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The Colborne Express (Colborne Ontario), 2 Jun 1938, p. 7

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THE COLBORNE EXPRESS, COLBORNE, ONT., JUNE 2, 1938 dealer. Learn how to save dollars by filling your fuel bin with "Canada's finest Coke" NOW. GET A DANDY HAMCO COKE SHOVEL at a fraction of regular cost. See your dealer. • Ask him, too, about the new HAMCO AUTOMATIC DRAFT CONTROL HAMCO HOT WATER HEATER HAMCO YOUR LOCAL DEALER'S NAME Appears elsewhere in this paper INSIST ON HAMCO--CANADA'S FINEST CO m Classified Advertising AGENTS WANTED MAN OR WOMAN FOR CUPID CON-centrated Flavors. Fifty varieties. Long profits. Grand route salesman extra. Acme Direct Sales. 615 Yonge, UGHTNING ROD AGENT WANTED, To sell Phillips Lightning Protective System. B. Phillips Company Limit- 1F Y< J LIKE TO DRAW, SKETCH OP t. write for Talent Test (No Give age and occupation. Box '3 Adelaide St. W., Toronto. ill iV'lIKVT JLTRY I DEACON, MANA-'arra», of l-iii.mvill-. H J »,•:»•„)), the well ••i! !< 'IU. it." TwUi-ry Limited, Fergus, CLOTHING FOR SALE FREE HATS, SHOES, SHIRTS, TIES, etc., with clothing purchase. Write for free illustrated catalogue of clothing bargains, Dept. N. Yongs Strie. Cloihing Exchange. 502 Yonge J"/,';'",., Tcr.Tni PRINTED, Re-prints, 183 King Eai KOH SALE YORKSHIRES--AT THE HEAD OF Champ ii. sire of "Sainsbury Trophy" and "Best Market Pen" at Royal Winter Fair. Sows include First and Second winners Toronto anc: F;! -1 Guelph. young males with "Advan 3d Registry" backing. For Sale, s ,adeland Farms, Box 7. Eden, (i';c. Hatch. . Box 53.1W. Trenton, Onl b^ween I •!.'.!, LYONS Drastic Reductions in Our Trade-in Department down for ,,u;ek '^"iinre"' \\'""niuVt have 1U., r spi.ee regardless of cost. teed .absoiutely^clean and sold under a ; '};{\^J'^$64.00 $21.50 g£?" ,,","ldlfV"' eC«l"°$3k00 buTu .l" ilHuS, '°$24"95 ;in v", ;„;", „ ind "alnut $4.95 1 only, 9 p,e..-o -Malcolm Suite in burl $125.00 !;;,;, r\!/ , dfl$24.95 Ite.JS pieces, Thoroulhly $49,00 }™p£t£??onMoTr*'U $69.00 tl111 '"^"^"'^.so „' ,,Ti' '. 1,!„$23.00 carefully packed ready fo sold under a defini Salt Is Essential In Stock Feeding The Animal Body Cannot Do Without It, Experiments Show All farm animals need salt in their daily diet just the same as human beings do. Their craving for it- is not an acquired taste, but is based upon a real need of the body. Salt is one of the essential minerals, and it supplies two substances--sodium and chlorine--which the animal body cannot do without, but which are not supplied naturally in sufficient quantities in grain and pasturage. Stimulates Appetite The first and most apparent effect of salt is that it increases animal appetite. It makes the feed more palatable. When feed tastes better, animals eat more of it and make faster, cheaper gains. Every pound of,food consumed above bare subsistence requirements is used for growth or production of saleable farm products. Salt helps digestion. Not only do well-salted animals have good appetites, but they are able to utilize the extra food intake fully, because of the stimulating action of salt on digesti What Happens Without It The late Dr. S. M. Babcock carr out an experiment to find the ansi to this question in 1905. Twe healthy cows were taken and divided into two groups of ten each. Both i placed on the same liberal diet, but one group received no salt. The salt-fed group remained strong and healthy throughout the test, which lasted less than a year. In 2 or 3 weeks the alt group showed abnormal hunger, but their general health not seriously affected till some mo later. Every animal in this group sooner or later suffered a complete breakdown, marked by loss of appetite, lustreless eyes, rough coat, and rapid decline in body weight and milk yield. These cows quickly regained their health when salt was returned to their diet. This experiment has sine been repeated many times, but aiway with the same result. Importance of Salt Licks The following statements are th advice of practical experts in liv< stock raising: -- "Domestic animals should have fre :cess to salt at all times. In addi on to salt fed mixed in rations, supplementary salt licks should always be provided." "Feed domestic animals their r jm salt requ'ioments as loose salt mixed in their rations, but keep salt licks before them at all times." 