Clarington Digital Newspaper Collections

Orono Weekly Times, 28 Jul 1938, p. 2

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Classified Advertising POULTRY AND POULTRY 150UI PM ENT COCKERELS AT REDUCED PRICES while they last. Barred Rock and New Hampshire Reds, 2 week old $11.95, 3 week old $15.95, day old $5.95. Big Egg Quality add lc. Baden Electric Chick Hatchery, Limited, Baden, Ontario. pin,LET BARGAINS WHILE THEY last. Barred Rocks day old !H4c, 10 day 1314c, 2 week 1514c 3 week 1914c; Leghorns day old 13toc, 1U day 17toe, 2 week IStoc, 3 week 23toe. Large Egg Quality add Rocks lc, Leghorns 2c. Top Notch Chickeries, Guelph, Ontario. A NUMBER OF BRAY STARTED Leghorn pullet chicks, 2 to 3 Weeks old, will be available this week. Also day-old chicks in some of the heavier breeds. Write tor prices today. Bray Hatchery, 130 John St. North, Hamilton, Ontario. END OF THE HATCHING SEASON. Save 2 to 3 weeks by ordering Bray started Leghorn pullets to- day. A few* of the heavier breeds will be available until the end of July, Write for prices today, gray Hatchery, 130 John St. North, Hamilton, Ontario. PROMPT DELIVERY ON DAY OLD and started Barred Rock, White Rock New Hampshire Red and White Leghorn pullets, cockerels and non-sexed chicks. Send for latest price list. Twaddle Chick Hatcheries Limited, -Fergus, Ont. LAST CALL FOR BABY CHICKS. Catch up with Bray started Leg- horn pullets. Some 2 and 3 week- old leghorn pullets are available. Order now while our supply lasts. Bray Hatchery, 130 John St. North, Hamilton, Ontario.. FURNITURES LYONS TRADE-IN DEPARTMENT 478 Yonge St. JULY CLEARANCE SALE Reconditioned Furniture Every article in our store marked down for quick clearance, thorough- ly cleaned, reconditioned and sold under a positive money back guar- antee of satisfaction. A line oppor- tunity for you to buy high class reconditioned furniture at a fraction of its real value. $39 qq Bed room suite, dresser, chiffonier, full size bed and sagless spring. Perfect. An Beautiful vanity, dresser, «jptA.UU fun £jze bed and sagless spring- Floor sample. dt/jO Modern suite, vanity, ve- fTp.W netian mirror, chiffonier, Jill! size panel bed and suglëss spring, , •BQ nil Smart 4 piece suite in wal- «pCCT.vU nut finish, large dresser, chiffonier, vanity, full gjze bed and rag less spring'. Like new. Large suite, dresser, triple IpOly.UV mjrfor vanity, chiffrobe, full size bed, sagless spring. Cost over $200.00 new. Perfect condition. d»ii Q, cn Large dresser, full size bed, sâgless spring and brand new felt mattress. $79. qq Solid walnut suite, dresser, vanity, chiffpnier, full size bed and sagless spring, in perfect condition, QC Dressers, $1.75 wash stands, $8.75 chiffoniers. Solid oak dining room suites, buffet, extension table and 0 leather upholstered chairs, . AA 0 piece suite, walnut finish, buffet, extension table, china cabinet and 6 slip seat chairs. Refinished. Aft Beautiful oak suite, buffet, f^O.vUexj:ensi0n table and 6 leath- er upholstered chairs. on Fine walnut finish suite, èpOèy.UU buffet, extension table, china cabinet and 6 leather seat chairs. cfA English oak suite, buffet, 5p>Oi£***Jv extension table, china cab- inet and 6 leather seat chairs. aa Rich walnut finish suite, îpv^*UV]apge buffet, china cabinet, extension table and 6 leather seat chairs, perfect. Beautiful walnut suite, 9 $79.00 pieces, buffet, china cab- inet, extension table and ti leather scat chairs, Like new. $89, qq Modern 9 piece suite, buf- fet, extension table, china cabinet and 6 leather seat chairs. Cost new over $200.00. $127. qq A $500 solid walnut suite, beautiful carved buffet, extension table, china cabinet and 6 leather upholstered chairs. Perfect condition. $119 ftri Burl walnut suite, large vu hv buffet, closed front, chi- na cabinet, extension table and 6 chairs with backs and seats uphol- stered in blue mohair. Cost new over $400.00. Completely refinished. $49, , qq Beautiful 3 