There arc ill influem Canada in "Agriculture about to be published by the Dominion Department of Agriculture, in co-operation with the Department of Trade and Commerce. Feed serves will be considerably less than normal owing to low yields in 1934, domestic requirements in drought areas, and strong export demand from the United States. Meadows nd pastures in large sections of astern Canada, which were seeded i 1933, and also in 1934, will show the effects of subsequent adverse climatic conditions. The restricted | seed supplies of grass, clover and i alfalfa, coupled with high prices, i is expected to reduce the acreage j of these crops seeded in 1935. In the I drought areas of the Prairie Pro-I vinces, less summer-fallowed land j than usual, subsoil moisture, are unfavourable conditions for the seeding of gra! se of a j ses and legumes. To these advers is men- j factors may be added also the pos-Aho a sibility in 1935 of some crop des-clipped; truction in the Prairie Provinces 36 and from grasshoppers and cutworms, 37 brought up the subject of tools1 and to a lesser extent, in a part of or instruments. Also practical prob- j the Province of Quebec, from white lems were set out for the students grubi to create in design work. Lesson No. I Grasshoppers, which took a heavy 38. 'Suggestions for Design were! toll of forage crops last year in given and then The Principles of! Prairie Provinces, are expected Design in Lesson No. 29. Lesson' be ,ess troublesome in 1935 than No. 40, taught Rhythm, Balance i 1934> on account of a reduction the intensity of infestation in provinces, the smaller number of eggs to be found in stubble land, and the greater skill on the part of the farmers in carrying on control campaigns. The pale western cutworm is expected to be present again over wide areas in Saskatchewan and Alberta. If moisture conditions and weather for growing crops in the early part of the season are not better than average, considerable losses may be expected in certain large, though scattered, localities. Wherever grasshoppers and cutworms are known to be present, tillage and seeding practices should keeping recommended methods of con-Then in Lesson No. 51 we took up | tpol. the study of Tone in Line Technique, COULD KOT SEW A BUTTON ON Her Hands Were Helpless. With Rheumatism At one time she thought she would lose the use of her right hand. But "a -blessing"--in the form of Kruschen Salts--put her right agailj, "I was sure in a bad state," sh$ wri.es. "In fact, I could not do my housework. I was so bad with rheii-matism in my arms and hands. J could not sleep at nights, and 1 thought I would lose the use of my right hand. I could not hold anjf. thing, nor could I sew a button oh. My arm would go dead. I was ad* vised to try Kruschen, and inside ot three weeks I found such a change, I have kept on taking it, and now I sleep all night--thanks to Krus-chen's help and relief."--(Mrs.) J. H. Two of the ingredients of Kruschen Salts have the power of dissolving uric acid crystals, which are responsible for rheumatic agony. Other ingredients of these salts assist Nature to expel these dissolved crystals through the natural chan- A study of Desig "Docket" or "Time 1 tioned in Lessor N filing system for for refere Harmony and the same subjects! were continued in Lesson No. 41. We then had a chat on Design' for Surface Patterns in Lesson No. 42. Rhythm and Surface Patterns were discussed in Lesson No. Flowing Rhythm in Lesson No. 44. Flowing Rhythm and Repetition in Lesson No. 45. Flowing Rhythm in Natural Leaf P'orms in Lesson No. 46. Rhythmical arrangements in Lesson No. 47. Rhythmical Arrangements of. Simple Pattern ot face in Lesson No. 48. Flowing-Rhythmical Pattern in Lesson " 49. Simple Rhythm, Flowing Rhythm, Tone Rhythm in Lesson No. j bellowed which" i GOOD LUCK CHICKS SL™L ANDY AWDEBBONB ( I WILL SHIP you my best blood te ed Barred Rocks or White Leghor for 8c. Day old. Any Monday Thursday. 100% live arrival. He any deposit with order. Balance CO Both breeds are the finest type, lar booted and good layers. Andy Audi Bon, Box WP, Essex, Ont. CHICKS FOB SALE THREE FREE PRIZES A framed landscape water color painting by Giff Baker. Valued at $10.00. 