14 Special Days At The Exhibition The fourteen days of the Canadh National Exhibition this year have been named as follows: -- Friday August 26th, Founders' Day; Saturday, August 27th, Warriors' Day; Monday, August 29th, Children's Day; Tuesday, August 30th, Automotive Day; Wednesday, August 31st, Food Products and Merchants' Day; Thursday, September 1st, Women's and Music Day; Friday, September 2nd, Press Day; Saturday, September 3rd, Manufacturers', Athletic and Floral Day; Monday, September 5tb, Labor Day; Tuesday, September 6th, British Empire Day; Wednesday, September 7th, Agriculturists' Day; Thursday, September Sth, Transportation and Commercial Travellers' Day; Friday, September 9th, Live Stock Review Day; Saturday, September 10th, Citizens' Day. MEDICAL R. & S.) RHEUMATISM AND STOM-aeh Powder, "The Great Eliminator,' Contains ten of Nature's ingredients Removing the cause and eliminating Rheumatism, Stomach,troubles. Arth- $1.50, $3.00. $5.00. All Druggists! Agents Lymans Limited, Montreal. ECZEMA, SKIN AILMENTS, SORES uickly healed by Dermisoothe, tin lean, white, antiseptic ointment t all druggists. Twentieth Cen'turj Remedies, 87 Ingham Ave., Toronto. User 1 ' a -KSSi-TI. S< 'J ENTJ I-'IC ST. >.M AH I: For years I was troubled 'caused gas and' blo'at'ing. ny remedies, but my only soda, and that for short ■ ii s; then ped cor icIi lc° CoT'lSI°A1 b ar "M-l.s [-'(III SALE MATT RESSES-- S] T. i > COU RUPTURED? RELIEF rt, positive support with ou: ced method. No elastic or un raps or steel. Write Smitl NUFF, BASIL Fillers As passengers watched, a man dived fully dressed from the liner Kanimbla into the rough sea 250 miles off Adelaide, Australia, and rescued Miss Shirley Hall, aged 22, of Perth, who had fallen from the Every student at Police College, England's training school at Hendon for policemen, costs the Government $2,110 a year in addition to $1,095 for pay and allowance. Jack Miner With a Pair of Blue Geese Jack Miner, the Canadian naturalist, about to liberate a pair of Blue Geese he has caught and tagged to study their migration route. Blue Geese are not common in JacA Miner's vicinity so Jack Miner was anxious to catch this pair to tag them and find out their migration route. The species that visits Jack Miner is the Canada Goose. FRIENDS A friend is like an old song grown sweeter with the years, A friend is one who shares our joys and wipes away our tears; A friend will look for goodness in everything we do, A friend is one who knows our faults yet finds'our virtues too; A friend will share a crust of bread, or help to lift a load -- Happy are we who find a few good friends along the road. There is bound to be tragedy in the life of the man who won't recognize his limitations. Mrs. Askene -- "It's simply ridiculous calling these cashiers in banks 'Tellers'. They won't tell you anything. Why, only yesterday, I asked one how much money my husband had deposit there, and, would you be-re it, he just laughed at me!" mid .- e money if Cape Breton Coal Is Under Water A Great Deal of It Has To Be Got At By Boring From Below GLACE BAY, N.S.--Dominion Coal Company drillers had to drive their diamond-tipped shafts upward to discover a seam of coal which is being tested by the company. The deposit, six feet thick, is said to be of excellent quality. Unable to bore from above into the submarine areas of this southern Cape Breton mining section, drillers probed upwards from the underlying Phalen seam on which Dominion No. IB, 'the Metropolitan Racing Association LONG BRANCH June 8 to 15 DUFFERINPARK June 16 to 23 7Races Daily 2.30 p.m. B company's most modern colliery,' is. Their drills struck the rich Harbor Seam, more than 400 feet' above their heads. A great part of Cape Breton's coal resources lie in submarine areas, some of the mining operations being carried on for miles out under the sea. Boring a Tunnel Coal from the Harbor Seam mine, be reopened soon after 15 years of idleness, will be taken downward1 through a concrete tunnel into No. 2-mine and will be raised to the surface r the No. 2 bankhead. The Harbor Mine, known as Colliery No. 9 will have no outlet of its own. For three years mining men worked to bore the tunnel between No. 2 and No. 9. Now the company proposes a lar tunnel from the Harbor Seam to No. IB Colliery. It is planned to electric locomotives in the tunnels instead of horses for hauling coal-! laden boxes. Drilling within the mines is only part of the company's development' : in search of new coal deposits. The 20 Latin American countries are estimated to have now over 130,-000,000 population. Ulster will preserve its windmills, with machinery intact, and throw them open to visitors. ....Gardening Notes.... CHICKS BACKED BY b 1 e they ar '- progra vders a defhS?8 pient Inspected, Blood-tested. For immediate delivery: Leghorn Stai " ards, $6.95; pullets $15.90. Ban Rock Standards. $8.95; pullets $13 Hampshires, $7.95; pullets $14! Leghorn cockerels J1.5C. Heavy coc erels $6.00. Premiums $2.00 mo i for special prices on Started "^ar -- 3 King st!cE"mt( Peterborough boats, sturdy, TO FLY DUFFER1N FLYING SERVICE GETS your license on easy ♦<"■ Issue No. 23--'38 PROFESSIONAL RESULTS COUNT -- any film developed and printed properly. Mail with 25c to Professional ' * London, Ont. Send your own choice ( \ ii i fiee lllustidted catalog f LYONS TRADE-IN DEPT. 478 Yonge St., Toronto ALL KNOWN DISEASES CAN BE CAR-ried by rats. Safeguard your home and stock by using Ratopax--I]arm-kill all" rodent>sPaetc!S Ff"you" dealer for post-paid^ supply.