piece chester- field suite in rust repp, re- versible Marshall spring cushions. Floor sample. AA Large mohair suite, 3 fd'JI.UU pieces, figured, reversible Marshall cushions in perfect condi- tion. aa Three piece brown mohair .,UU pillow arms, Marsh- all réversible spring cushions,' Thor- oughly cleaned. $35, $14, gQ Lafge 3 piece chesterfield suite, tapestry cover, Marshall spring cushions. CA Smart 3 piece jacquard Kojte, reversible Marshall spring cushions Perfect $27 EfA French jacquard* suite, 3 $14. farm for sale pieces, Marshall rex^rs- jb)e spring cushions. Perfect con- dition. <t> 4!r AA Kroehler chesterfield bed suite, 3 pieces, upholstered in fine velour cover. Cost new about $ 445.00V 0E£ 4. odd chesterfields, mohair ifrii:.sru covers, Marshall reversible cushions. *7 Rfi 3 smart 2 piece suites, 4?,I e «OU | chesterf ield and 1 chair to match in fine mohair covers. OS? 6 piece breakfast suites, «.c $S.»5 Kitchen cabinets; $400 ice boxes. $11.1*5 Singer sewing machines, $4.05 gas stoves, $3.1*5 h r a. n d n e w f e 11 m a ttre s ses a n d h un* tireds of other outstanding values too numerous to mention. Write for free illustrated catalogue. LYONS TRADE-IN DEPARTMENT 478 Yonge St., Toronto FARM FOB SALEâ€"100 ACRES LOT 6, Con. 4, Township of Last Willi- ams, County of Middlesex, good clay loam, suitable fa.rm buildings, 20 acres of good hard maple sugar bush. Estate must be closed. Ap- ply to Hugh McIntyre Campbell, Executor of Estate, Ailsa Craig, Ontario, R. R. No. 1, or to A. W. Bixel, ICC., his Solicitor fctratn- l-oy, Ontario. ' films and prints ' ROLLS DEVELOPED AND LIGHT beautiful enlargements 30c. « regular prints and one FREE en- largement 25c. Service Guaran- teed. York Photo Service, IS,-.to King East. Toronto. MEDICAL TRY PR. McLEOD’S SCIENTIFIC remedy Stomachic, for your stom- ach trouble. Clears up gas, nau- sea, bloating, indigestion. Drug stores or direct. Write tor free information. 191 Albany Ave., io- ronto. I Candle Auctions Somerset is a county of queer old customs, and' one that dies hard is the Candle Auction which takes place at Tatworth, England. Although candle auctions are now rare, they were once common throughout England. A tallow candle is marked about an inch from the wick and all bidding must take place by. the time the fallow burns down to the mark. After the fixed mark is reached no further sales are made. Near Bridgwater is held the famous Sand-glass Auction, in which the highest bidder obtains the right to collect toll for one year on all vehicles crossing the River Barrett at Boroughbridge. More than $7,500 lias been paid for this privilege ! Here* an hour- glass is used. INFANTILE PARALYSIS CRIPPLES recover the use of their limbs un- der our new treatment. We give the famous foot treatment for tired aching feet. Hay Fever re- sponds instantly to our treatment. Don't suffer. Consult us regard- ing your case. Ailanao Health Clinic, 1 mile west of Erindale on Dundas Highway. GEORGIAN HAY SUMMER GAMP CAMP FRANKLIN'S PRIZE ESSAY Contest. First prize, one hundred dollars; second prize, fifty dollars, Themeâ€""Camp Franklin â€" the Camp with Ideals,” Full informa- tion regarding Canada s unique and pioneer recreational camp 1 or young men and young women, from Camp Franklin’s Toronto office, 83 Yonge Street. ______ NEWSPAPER OPPORTUNITY WEEKLY NEWSPAPER PROPER- ty and Job plant for sale in thriv- ing Ontario town. Excellent .lob printing business, complete equip- ment in splendid condition. Re- quires $4,000 cash, balance on easy terms to responsible purchaser. U. E. Brown, 114 Moore Ave., Tor- onto. odourless toilets YOU CAN HAVE CITY CONVENT - ences in your village or farm home without water supply or sewers Write for free information on our modern, self-emptying, odourless Toilets from $35.00 up and leave behind for ever the dread out- house with its flies, cold and un- healthy discomforts. ICaustine En- gineering Company, 104 Portland