THE COLBORNE EXPRESS, COLBORNE ONT. THURSDAY, APR. 11, 1935 ALL FOOD MADE HER ILL Caused by Acidity-- Corrected by Kruschen "It is only fair to pass these facts on," writes a nurse. "I was suffering from over-acidity and flatulence to such an extent that I was completely ill. I couldn't take food, When I actually forced myself to take something, I would be wretchedly ill. I have now taken Kruschen for 12 months, and I have no doubt that it has righted my d'gestive system. I am now quite fit and able to work with vigor again."--Nurse E. S. Indigestion is caused by a failure in the flow of the gastric or digestive juices. As a result, your food, instead of being assimilated by your sys'em, simply collects and ferments inside you, producing harmful acid poisons. The immediate effect of the six mineral s?.lts in Kruschen is to promote the healthy flow of the vital juices of the body. As you continue with the "little daily dcse," it ensures the regular and complete elimination of all waste matter every day. And that means a complete end to indigestion. AN APPEAL TO TIE CITIZENS OF ONTARIO Kin,2,' George V. Jubilee Cancer Fund Inaugurated A message to the citizens of Ontario from His Honor, Dr. Herbert A. Bruce, Lieutenant-Governor:-- "His Excellency the Governor-General inaugurated recently the King George V. Jubilee Cancer Fund in Canada. The citizens of every Province in this great Dominion are being invited to assist in bringing about the ultimate conquest of a deadly, relentless enemy whose shadow falls across all our lives--CANCER. I need not say how eagerly I seize this opportunity to appeal to the citizens of Ontario to do all they can to make this Jubilee year of His Majesty's accession to the throne forever glorious, forever a year of grace memorable for all time as the year I when we all, in massed formaUon, began a well-planned attack -the i , the nd the most inexorably mankind's enemies. annual toll cancer four checked. Eaoh people die of Cancer in Hop every one that dies * [usually three more who ■• ifrom this painful, maligr That makes 12,000 cases annually in Ontario. Thi Community Advisory Board A group of public-spirited citizens having joined together for the common weal and betterment of Communities, now offer a service to individual citizens and communities. NON-POLITICAL, NON-RACIAL, NON-SECTARIAN. ! Send a 3 cent stamped envelope for further information. GIFF BAKER 39 LEE AVE. Toronto, Ont. ardemng By Gordon L. Smith Article No. 6 SEED-- Good seed is the foundation of all successful gardening. Other factors may be beyond control, but the gardener has absolute check over the seed. Weather, soil and location may be ideal but without good seed, specially selected to suit Canadian conditions, the garden is going to be failure. The average gardener is well advised to secure his seed and ery stock from a reliable Canadian source because there is no guarantee that a flower which has given wonderful results in Great Britain or the Southern States will do equally well in this country. VEGETABLE HINTS-- >r best results the soil in the vegetable garden sh:;uld be worked to good tilth early. To increase the fertility, well rotted manure should be dug in with a digging fork. The following seeds may be sown early in the open: Spinach, beets, carrots, radish, lettuce, onions, parsnips and peas; seeds to be sown in the open after danger from frost is over: Beans, corn, melons, cucumbers, potatoes, pumpkin and squash; seeds be started in hot-beds: Cabbage, cauliflower, celery, tomatoes, peppers and egg plants. LAWN BUILDING-- Since it is impossible to do much general repairing to a lawn already established, it is most important to get the very best seed when first starting out. There is a great range-in price' just as in tobacco because both products, in the commercial stage, are made up of blended mixtures and absolutely depend on the proportion of the higher grade lines which go into the mixture. A good lawn grass mixture is composed of at least half a dozen grasses. Some of these are quick growers, which come along speedily the first year and protect the later starting, finer stemmed, but really permanent grasses which will go to make the lawn in the years to come. Ii these permanent grasses which the most expensive, but without large proportion of them, the n ture will not make a satisfactory showing "after the second year. ~ fore sowing it is essential to get the soil raked level. Allow a week tc settle, and any weed seeds to germinate and then on a windless day sow at the rate of one pound per 200 square feet, going over the ground twice, once across and once lengthwise. Then rake lightly, one way only so as to merely cover the seed, and if possible, finish the job with a heavy roller or pounder. When the grass is up two inches, commence mowing, using a very sharp machine so that there will be no danger of pulling out the young plants. deaths from cancer has increased from 70.9 in 1914 to 114.7 in 1933-- increase of 43.9. 