Grimsby Independent, 23 Jan 1935, p. 3

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

It was recommended that the chairman of the conference, Dr. H. M. Tory, President of the National Research Council, appoint a comâ€" mittee consisting of representatives of departments of the Dominion Government to draw up a research programme on new uses of potatoes, the preservation and canning of poâ€" tatoes and food values generally, including particularly the food vaâ€" lue of potatoes and the claims made in advertising for various foods and diets.© It was stated that such a programme of research might be underamme Of \®~ by :0 NDominion undertaken jointly x7 the ~, _ _ Mo Enp emereeeeeeeee Onenei i 0000 paxtment of Pensions and National Health (Food and Drug Laboratory) and the National Research Counâ€" eil. It was stated that certain of the investigations projected heldâ€" out definite promise of valuable reâ€" guits. _ Potatoes, ® was said, could be substituted for corn now importâ€". ed in manufacturing â€" millions of pounds of a variety of food proâ€" ducts. _ Dr. W. Gallay of the Naâ€" tional Research Council said his calculations showed that the entire present â€" Canadian potato surplus might be so used. _ The possibility of using potatoes for the manufacâ€" ture of alcohol was discounted. If the alcohol so produced was to be used with gasoline it was stated that the price of the mixture would be approximately three cents above the present market price of gasoline if 10 p. c. alcohol were used, and would require compulsory legislaâ€" tion. Such compulsory legislation was in effect in other countries, inâ€" 1c{luding Germany and Czechoslovaâ€" ia. On the agerda ~f the conference, for discussion, were new uses ~for Canadian potatoes, such as for â€"conâ€" fectioners‘ glucose, grape .sugar, gyrup, starch, potato flour and potaâ€" to chips and suc nonâ€"edible products as laundry starch, dextrine, glue, gum, alchol and in making foundry moulds. Other means of disposing of this surples are the â€" preservation and canning of potatoes; the use of potatoes as food for live stock; the possibilities of extending the market for Canadian seed potatoes; market possibilities both foreign and domâ€" estic for commercial grades; proâ€" blems of transportation and the posâ€" gibilities of increasing consumption ofv potatoes by advert‘sing. The 1984 potato crop in Canada is placed at 78,735,000 bushels an increase of 7,494,000 bushels over the production in 1983. The princiâ€" pal export markets for Canadian potatoes are the United States and Cuba but high tariffis and other handicaps, ~ recently ~imposed, preâ€" vent the normal movement of. the Canadian product to those counâ€" tries. Another factor that aggraâ€" wates the situation is the gradual deâ€" €line in the per capita consumption of potatoes in Canada which is now @bout.four bushels per year. In the United States it is only about two and oneâ€"half bushels per person. On the agerda ~f the conference, for discussion. were new uses ~for The Director of the Commercial intelligence Service of the Departâ€" ment of Trade and Commerce, reâ€" ported that the Department, through its Trade Commissioners, was makâ€" ing a survey of the potato export possibilities in â€" various countries, but the information so far received did not offer very much encourageâ€" n.ent. ' Certain anomalies in freight raâ€" tes were pointed out to the Conferâ€" ence. For example, the rate for earring potatoes from Halifax to Bermuda was 15 cents per barrel higher than for carrying potatoes from Bermuda to Halifax. Netherâ€" lands ships were carrying potatoes to the West Indies at from 50 to 5b3 cents per crate as compared with a rate of 60 to 65 cents which was open to Canadian shippers. Holâ€" land, it was stated, was subsidizing the expor‘s of potatoes to the exâ€" tent of tariffs placed against them. A conference of representatives Of the National Research Council, the Dominion Departments of Agriâ€" eulture and Trade and Commerce, the Ontario, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island Departments of â€" Agriculture, the Canadian Horticultural Council and the principal potato growers of the Maritime Provinces was held ir Otâ€" tawa on December. 16th to discuss ways and means for using the surâ€" plus :‘of over. 7,000,000 bushels of potatoes on hand this year. Dr. H. T. Gussow, Dominion Boâ€" tanist, told the conference that while 39 per cent. of the potato proâ€" duction of Germany was used in feeding live stock, only 11 per cent. of the Canadian production was so used. , A report of the discussion is beâ€" ing prepared to serve as the basis of further discussion. A programâ€" me of research and investigation is to be carried on. MEET TO DISCUSS POTATO SURPLUS "The depression seems to have reâ€" vived â€"an old and vastly significant aspect of the American spiritâ€"the spirit of unity and co.operation.