Street, Toronto, Ont. WAverley 8985. PERSONAL QUIT TOBACCO, SNUFF, EASILY, inexpensively. Home remedy. Tes- timonials. Guaranteed. Advice free Bartlett’s, Box 1, Winnipeg. EVERY MARRIED DOUBLE AND those contemplating .marriage should readâ€"“Sex and Youth," 104 pages, postpaid 25c. Our 12 page illustrated catalogue of sex books, drug sundries, etc., free upon re- quest. Supreme Specialty , 169 Yonge, Toronto. “photography Issue No. 31â€"- 38 ENLARGEMENT FREE WITH Ev- ery 25c order. Roll film developed and eight prints 25c. Reprints 3c. Established over 26 years. Bviglit- ling Studio, 29 Richmond Street East, Toronto. FREE ENLARGEMENT, ROLL DE- veldped, printed 25c, reprints 3c, Antill Studio, 73 Brock St., King- ston, Ont. ~ SUMMER RESORTS -SUNSET PARKâ€"SIX MILES NORTH of Callander on Highway No. 11. Three miles south of North Bay. Cabins and cottages on the beach of Lake Nipissing. Best fishing for pickerel and pike. Inner spring mattresses. Hot and cold showers. City water and lights. Boats for rent. Apply E. J. Jessop, 168 Fish- er Street, North Bay, Ontario. T R ACTOR MA GNET'O AND GENER A TOR RE l’AI RS SEND US YOUR TRACTOR MAGNE- to and Generator Repairs. YVe save you money. Ailanson Armature Manfr., 855 Bay St,, Toronto. Hear Modern Music At C. N. Exhibition It will be interesting to music lovers at the Canadian National Exhibition to compare the ultra modern rhythmic arrangements of popular and folk dance music as exemplified by the leading, dance orchestras, with the music of the band of the Royal Artillery from England with their more conven- tional interpretations of musical themes. There will be an unique opportunity to do this as three of the outstanding U. S. dance ag- gregations will be present at the new open air Dance Pavilion this year â€" Guy Lombardo and his Royal Canadians and the Tommy Dorsey and Benny Goodman units. Canadian National Railways Revenues The gross revenues of the all-in- clusive Canadian National Rail- ways System for the week ending July 14, 1938, were ...$3,188,221 as compared with ..... 3,770,754 for the corresponding period of 1937, a de- crease of .............$ 582,633 HAVE f ° heARU Soda may sweeten the stomach, but a man with a sour disposition must work on himself if he ever hopes for a cure. Teacher â€" “Now, boys, after what I’ve explained of the lion’s fierceness, strength and daring, can any one of you name a single animal that the king of beasts stands in awe of?” Up shot little Willie’s hand! Teacherâ€"“Well, Willie, which is the animal ?” Willie (promptly) â€"- “Please, teacher, the lioness.” The Train of Life I used to sit, when I was small, Upon the grass beside a wall Where tangled vines and roses grew, To see the nine-fifteen go through. Far down the track, a heavy tread Sent notice to me up ahead, And then, a shrieking whistle blew, I’d watch the nine-fifteen go through. It thrilled me with a keen delight To see the last coach fade from sight ; What pleasant scenes my fancy drew Of lands the nine-fifteen went through. On such a train my life has sped, Through wistful dreams that lured ahead; My dimming eyes now scan the trackâ€" But there’s no train to take me back. . .. Professorâ€"“If you boys keep up like you are now, you’ll be like Napoleon.” Class (in unison) â€" “How’s that?” Professorâ€"“You are all going down in history.” A successful man is one who can make more than his wife can spend, and a successful woiqan is one who can land such a man. Glamorous Pageant To hundreds of thousands of people on this continent and over- seas the name Canadian National Exhibition is synonymous with pageantry, glamour and pomp. This is because the grandstand spectacle is the outstanding event of their visit to the world’s great- est annual exhibition. This year’s pageant promises to be even greater and more impressive than ever before, comprising within its scope and pageantry, glamour and romance of the development of the great