1 A box of personal stationery, j consisting of 100 sheets and 75 j envelopes, with an address print-j ed on paper and envelopes, valued ! at $1-75, or embossed effect, i valued at $3.00. A box of personal stationery con-I sisting of 24 sheets and 24 en-j velopes, valued at $1-00, or em-.1 bossed effect, valued at $1.75. I GIFF BAKER 39 LEE AVENUE Toronto, -:- Ont. that of maple syrup approximately 2,000,000 gallons, with a total value of more than $3,000,000. This output is produced by nearly 50,000 farmers in Central Canada - and the total number of trees now being tapped annually ranges between twenty and twenty-five million. Six years ago the total output of maple products j was valued at about $6,000,000, but! Landscape Drawing with Lesson N since then the trade in maple pro-1 8- We here studied the use of ducts, as in many other lines, has Range Finder to select composition been considerably reduced. | Then we announced a Landscape The tapping of maple trees goes Sketching Contest and offered three resting one above the other aniL three different colors or tones of cubes. Then we also studied the light and shade effect of these cubes and a cast shadow upon cylinder. The problem of a hollow hexagon was also explained and il7 lustrated. We took up our first study back to the Indian days, on the < ern seaboard, and while little ap-1 pears in history about their'method of extracting the isap and rendering it into syrup, references are found hai dance: illu rtisls i by ] ; Canadia Lesson No. 9, we continued the e of a Range Finder, and also how change a bit of scenery around order to make a new composition. dances, held in the spring. It 1 Lesson No. 10, illustrates iS5 however that the of pen and inkj and alg0 brush tech. niques, together with the use of white paint combined with maple syrup industry began ceive prominence in the reports of the governors and intendants of New France. Towards the end of the ISth century, the industry gained recognition as a commercial venture of some magnitude. Much of the advancement of the industry is attributed to modern methods of collecting and boiling the sap, making refining simple and profitable. Although maple syrup and sugar mak-' ing are still carried on in a more or less primitive way in 'some sections, there are also a number of refineries using high-speed, scientific machinery for the purpose. Gold can be beaten out that one ounce will cover ai 146 square feet. Jbf CUTS & SORES] f mm*20 There's nothing totter I jB The method of using a decorative technique of landscape for advertising purposes was ' demonstrated in Lesson No. 11. We also studied pen stipple and scatter work by the tooth brush. Lesson No. 12, brought out the filing away of sample pictures for future reference. Lesson No. 13, was given over to answering special questions and problems submitted by our students, this proved to be very interesting and helpful to both the Art Director as well as the students. Lesson No. 14, was a continuation of study on tree trunks. Trees in different atmospheric conditions were dealt with in Lesson No. 17, such as seen in rain or snow effects. Strong sunlight effects on trees was studied in Lesson No. 18 together with the effective use of the crayon pencil for sketching certain kinds of trees. Pine needles, reflection of tall grasses upon water, stone and grass in strong sunlight was studied in Lesson No. 19. Lessons 20 and 21 taught the value of carrying around a sketch book with you when out walking, so that important and valuable little bits of useful material may be recorded and then filed for future reference. Lesson No. 22. changes the scene to water, and boats, and birds. The winners of our Sketching Contest were announced and prizes sent out to the three lucky winners. Contrasts in ocean going boats or ships were illlustrated in Lesson No. 23, in modern and early shipping-events. A test drawing was asked for in illustrating with pen lines a. pictorial scene of water, horizon and i this being a very important study as will be sen in the near future. Master this important feature of be well. iswered in this ply may have Questions will be Questions will be department. Anyor ceive a personal i same if a 3c stamped, addressed velope is enclosed with the request. The Art Director, Our Sketch Club, 73 Adelaide Street, West, Toronto. $100,000,000 Gain In Tourists Seen Total of $300,000,000 For Business in Canada For 1935 Forecast Ottawa.