‘"â€" Frances Perkins. Report Of Meeting At Ottawa To Be Issuedâ€"Investigaâ€" tion To Be Carried On. of research might be of \*~ by the Dominion jointly uy the .. , . .. _ ‘"There are two democracies in America; it seems to me. TLere is the democracy of bad manners and the democracy of good manners."â€" J. B. Priestly. ‘The" Yukon of Robert Service has vanished as completely as the Engâ€" ind of â€"William .Shakespeare.â€"Hamâ€" ‘ltom Herald; . And. if a stranger should happen to :come tramping over the Whiteâ€" horse Pass into Dawson City, with a glint in his eye and muttering of gold ‘‘in them thar hills,"" he would probably be sent outside on the next boatâ€" and incarceraed in one of the provincial asylums. $is Alaska and the Yukon have grown respectable. â€" Skagway is living on the memory of Soapy Smith, selling guns he used and did not use, and if there are any ladies left that were ever known zs Lou, they have changed their names and gone in for large families and for growing vegetables. am 65 years of age, and everybody that knows me says I am a wonder to get on, after what 1 was."â€"J. B. Do you realise what causes rheuâ€" matism ? Nothing but sharpâ€"edged uric acid erystals which form as the result of sluggish eliminating organs. Kruschen Salts can always be countâ€" ed upon to clear these painful eryâ€" stals from the system. Why worry about rheumatism ? This old fellow had it almost as bad as it could be. But he just found the right remedy, stuck to it, and now he‘s working againâ€"at 65 years of age. Let him tell you about it:â€" "For two years and a half," he writes, *J rave suffered from rheumatism. For eighteen months I could not turn »ver in bed, nor heip mysef in any way. My legs and feet were swollen, and I could not sleep or get any rest until I started taking Kruschen Salts. After taking one bottle, I went about on two canes. I kept on taking it, as I found the pains were leaving me. I have taken six bottles, and now 1 have started work again. I Feel That They‘re Slipping Losing Their"Grip" onThings Now Science Explains Why So Many People Past 40 At 6\2â€"In Bed With Rheumatism Bm seR Sa e io 0 ul ... "weak." Have headaches, dizziâ€" ness, stomach upsets. Many people ‘round 40 think they‘re *‘growing ‘ol’c,l.:’YTheY feAel tgred a lot 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 have one of these acid stomach upsets, take Phillips‘ Milk of Magnesia after meals and before going to bed. That‘s alll > Try this. Soon you‘ll feel like another _ person! Take either the familiar liquid "PHILLIPS‘" or the convenient new Phillips‘ < Milk of Magnesia Tablets. Made in Canada. «rso in Taster rorm: â€" #Wa&| Phillips® Milk of Magnesia Tabâ€" â€" J\ lets ar:'e now on sale at all ‘drug ‘E\"‘\‘L stores everywhere. Each tiny tab= â€" [=Piubs: let is the equivalent of * T2\ s 1 a tea%)oonful of Genâ€" : @ uine Phillips Milk of &z | Tortrogblee Magnesia. Cose S( oo ho. PHILLIPS® / > At 65 The "Lift" and Energy of Cod Liver Oil Vitamins A and D, abundantly found in Scott‘s AMinAurioring Emulsion, bolster up tired, WiÂ¥1ter-worn bodies, HEALTH £SPRENGTH restoring vitality and strength. But Scott‘s DEPEND EBs Emulsion gives you more: Emulsificationâ€"the on me / minute breaking up of the particlesâ€"making for quicker assimilation, easier digestibility. Yet b D* none of the virtues of pure cod liver oil are a lost, One of the PLUS values you get only in s ] \ Scott‘s Emulsion. THE COD LIVER OIL witHh ThE PLUS vauur AMfilh Where Men Are Men of Me Working Again FORM : L\' Q\‘\v esia Tabâ€" A w w NO : all drug B y tiny tab= "‘.'."‘.