^ Dealers write Ae-ency, ."7 Bloor West, Toronto. HAIR GOODS WIGS, TOUPES, TRANSFORMATIONS. Braids, Curls, and all types of finest quality Hair Goods. Write for illustrated catalogue. Special attention to repair work. Toronto Human Hair Supply Co.. 528 Bathurst. Toronto. TTtlO NEWEST GAME SENSATION BE THE FIRST IN YOUR COMMUN-Ity to run the Kentucky Derby for your friends' amusement. Each game an actual, exciting race. Send 25c in coin for eight complete races. Agents write for particulars. National Sales Agency, Bloor Bldg., Toronto. HELP WANTED--FEMALE WANTED--"WOMEN WHO WISH TO earn extra money at Home, refined work--free training. Write Box 8, Listowel, Ontario. ■ (noticing a huge cloud of ng up the road) -- "You 3d to bother, here it comes Pin Worms Why let your children suffer when an old New England remedy is available. Send two dollars to CONNECTICUT REMEDY CO. Room 421, 73 Adelaide St. West, Toronto It might be disheartening to kne what your children really think of yc Old-fashioned Girl -- "All my life I have been saving my kisses for a ma: like you." Modem Young Man--"Well, prepar to lose the savings- of a lifetime." READ IT OR NOT! Tuberculosis is increasing at a dis turbing rate among medical students and student nurses in some parts of the world. The dean of a college was investigating a charge made by some of the girls that the young men who lived in the fraternity house, next door forgot to lower their window shades. The dean looked out of the sorority indow, and said: Dean -- "Why, I can't see into any of the fraternity house windows?" Girls (chorus) -- "Oh, yes you can! All you have to do is to get on a TENDER VEGETABLES N >W lore tender vegetables are beans, tomato plants, squash, cucumbers and nelons. They Wll not start to grow mtil the weather and soil really be-:o -» warm. In order to get a long and teady supply of green beans, make it least thr< j plantings at intervals of en days, and use several varieties. To do the same thing with tomatoes few well started plants for the first crop, and hurry these along with fertilizer and possibly with mulch paper. All garden tomatoes always should be staked. These warm weather vegetables do pre" - :ch open soil and any members of the melon family, that is squash, cucumber, citron, etc., take special delight in hot, sandy soil, though it must be made rich. Along with the vegetables mentioned, one may set out egg plants, well started peppers and the first planting of celery. The latter must have very rich soil and water during the dry -..eather. There is still plenty of time to make second and third sowings of nearly all standard able:; ■tc. FERTILIZE Gardeners will find the judicious se of commercial fertilizer a very valuable aide in hastening growth. For and flower gardens, too, where rse of ordinary manure might be offeirive, odourless chemical fertili-is to be preferred. But this sort of thing must be used carefully. If it is alio- a to touch the foliage it is .0 burn. With v:getables, the fer-r is raked in close along the without actually touching the tender roots. Two or fhree applica-ions during the g-owing season will push -•'I veget ,.is along quickly. ENEMIES General garden insect enemies are divided into two groups -- those that t holes in the-foliage and those that suck out the juices. For the first-named, poison is usua'"'- pplied, while the fuckers are attacked vith a burning :pray which penetrates. Ofte- when both are present a sulphur and arsen-gives the best results. The damage from the biting insects is usually ; apparent but the presence of other kind is only shown at first . wilting or withering of the foliage. For sucking pests, chief of them i the aphids or plant lice, spray, h whale oil soap, a quarter pound' of soap to a gallon and a half of wa-; nicotine sulphate or "Black Leaf ', or any other repellent secured m a reliable seed store. When fungus attacks the plants, the foliage usually turns yellow or brown, or white spots like mildew cover the leaves. Fungus is most common i n warm, ty weather. Spraying with Bord-Mixture or dusting with specially finely ground sulphur is advised. BINDER TWINE --AT-- M anufacturer's Prices Finest Quality 600 and 650 foot grade, Large or Small Balls. S{. icial Prices on Pure Manilla Rope and Wire Cable See your Club Secretary, Co-op- Th^UNITED^FARME^ CO-OPERATIVE CO., Limited Cor. Duke and George Sts. TORONTO, ONTARIO

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