--The return from the tourist business in Canada will approximate $300,000,000 in 1935, representing an increase of $100,000,000 over 1934, D. L. Dolan. director of the Canadian Tourist Bureau, told he Senate Tourist Committee re-lently. "More people in, the United States | are looking to Canada lor tourist In Biblical days lamb, unblemish-1 purposes than ever before," the of-ed and of choice quality, was of-1 ficial said. "There is a tremen- LAMB ONE OF BEST OF MEATS fered up in sacrifice, and even today in the Holy Land lamb is the chosen meat for religious feasts. In Canada lamb was first used as a farm meat in the early days of settlement at logging bees, barn raisings, and other festive gatherings. In those days lamb owed its popularity to the fact that it was fresh-killed, thus possessing all the quality of a high-class farm product. Nowadays, after a lull in po-favour, the fine flavour of lamb is once more being duly appreciated and the use of lamb is becoming more general in Canadian homes. With modern packing-h< facilities, with the Dominion Department of Agriculture meat inspection service, and with the sheep industry well organized, choice de-liciously flavored lamb available for the retail trade in Canada all the year round. At this season of the year, a regular supply of freshly-killed carcasses from Prairie raised range lambs fattened in feed lots throughout Canada on the best of clover or alfalfa hay and Canadian grains are on display in meat stores and butcher shops. Roasts and chops from these carcasses are tender, carrying a large amount of juicy, lean meat. Dinners served from dous increase in Canadian travel." A sum approximating $25,000 will be spent this year in Canadian newspapers and magazines advertising the tourist trade of this country, he said. It was most important to develop interprovincial tourist, traffic, Senator Dennis said. $150,000 TO BE SPENT The amount to be spent this year in advertising this country's tourist attractions in the United States, hich was an important market for the promotion of Canada's tourist trade, will approximate about $150,-000, the official said. Mr. Dennis asked whether the question of the use of the radio in conjunction with the Canadian newspapers and magazines in developing tourist trade between the different Canadian provinces had been considered. A suggestion was under consideration by which the Canadian Radio Broadcasting Commission might allot a few minutes two or three times a week at the end of the day's program to giving facts on the tourist attractions in the East and West, he replied. The total amount ispent on advertising up to the end of this month estimated at $80,026 by Mr. Dolan. One Canadian campaign cost $13,-000 and the first advertising campaign in the United States last Aug-$17,525, he said. The second United States campaign had cost about $49,000. TOTAL OUTLAY IS $92,000. The total expenditure by the Bureau amounted to $92,000 up to the present, he said. The bureau was closing the present fiscal year with balance of $6,000 of its appropriation. August campaign in the United States 40 newspapers in 23 yering 17 states were patronized, he said. Many inquiries had been received from the United States as a consequence of the August campaign, and much information was received which helped the bureau in basing its campaign this spring, he added. The information indicated that the best sources of tourist traffic from the United States were: New York Pennsylvania, Ohio, Illinois, Wisconsin, Missouri, California, Minnesota, Iowa, Kansas, Michigan and Indiana. The main inquiries received, he said, were about hunting and fishing, motoring and national parks. "Our statistics as to the source from which we draw our most tourist trade is the same and agrees ith those of the railways and steamship companies over a period of years," he said. The bureau had consulted the provinces, the railways and tourist, bureaus in different cities so as to wishes of these various organizations in regard to the "general plan In their own provinces," he said. Senator W. A. Buchanan (Lib., Lethbridge) urged the importance oi promoting the tourist business among farmers. For this purpose Senator Buchanan said, the occasion for public speaking by tourist officials should be seized. ARE YOU MISERABLE ? n disappeared. New liic, Issue No. 18--'35 ^0. custom China come mysterious stories of prisoners deprived of Salt, a form of torture and death. Strange customs and superstitions feature our wonderful new licture book for Children: Vould you like to read this gripping story ?Then send the coupon now. It is free. Try this: When beating eggs--A little Salt helps you beat them quickly. WINDSOR SALT

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