{Zf PE E. . o rwr > roubles wco. *r4 Euce ) TY ts For Sale by Your Druggist PLUS GREATER EFFICIENCY Kingston, Ont. â€" An unique 0¢â€" casion for Mr. and Mrs. Calvin. Arâ€" nold of the village of Roblin in Lenâ€" nox and Addington counties was reâ€" cently celebrated, It marked their 78th wedding anniversary. Before the Dominion of Canada existed as such, they were married in Napanee on Jan 1, 1867, Confedâ€" eration year, by Rev. John Clark. Shortly after they settled on a farm at Selby, retiring to Roblin 10 years ago. Mr. Arnold is 88 and his wife, formerly Polly Ann Hartin, four years younger. Although not in the E.EEL_Q,f) healthâ€"theyâ€"live â€"alone.and Mrs Arnold has complete charge of her household. The Hydro engineers report that a test has shown that one can read a newspaper with ease 150 feet away from the light, or midway beâ€" tween two lamps. It is hoped that if the scheme proves feasible, the erectâ€" ion of such lamps at dangerous corners may reduce fatalities. / The lamps on number 8 highway arie 300 feet apart, and are placed at a height of 23 feet above ‘the ground. They extend out over the pevement two feet. & Four daughters live near them. They are: Mrs. Waler Dodge of Selby. Mrs. John McFarlane of South Napanee; Mrs. William Ramâ€" say of Newburgh and Mrs. Kenneth Weese of Centreville. A fifth daughâ€" ter, Mrs. George McFarlane, died several years ago. They have one son, George Arnold of Sharp‘s Corâ€" ners in the Roblin district. The four lamps have a capacity of 10,000 lumens each, 250 watts, and they are reported to cast very little shadow, thus reducing traffic hazâ€" ards. The lamps on number 8 highway are 300 feet apart, and are placed Hon. Leopold Macaulay, former minister of â€" highways, brought back the idea with him after his visit to Europe in 19383. He reported that such lighting was used on many highways there and had resulted in decreased numbers of accidents. The Hydro Commission has been giving the proposal consideration for some time, and a few weeks ago inâ€" stalled such lights at an important intersection in Toronto. The hay was bought by H. B. ‘Spence, Osseo, Minn., feed dealer, for sale to farmers in the Osseo terâ€" ritory just north of Minneapolis. It will be Aelivered as soon as shipâ€" ment can be sent over the border. Torontoâ€"Experimenting along the lines of advancements made on highâ€" ways in Europe, the Ontario Hydro Electric Commission has installed four powerful sodium vapor lamps on number 8 highway immediately east of Saltfleet in Saltfleet Townâ€" ship. If this experiment proves to be a success, it is possible that similar lighting may be placed on portions of other provincial highways. _ Double Celebration â€" Members of the family and friends were present at the Arnold home for the combined wedding anâ€" niversary and New Year‘s Day celeâ€" bration. Minneapolisâ€"The first purchase of Canadian hay for drought relief in the Northwest, amounting to 85 carloads, is announced by the Minâ€" neapolis headquarters of the Farm Aid Program, the agency for deâ€" ficiency distribution. 3 Four Installed By Hydro On No. 8 Highway Near Saltfeet SODIUM . VAPOR LAMPS TESTED Hay From Canada For U.S. Northwest For Aged Couple t BUILD eo~es,1 PM VITAMIN D. HEALTH £SFRENGTH DEPEND 1 _on me / ,f&, DE on me/ :% ‘ C s S D? ] \ BA She told her mother she swallowâ€" ed a fiveâ€"cent piece and it was lodgâ€" ed in her throat; Her mother hurâ€" ried her to a hospital. When the Xâ€"ray found no trace of a coin, the girl admitted she just "didn‘t want to go back to school." Educators, parents and â€" children are interested in the new system of grading recently adopted by schools of Tuscaloosa County, Ala. Students will no longer be given A.‘s, B‘s, C‘s, ete. Their work will be classified only as satisfactory or unsatisâ€" factory. Sir Thomas Nell; president of the conference of industrial assurance approved societies, speaking recentâ€" ly at the Hotel Metropole, London, said:â€""There is every indication that the public conscience is beâ€" coming impatient at the failure to reduce the national rate of materâ€" nal mortality, The remedy is not to be found in some single spectacuâ€" lar discovery. An inquiry undertakâ€" en by the societies showed that of cases investigated 60 per cent of the deaths in childbirth related to first confinements. If the whole of these could be brought within the safety zone of expert treatment and attenâ€" tion an important step forward will have been taken," Sir Thomas said. "If the right type of institution were available to their members socâ€" ieties would be prepared to use their unique opportunities for prevailing upon expectant mothers to utilize the.a, and would be ready to pay to such institutions at least a part of the maternity benefit in consideraâ€" tion of service rendered." With the Xâ€"ray around, it . isn‘t safe any. more for a girl. to .play sick to keep out of school. "The greatest tragedy is when the expectant mother is too late in appealing for assistance. To enlist the coâ€"operation of the woman is, therefore, the urgent problem. Our own, societies would be only too ready and willing to place their orâ€" ganizations at the disposal of the auâ€" thorities responsible. _ Ida Russell, of