'The results obtained today in the treatment of cancer are so very much better than formerly that those who notice a lump or have unusual symptoms should not be deterred from consulting a doctor be-s> of the fear that he will diag-their case as cancer, early cases surgery is still the best form of treatment, either alone i combination with X-ray and radium. In certain regions, however, X-ray or radium is preferred and . results are obtained. Even In cases the use of X-ray or rad-will relieve pain and delay the table. he crying need is for more research, more institutions with facil-iUss-fo*. the eeietUiat--in..fais--gmO. ■k of investigating the cancel and the discovery of a specific for its cure. There must be a "specific" but the cause of cancer must first be discovered by exact, painstaking medical research. This research will only be possible if we all help to provide the necessary funds. When this fund is established it will enable Canada to take her place with her sister Dominions, thus making the campaign inaugurated in London twelve years ago a truly British Empire Campaign against cancer in its scope. "However, 1 should make it clear that all money collected will be spent in this country. "I appeal to all citizens in this Province to contribute $1.00 or more to the King George V. Silver Jubilee Cancer Fund for Canada. Will you please send your contribution direct to Lady Bessborough, acknowledge it. Her address is simply, Ottawa, Ontario. The chartered banks are receiving contributions for transmission to Her Excellency public." Eccentric's $3,000 Hidden 13 Years Saint John.--When Mrs. Sarah A. Shaw lay dying 13 years ago her last words to her daughter,, Mrs. Samuel Allan, were: "Watch the newspapers and someday you'll know The Abundant Vitality of Cod Liver Oil PLUS PLEASANT TASTE For over fifty years doctors have specified " Scott's Emulsion", wherever the bone-building, strengthening qualities of pure cod liver oil were indicated. For Scott's Emulsion is more than just cod liver oil. Scott's Emulsion is pure cod liver oil, emulsified for easier digestion, greater efficiency and pleasant taste. SCOTT'S EMULSION THE COD LIVER OIL WITH THE PLUS VALUE For Sale by Your Druggist _____ where my money is left," the daughter said last week, adding that she had never found the money mentioned. Mrs. Shaw then lived at 160 Prince Edward Street, where J. I. Normandaou, a carpenter, said he he recently found a box containing more than $3,000 in currency. By Rail to Africa Old Tunnel Project Manchester Guardian The idea of a Gibraltar tunnel was first conceived by a Frenchman as long ago as 1869., It has been reborn since the war in the mind of a Spanish artillery officer --Colonel Pedro Jevenois, of the Sflrajj-QSca garrison;, and,_fostered in its new form both by Primo de Rivera and by the Spanish Republican Government, it has for the past seven years been the object of deliberation by a public commission. This commission has just published its latest report. Technical, economic, international---all aspects of the scheme have in turn been considered. Not, indeed, that deliberation is at an end; the technical aspect is to be examined further in the Spring, and the Summer should hear of a definite answer to the question of the tunnel's technical feasibility. Twenty miles in length, stretching beneath the Straits of Tama on GENERAL -- MAC -- MAR. 28th the Spanish side to Punta Felguera, in Morocco, and plunging at times to a depth of a thousand feet, the tunnel--if it becomes fact--will be the longest and deepest in the world. Perhaps one should use the plural form; for Spanish engineers speak of two contiguous tunnels with intermittent points of communication. Telegraph and telephone cables would