Dominion of Canada during the past sixty years. â-  â-  s Gardening Notes.., WORK NEVER FINISHED The gardener’s work never is finished. No sooner has a plant developed than every effort must be made to maintain it at the peak for as long as the natural limita- tions of the species permit. At that time more than ever, skill, the practical application of knowing how, is the determining factor in success. Fortunately there are many lo- cations where the gorgeous flow- er-laden spikes will develop to perfection even with little care. The object then is to insure con- tinued success. This calls for close attention to the needs of the plants, since insect and plant dis- eases ever are lurking to destroy them. The food balance of the soil also is likely to be disturbed. * * * FEEDING IN SUMMER The feeding of garden plants during summer usually is referred to as top dressing because the , plant food or fertilizer cannot be worked deeply into the soil now without causing considerable harm to many roots. Never apply any fertilizer or plant food while the soil is dry. Always give good watering and, after the surface moisture has drained away, apply the food or fertilizer to the soil around the plants. Keep it away from all parts of the plants, including the base of the stem, since many kinds, par- ticularly the highly concentrated fertilizers, exert a caustic action on plant tissues. Hoe the material lightly into the soil surface and give prolonged watering to dis- solve the food and carry it down to the roots. READY FOR FLOWER SHOWS Now is the time to apply light feeding to plants of all kinds that are being grown for the fall flow- er shows. Regardless of the type of plant-food, it will be found a good practice to spread it over several feedings rather than one heavy application. Needless to say, the ideal time to feed any agrden is just before a rain, or, if artifi- cial irrigation is present, to water the food in immediately after ap- plying. If you must use elements high in nitrogen, go easy, for hot weather and nitrogen often will upet your best calculations. Well balanced foods are safer at this season and will return the great- est dividends. Only experienced gardeners succeed in applying single elements to their plants and they often find the vagaries of nature upsetting their plans. Read It Or Not: -a- Olive oil dropped at the root of a fern will improve its growth. Juniorâ€"“Mother dear, you said if I was good for half an hour I could do what I liked.” Motherâ€"“Well?” • Juniorâ€"“I want to be naughty for two hours,” THE GAME â€" It’s much more satisfactory, and far more pro- ductive, making the best of what you have than wasting time wish- ing for the moon. . . . It is better to spit on your hands than to wring them. . . . Life is not so much holding a good hand aS it is playing a poor hand well. Janieâ€"“Black hens arc smarter than white hens, aben’t they, mom ?” Motherâ€"“What makes you ask such a silly question?” Janieâ€"“Well, black hens can lay white eggs, but white hens can’t lay black eggs, can they?” ^Scratching f/f ' RELIEVE Itching Insect Bites â-  Even the most stubborn itching of insect bites, ath- lete's foot, hives, scales, eczema, and other externally caused «kin afflictions quickly yields to cooling, anti- Beptic, liquid D, D. D. PRESCRIPTION. Easy to usé. Bries fast. Clear, greaseless and stainless. Soothes the irritation and quickly stops the most intense itching. A 35c trial bottle, at. all drug stores, proves itâ€" er money hack. Ask for D. D. D. PRESCRIPTION* n GUM-DIPPING is a. patented Firestone process not used in any other tire. With it every hundred pounds of cord fabric absorbs eight pounds of rubber and, as a result, every fibre, every cord and every ply in a Firestone tire is coated and insulated with pure rubber to counter- act internal heat and frictionâ€"the greatest enemy of tire life. Due to this extra process, Firestone Gum-Dipped Cords have 