Lancaster, Pa., 11, tried it and found it. Twin Brothers Born In â€"~â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"<â€"â€"LOnifferent Indianapolis, Ind. â€" Mr. and Mrs. Harry Boles twin sons will have birthdays in different years. The first was born New Year‘s eve at 11.50 p.m. and the other 17 minutes after midnight in 1985. Cater to Wants Of Tourist, Says Hotel Official Problem of Maternal Mortality in Britain "The tourist wants something more than porridge, bacon and eggs for breakfast. You must cater to _ his wants." So says the Blackpool genâ€" eral secretary of the British Federâ€" ation of Hotel and Apartment Asâ€" sociations, in his annual report. The secretary said he did not beâ€" lieve any other country in the world could provide a better afternoon tea and dinner than Britain, but "even here we should make ourselves famiâ€" liar with certain foreign dishes if we intended catering for the forâ€" eign tourist." "In any case," he added, "I would impress on you the desirability to make your guest, foreign or British, feel he is not lost but is an essential part of the scheme of things. The important part is that you can help the government, the municipal auâ€" thorities and others interested in the tourist industry to earn that $500,â€" 000,000 of ready money which is ours for the asking." Secretary Blackpool Associaâ€" ion Suggests British Make Themselves Familiar with Foreign Dishes In this effort newspaper adverâ€" tising would play an important part. Mr. Evans said he could not speak too highly of this medium. Indeed, he knew of no other that could beat it; it was supreme. Their foreign rivals, with State aid, were in close coâ€"operation with newspapers at home ‘and abroad, with the result that they were deâ€" veloping a cultural propaganda pecuâ€" liarly favorable to them. He had not seen anything brilliant in the shape of news to attract the visitors in Great Britain. an‘t Play Sick To ... Keep Out Of School ~With Xâ€"Ray . Around "This country will have systematiâ€" cally to train experts whose main objective must be to influence favorâ€" ably all sorts of travel facilities in this country. This is a brandâ€"new field of educational training which our polytechnics and like institutions should forthwith introduce." ‘Satisactory‘ Or Not Â¥ ears \An Editor‘s Secrets An occasional newspaperâ€" column writer, who used to be a daily column writer was telling his readers the other day how he did his writing. His excuse for telling them, as he maintained, was that there was a considerable public curiosity. about it. $ He said that he went about all over the place for 16 hours a day, taking notes, on little nondescript bits of paper, of things he saw and things that people said to him. Then, he said, he came into the office and he read his notes for an hour. Then, he said, he sat down to lhis typeâ€" writer, and in another hour, he had the thing done, complete. Then, he said, he went home to bed. We remember thinking. as we read it that it was a free and careâ€" free rendering of a method of newspaper â€"composition undoubtedâ€" ly authentic, especially the bit about going home to bed. We are unable to report in @‘s more austere place a simflar »â€" liic curiosity abfut the metly ¢: more regular newspaper waetare d!\n the creation of their bits d pieces. We have found, for our part, we are sorry. to say, the alâ€" most universal incidenrce of a popu. lar delusion. It seems to be assumâ€" edâ€"if the thing is worth â€"a . moâ€" ment‘s conjecture at allâ€"that you just sit down to your typetriter and, hey, presto, the bit or piece is accomplished: â€" â€" > . All these columns of printed matâ€" ter which appear in the paper day by day, which are first of all visiâ€" ble in time and space as writings done by the hands of writing men and women, they are just so many fortuitous rabbits out of the magiâ€" cal journalistic hatâ€"that seems to be the géneral idea. s But we shouldn‘t be making this mild complaint if it were not that making it permits us to say someâ€" thing that has long been waiting to be said about office visitors. They are the people who come in and, by all their speech and _ conduct, infer ‘that you are not writing unâ€" less you are actually slogging away at your typewriter. ; In fact they infer that you are not working at all.. "I see you‘re not working," they say, or, "I see you are not busy for a minute." Sometimes they want to know what you do with yourself in a newspaper office when you are not writing. "What does the editor do," said one of them, God bless his heart, "besides writing the ediâ€" torials?" Well, there is noâ€" making any headway against a popular delusion of this sort. We might as well own up to it that _we just sit down to our typeWTIt@TS Raa .