be laid; automobiles would be whisked through on flat cars; and within 30 minutes of leaving the tunnel's Spanish end electric trains would discharge their passengers at the African exit. The potential commercial importance of the tunnel springs to the eye; with Punta Felguera as the focus of a number of African trunk lines, Africa's tropical products would be conveyed to Luropean tables by an all-land route. Four trunk lines are dreamt of by Spanish enthusiasts of the scheme. Two would traverse the Sahaia, one piercing Nigeria to join the nearly completed Cape-Cairo railroad at Stanleyville in the Belgian Congo, the other making its way towards the jungled coast of West Africa. The construction of both railways has been started under French direction; their completion awaits the day when the Bank of Fiance has a governor bold enough and when the "French investor is readier to expose his nose to cutting economic winds. There exists a slight doubt, a very slight doubt, as to the willingness of the French to carry the second line to Punta Felguera; they might prefer to make its terminal point at Oran or Algiers. The third line, a continuation of the present rail route from Tan-giers to Marrakesh, would skirt the Atlantic seaboard as far as Dakar, in Senegal. Aviation has already given Dakar geographical dignity; it is the starting point both of the German air mail and of the French air and ship mail services to South America. The fourth line, brushing the Mediterranean coast line, would prolong the French railway which now comes to a humiliatingly abrupt slop at Italy's colony of Tripolitania. Such, then, is the vision; how possible is its realization? Economic means and technical possibility are questions that await final pronouncement. Apart from them there is that small but annoying difficulty of the seven-inch difference between the Spanish and French railway gauges. Alteration of the present Spanish track wou'd be too costly; the construction of a new trunk route in Spain in impractic- What, then, can be done? Container cars might solve the problem offered by freight traffic, and there are not lacking systems permitting passenger trains to be adapted to varying gauges. Perhaps one of them will enable this subsidiary difficulty to be over- What, lastly, of the international consequences of a realized Gibraltar tunnel? To Britain a British- ! controlled Gibraltar would acquire significance. To France, French colonies in Africa would be of enhanced military importance; black troops could be rushed across to Europe in a matter of hours. Spain herself would recover a meed of long-lost European prestige. But glory has its prices. Spain has liked to remain aloof from European troubles; she might still o so"; but a neutral Spain of a Gibraltar tunnel ould be a passive ally of France. Are Spanish "tunnel enthusiasts" to be checked by the thought? Large Plug 20c. SING A SONG OF DIXIE! Fresh as a daisy, good to your pipe, Fine tobacco, aged and ripe. Longer lasting, fragrant, too Dixie Plug's the smoke foryou I DIXIE PLUG SMOKING TOBACCO The Home Merchant 'Hie-home mere! He islthe chap chant. Who is he? who gives you cre-jSpnancially broke, until you lie istthe chap who gives you back your money or makes exchauges when you *re not satisfied with what you have bought. He is the chap who stands behind the guarantee and makes restoration of ail losses that you may sustain on the goods you buy. He is the chap who meets you at his door with a handshake and) let you out with a message to the "kids" and a real come-again goodbye. He is the chap who meets and greets you on the street every day in the year and takes a neighborly interest in your family and your affairs. He is the chap whose clerks and book-keepers and otiher employees live in your town and spend their money with you and other home people. He is the chap who pays heavy taxes to help support home schools and build your town streets, and maintain the fire department, the police department and lighting ser- H.e is the ohap who visits you when you are sick, sends flowers to your family when you die, and follows your body out among the trees and tombs, as far as human feet may travel with the dead. He is the home merchant--your neighbour -- your friend -- your helper in times of need. Don't you think that you ought to trade with him, and be his friend and his helper