58% longer flexing life. Yet you do not pay one cent more for this extra value. And you also get 2 Extra Cord Plies under the tread and the Firestone Scientifically Designed Safety Tread. See the nearest Firestone Dealer today! What Science * Is Doing * VENOM MAY BE CURE The poisonous venoms of bees, lizards, salamanders and the dead- ly rattlesnake and cobra were de- clared to offer new hope to sitf- fevers from palsy, paralysis, spi- nal-cord injuries and otiier pain- ful nerve disturbances. The use of insect and reptile poisons to treat the pain which re- sults from cancer and, other ma- lignant diseases is not new, Dr. M. B. Greene, of New York, de- clared in a report to the American Association for the Advancement of Science, but the method of us- ing them to “block off” individual nerves or sets of nerves is now being successfully applied for the first time on a large scale. Dills of ocean water Hills of water exist in the Paci- fic Ocean, according to Howard W. Blalceslee, the Associated Press science editor, quoting Dr. E. H, Fleming of the Scripps Institution of Oceanography of the Univer- sity of California. The greatest hill centres around the Hawaiian Islands. The water there is a little more than three feet higher than at the Aleutian Islands, 2,000 miles south. NEW DISCOVERIES IN HEREDITY Dr. Leonard G. Rowntree, direc- tor of the Philadelphia Institute for Medical Research, investigat- ing the affects of the thymus gland, has found that the mother passes on to her child the factor that controls the rate of growth, and that the father’s contribution is nil. Earlier experiments by Dr. Rowntree demonstrated that ef- fects of gland treatment can be passed on from one .generation to the next. In these expérimenta he treated both parents. Continuing the experiment with the same line of animals, he omitted the gland- ular treatments to the father and found that treatments given to. the mother alone produce the same effects as were observed when both parents were treated. This discovery is important in the study of heredity. It has been generally believed that all the physical characteristics possessed by an individual are the joint con- tribution of both parents and of their line of ancestors, and that these characteristics' are carried in the , chromosomes, tiny struc- tures in the nucleus of the germ cell. MIRACLE OF METAMORPHOSIS A winged chrysalis, a new in- sect, half chrysalis and half but- terfly, has come from the bio- logical test tubes of Stanford University, Palo Alto, California. With head and wings of a but- terfly but the body of a chrysalis, this strange creature arises from discovery of what causes the sum- mer, miracle of metamorphosis of caterpillars into butterflies. The discovery was made by Dietrich Bodenstein, research assistant in the school of biology. The cause is a chemical in the chrysalis’ head. The chemical acts like a hormone, the' ductless gland, secretions which “make a man what he is.” Bodenstein says the metamor- phosis chemical may be hormone, enzyme or “a nervous stimulus.” It travels through the chrysalis’ skin. Discovery of this mechanism opens new angles of investigation into the biological secrets of all' animals. HELIUM HELPS ASTHMA Successful use of helium in re- lieving a large proportion of chronic asthma cases treated with the gas was described last week by the United States Public Health Service. An approximate rour-to-ons mixture of helium and oxygen, gases, administered in a specially devised hood tent, the statement said, has given patients very fav- orable relief. Although not proposed as a cure for asthma, helium is now pre- scribed where an effective ven- tilation of the lungs, as least ef- fort to the patient, is necessary to end severe asthma which no longer responds to “adrenalin treatment,” It has even been found useful in terminating cer- tain cases of severe asthma.

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