«lie aIâ€"â€"tâ€"=or comes into our head. If we said that we ftook notes for 16 hours a day (like a column writer), we shouldn‘t be believed. If we said that newspapermen sometimes had to read as well as write, somebody would say "What for?" We think we had better put "©30" under this, and go home to bed. Alberta‘s Beet: Sugar Indusâ€" try Shows Remarkable _Growth Raymond, Altaâ€"With increasing faith in an industry that this year has brought them a record crop of 179,000 tons and which may net them $1,000,000, farmers have begun plowing in preparation for the 1935 sugar beet crop. Early cultivation will prevent soil drifting. Each successive beet crop has esâ€" tablished a record since the indusâ€" try was established in â€" southern Alberta in 1928 but this year‘s inâ€" crease of 30,000 tons is the greatest in history. It is believed the indusâ€" try will mean the distribution _ of $1,750,000 in the district this year and net the refinery here approXxâ€" imately $2,000,000 if the wholesale price of sugar proves reasonable. Last year farmers received a toâ€" tal of $6.38 per ton for their beets. This consisted of the $5 per ton base rate and three bonus payâ€" ments during the year totalling $1,38 per ton. Returns this year to farmers will depend on the sugar content and the average wholesale price of sugar between now â€" and next October when the last ~ of the crop will be sold. Present sugâ€" ar content averages 17 per cent. compared with 18.41 per cent. in 1933. It is estimated bonus payments on the present crop will net farmers $850,000. Firmer prices before next October will swell total earnings to Sets New Record Are You Sluggish ? To Throw Off Energyâ€"Stealing Impurities, enjoy a glass or two each week of Energizing, Effervescent bonus payments _will net farmers rices before next total earnings to the $1,000,000 mark. An additional $750,000 will be paid out for labor, coal, freight and materials. Factory operations, which began in Septemâ€" ber, will not end until February and will provide employment for 420 men working three eightâ€"hour shifts. The factory expects to produce more than 50,000,000 pounds of sugar valued at approximately $2,000,000. "There is reason to believe thatlI the average annual damage to the t forests of Canada, caused by inâ€" sects, may <approximate in â€" value 1 that caused by fire, which averages : nearly $10,000,000 â€" annually" sai(,llj R. D. Craig in a paper read at one 1 of the sessions of the conference of |â€" officers of. the Dominion â€" Entomoâ€" |â€" logical Branch, Dominion: Departâ€" A ment of Agriculture held recently | in Ottawa.. Mr. Craig‘s paper was | entitled "The Forest Resources of | Canadaâ€"Their Protection â€" Against |. Insect Pests". * Continuing he said that the loss to the forest wealth caused by inâ€" sect pests constitutes . a . most seâ€" rious drain on one of.the most valâ€" uable of the Dominion‘s natural reâ€" sources. The extent to which > inâ€" sects can ‘carry on ‘their work of destruction is not readily realized by the for»st authorities,nor : :by those engaged in the forest indusâ€" tries. He emphasized the econoâ€" mic value of the work of entomoâ€" logists, and said that in his opinion the introduction of> parasites, as> a means of biological control, is proâ€" ving one of the most . effective means of direct attack, and mainâ€" tained that great credit is due to the Dominion Entomological Branch for what has been done in this field. Fungi is also another cause of great loss in the forests. ° The forests of Canada cover 1,â€" 150,000 square miles, or about oneâ€" third of the total land area of the country. â€" The stand of -merchantr‘ able timber is estimated at 165,â€" 880,000 cubic feet, valued at $1,â€" 689,000,000. The young growth is placed at 400,000,000 . cubic feet. From the standpoint of forest ecoâ€" nomy, it is most important to proâ€" tect the young stands of trees from insects, fungi and fire, the three principal causes of loss, for the fuâ€" ture of the forest industries deâ€" ]pends on these young trees. About 82 per cent. of the accessible timber Ui~ / COMMeTCIHL | sree as | cuaiceav=~e ‘ trees, 11 per cent. is intolerant hardâ€" woods (white birch and poplar) and seven per cent. tolerant hardâ€" woodsâ€"yellow â€" birch, maple and Damage Is. Estimated At $10,000,000 Annually INSECT ENEMIES OF CANAD‘S FORESTS elm. FORECASTS NOT ALL REALIZED