in the time of his Don't you know that every dollar you send out of your town for merchandise is sent to strangers--to the en who never spend a dollar there men who would not trust you for box of matches. went to the Maritimes and $1,85%-8 to Alberta. Payments made generally by the Trade and Commerce Department to assist in placing Canadian coal used in the manufacture of iron or steel on a basis of eouality with imported coal amounted to $465,273, while "additional payments" made under the Domestic Fuel Act to the Maritime coal ividtstry totalled $87,953. From 1931 to the present , the amount of bonus paid on wheat was $12,708,576. The outlay in the year 1931-1932 when the five-cents-a bushel bonus was in effect was $10,-908,428. The Wolf Bounty Louis Johnson, trapper, of Felix, Ont., thinks the bounty on wolves should be higher than it is. Indeed he advocates one of $50 instead of the present $35 and declares that ["Hh-ts-Sprrrrg a very V.rge number of ' deer have been killed by wolves. "All year round the wolves have killed large numbers of deer around Felix," he said in an interview with a reporter "but recently the slaughter that took place wa hoofs of the deer ca ice or crust, and they i at all. The wolves a: manage to get about ever weather. They made quick the helpless deer recently." "The average person," Johnson went on, "does not realize how many deer the wolves kill. With the bounty at $15, trappers don't bother trying to trap wolves. They go after other animals because they get more money for them. It hardly pays us to trap wolves. We only get $15 a pelt, and out of that we have to pay our fare to the Crown lands office before we can collect. That's the reason wolves are on the i awful. The grip the 't get away light, and ■en in icy And with wolves on the increase, deer will be decreasing.--Sault Ste, Marie Star. Don't Do use LEONARD EAR OIL FOR DEAFNESS & HEAD NOISES Jvedthe Hearing a;;.I |. -n:..; ]!r;i,-: <;,-.;.,' t t 1 r lutPil Ba. '■ : Nostrils L »nard Ear Oit has been on. then 0. Made in ('ana.hi- I : Aid To Coal Industry Has Cost $6,781,176 Ottawa--SiiTce 1928,. Canada has paid $6,781,176 in subventions and other forms of assistance to aid the coal industry in the Maritime Provinces and Alberta, a return tabled recently in the House of Commons said. Of that amount $-1,-157,992 Pig's Stomach Patches Man's Geneva, O.--In the midst of news about upside-down stomachs and disarranged organs, H. P. Williamson, 68, of Cork, near here, has come forth to proclaim that for 23 years he has - been digesting his food with a stomach part of which Williamson, more than two decades ago underwent two operations in Cleveland for ulcers of the stomach. The second time, surgeons found it necessary to do some patching. A part of a stomach removed from a pig was used as the "patch," Williamson said. Williamson's health has been good during the 23 years, though he has been unable to stand much exertion. He said his appetite had been normal except during two illnesses. j beautiftji. white stone with cross--3 It. high §5$12.50 £S Kennedy & Menton 421 College St- Harley-Davidscn D.'-'...\ ulors and Used Parts Write at once for our bargain list of used motorcycles. Terms arranged. LO'NS STONE WORKS ox 1112 Norwood, Man. British Ford Pays Dividend Of 5 Per Cent. London, Eng.--The Ford Motor Company of Great Britain, Limited, has announced a dividend of 5 per cent, for the past year of £8,669,000 ($43,250,000) of ordinary shares of capital. No distribution had been made for the previous three years. Classified Advertising patents n List of i information Company, s; TO EVERY sex secrets revealed: EXCELLENT CHARACTER, READING JP IN ANY DIFF ing, birth-date, te by mail, Prof. Rog iCULTY, BUS. , Character Read- I had finished the first bottle of l-avurite I'ia-: tpti.m I felt much better, had more strength and Lett.-: ,l.K.stio»." New size, tablets 50 cents, liquid S1.00. Large size, tablets or liquid, $1.35. RELIEVE PERIODIC PAIN TF you suffer peri-o'riir nain *nrl Lydia E. Pinkham's 'ablet In i "cases they bring welcome relief. As Mrs. Caroline New-n says, "They .... ? the pain". Mrs. Raymond Chaput,- Routs 4, Tilbury,Ont. says,"I suffered something terrible. Had such backaches and headaches I was worn out. Your Tablets helped me". Let them help you, too. Ask your druggist. and depression? Issue No. 14--'35 ROSSy^ HEIGHT'