Montrealâ€"A year of définite proâ€" gress toward a better economic posiâ€" tion in Canda is the description of 1934 running through many articles 1934 Prosperity â€" Montreal Edtor Believes Gains Noteworthy _ on the country‘s business and inâ€" dustrial life published recently in the Montreal Gazette‘s commercial and financial review, "If the year 1934 failed to realize fully all the predictions of 19833 prophets," writes Paul Bilkey, â€" edâ€" itorâ€"inâ€"chief, "it was nevertheless a year of progress. It may have been and doubtless it was, disappointing If you have catarrhal deafness or head noises go to your druggist and get 1 oz.. of Parmint (double strength), and add to it 4& pint of hot water and a little sugar. Take a tablespoonful four times a day. 1 & . us medharn 94 If Your Ears Ring With Head Noises 11A a c indiihe rebsialih 7 i This wilil often bring quick relief from the distressing head noises. Clogged nostrils should open, breathâ€" ing become easy and the mucous stop dropping into the throat. It is easy to prepare, costs little, and is pleasant to take. Anyone who has catarrhal deafness or head noises should give this prescription a trial. SKIN RASHES Give Place to Velvet Smooth Skins In almost countless numbers, skin sufferers have had cause to be thankful for D.D.D., the prescription of a highly successful physician, Dr. D. D. Dennis: This liquid prescription, now made and endorsed by Campana‘s Italian Balm chemists, allays irritation almost at once, and quickly clears up such skin troubles as eczema, hives, acne, ringâ€" worm, dandruff, pimples and rashes. Ask your druggist for B.D.D. Prescripâ€" tion. Trial size, 35¢; Guaranteed to give instant relief or money re. unded. 2 Issue No. 3â€"‘35 to many people; if so it was hecause they expected too much." Mr. Bilkey reviewed factors miliâ€" tating against any important alteraâ€" tion during the past year in the fundamental conditions which lay beneath the worldâ€"wide depression, such as political upheavals and recurrent threats of war on the continent of Europe;. collapse of efforts towards universal disarmaâ€" ment and uncertainties surrounding developments in the Far East and continued . "It is scarcely surprising, therefore, that a recent estimate of the gain in world trade based upon the exports of 19 _ countries has amounted to only five per cent. since the low point of the depression was reached. "In these. cireumstances, the ecoâ€" nomic grains actually registered in Canada in 1934 were all the more noteworthy. . They, were significant of the ability of the Dominion to so employ its own resources as to atâ€" tain some measure of immunity from commercial debility prevalent elseâ€" where." ; 4 Mr: < Bilkey® found large increases in the physical volume of, business, in external trade, including higher exports of newsprint, pig iron, steel, etc., and an encouraging rise in volume of reveune freight carried by the railways. _ The improvement, however, was by no means general. There were many lines of business it failed to reaci and a very large number of individuals derived _ no benefit from: it. Generally speakâ€" ing, therefore, the psychological reâ€" action was disappointing. Pipe Smokers! fill up with GOLDEN VIRGINIA® and enjoy a really good smoke! C.N.R. Gets $1,114 "Conscience Money" Montrealâ€"Persons who defrauded the Canadian National Railways in one way or another in 1934 and whose consciences bothered them reâ€" mitted _ anonymously _ a total of $1,114 during the past year, the Te o on es on t th ks Ha ks o o eâ€"alltns week. ~s Ata y e The largest single amount of it «conscience money" was $800, and the smallest 25 cents. Both these reâ€" mittances were made last October. AN OFFER TO EVERY INVENTOR, List of wanted inventions and full imormation sent free. The Ramsay Company, World Pa.terLt At’ltorneyfs‘ 213 WUUAIPDWIAT§ TT UIOM ERRRRINY AANNCC Bank Street, Ottawa, Canada, WYVÂ¥ nome. Sewing machine necesâ€" sary. No selling. Ontario Neckwear Company, Dept. 297, Toronto 8. OBTAIN the highest prices for your old gold, silver or platinum. Deal direct with the largest refiners of precious metal scrap in _ Canada. The Williams Gold Refining ©o., ~Ltd., Assayers, Smelters and Refiners, Box 219A, Fort Erie, North, Ont. 76 BUFF MINORCASâ€"New breed for Canada. Premium size white eggS: Huge broilers. Catalogue on request. NEUHAUSER‘S, Chatham, Ontario. Classified Advertising $ $ $ FOR YOUR OLD goLp OMEN wanted to sew for us at FEMALE HELP WANTED stheHabitOf _._ Dentifrice POULTRY PATENTS

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy