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The Colborne Express (Colborne Ontario), 30 May 1935, p. 7

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THE COLBORNE EXPRESS, COLBCJRNE ONT. THURSDAY, MAY 30, 1935 Says Droughts Have Cycles Veteran Astrono ier Sees History Him Out The basis of theory is a book outlining the history of China. His find-of weather data--were placed at the ings--the results of pain-taking study disposal of the U.S. government in Classified Advertising Ol2 CUIE P TO $50.00 EACH PAID FOR U.S. Indian head cents. We buy all toss regardless of condition. Up tc • 00 each paid for U.S Lincoln cents. > to $150.00 each for Canadian coins. » buy stamp collections. .Medals, 'Oks, Old Paper Moi :st ami i teed or 26c r< SHOP. 159-23 Fr< arge Henry Capt. will be more imj ists than any da ther forecasts can "haphazard syste that the 11-year ers and plentiful to agricultur-a government wea-produce under their n." He has found cycle of cold wint-ainfall in this coijn- TOURIST TRADE SHOWS CLIMB $129,794,000 Is Estimated As Amouunt Spent For 1934 In Canada Ottawa. -- A substantial increase was shown in the total expenditure of tourists in Canada during 1934 when they were estimated at $129,794,000 compared with $117,124,000 in the previous year, the Dominion Bureau of Statistics reported recently. Overseas tourists were estimated to have spent $9,455,000 against $7,-763,000 in 1933. Tourists from the United States by automobile spent bout $86,259,000 compare with $72,196,000 in the preceding year, while those, by rail and steamer were estimated to have spent $34,260,000 against $29,460,000 in the previous 12-month period. Canadian tourist expenditures in foreign countries were estimated at $60,905,000 compared with $50,-860,000 the previous vear. portions- of one pound of sulphate to two hundredweight of toil, and brush it into jhe surface after mowing. Showyry weather is the best time for thif dressing, and if there are n0 showers wash it in with the hose j or a cparse-rosed watering can as ' soon asjposible. The (mount of dressing mentioned should |>e enough .for about sixty j Helped by "That Kruschen Feeling' Activity was Good for Her Figure square yai 3 of lawn ALCOHOL FORESEEN .-AS .MOTOR FOEI Seen As Chief Product Of Agriculture In America-- Boon To Fanners. of drought i ;h available re European weather compare i drought this country suffei ised i the •ultur eluding industry and Mich.,--Alcohol, to be will be l agri- • fuel hief product of Amerii DOMINION OFFERS GARDENING DATA to overseas countr es was estimated at $14,272,000 against $13,982,000 in 1933, Canadian tourists by uuti mobile to the United States spent approximately $32,645,000 against $24,611,000, while those by rail and .......to tne United States ' estimated to have spent $13,988,000 compared with $12,267,000 in previous year. Vicious Trees One of 1 oddest growths 1 °^,the electricity tree of Central India. ~*y Its leaves are so full of electricity " --i touch one you receive an will influence feet away. CHICKS FOB SALE PONDS AND CTJER-BNCIES WANTED jMl'EKIAl. RUSSIAN. VIOLIN SOUND POST s a resullt of more than half's century of actual experience ant. experiment by the Dominion Department of Agriculture, a storehouse of information on every pha ening is at the disposal of member of the Canadian public who j {nat jf you touch ishes to take advantage of this electric shock. The; lowledge. How to grow shrubs, a magnetic needle trees, flowers, and vegetables, how The electrical str protect them from disease and at midday, and weakest at midnight. ;ct enemies, how to attend to the in wet weather its powers disappear, soil, and the thousand-and-one things Birds and insects keep away, connected therewith are dealt withj The "Saymal," or "Cotton-tree" of in plain language- Year by year. Nepal, will eat other trees. Its seeds hundreds of bulletins, pamphlets, are dropped by birds in the forks of and circulars are distributed free to is victims, where they germinate and persons who write and ask for them drop a sort of robt which-Starts a from the Publicity and Extension! cotton-tree branch. Thh spreads and Branch of the Department in Ot-• drops other roots until a large stem tawa. In this way Canadian gar-'of the victim tree is seized. Then the deners, professional and amateur, | cannibal spreads round are helped to maintain a higg- le- trunk. After its meal, Replace Worn Screen Doors and Windows A broken screen is like bucket with a hole in it . useless. You may think y are protected against flies a mosquitoes, but you are no For health's sake, check ov your screen doors and wi dows now. Replace those th are damaged. screen every door & window ONTARIO SAFETY LEAGUE of horticulture. There are circulars or bulletins on spring and fall work in the rose garden, flowers for the prairie home the growing of peonies, gladioli, caragana for field shelters and hedges, tree planting for ornamental purposes, how to make hot-beds and cold frames, grapes for home use, mushroom culture, how to grow tomatoes, asparagus, cucumbers, potatoes, any known vegetable in short, and how to make a sketch for a proposed shelter belt, just to mention a few The cultivation of the apple in Canada, hedges and their uses, the prairie farmer's vegetable garden, vegetable growing in the coast area' of British Columbia vegetable insects and their control, cabbage flea beetle, crown gall in fruit trees and small fruits, the undesirable pest and earwig, onion maggot control, gladiolus thrips, diseases of the raspberry, potato and tomato, the strawberry root weevil, and many other subjects relating to the garden, and pest control are fully dealt with and may be obtained free by writing to the Publicity and Extension Branch, Dominion Department of Agriculture at Ottawa. of the Her husband assured her that was her age and that she could i not expect to wear stock size now. | He was evidently a believer in the ancient "fat and forty" legend, i To-day she dsmisses the idea with a laugh. But let her tell the story _ herself:-- "I must tell you I had developed beyond the 'stock size.' My husband assured me that it was my age. One day I saw an advertisement and decided to try Kruschen Salts. That was last July. Now once more ' I wear a size 38. Besides which, I feel so much better, more energetic, and can do my work without that tir-i ed feeling."--(Mrs.) J. M. i Your figure will not develop a ' "middle-aged spread" if you keep > yourself healthy and active with | a daily dose of Kruschen. When I you have taken Kruschen Salts for ! a few days that old indolent arm-' chair feeling begins to desert you-- it doesn't matter if you are in the forties--the urge for activity has i--and you're "stepping live- The Splendid Spirit Of The predicted at the of the agriculture, ice conference here. BOON TO FARMERS Dr. William J. Hale, research consultant,, and Dr. L. M. Christensen, ! <>:' the New York Chemical Foundation, told the 150 industrial, agri-| cultural and science leaders meeting here that this concentration of alcohol manufacture would be the best ^ way of accomplishing their announc-j " And, best of all, you like this ed program to restore American1 tivity--you walk a couple of it prosperity diverting the chief ac-: and enjoy it--you thought y< tivities of farmers to supplying raw materials for industry. "Our domestic gasoline requirements were 17 billion gallons in 1929," Dr. Christensen said. "If the entire output of agricultural products had been used for manufacture of motor fuel, the yield would not have been satisfied the demand." Dr. Halle pointed out that different crops in parts of the country could be used for alcohol production. DIFFERENT SECTIONS "In the south, it will probably be the sweet potato, irt the north the potato and sugar beet, in the middle portion corn, fruits and the Jerusalem artichoke." "By intensive use of new fertilizers. Dr. Hale predicted, the farmer could produce 350 gallons of alcohol per acre at a cost price of ten cents per gallon." find dresses never dance again, bu you're getting as spry a you can wear the modern with as much comfort as the young folks. Get a 75c bottle of Kruschen (it lasts four weeks) and start right away to take a half-a-teaspoonful in a tumbler of hot water every morning. West 'Phone Girls. How You May Improve A Weedy Lawi} Poor and weedy lawns will .'how hot great improvement if they are given kl occasional dressings of sulphate 'of kn ammonia during the growing season, has Mix the sulphate with sifted leaf and soil or old potting soil passed momenfj^J through a half inch sieve in the pro- vok One in the Central Park south, has become widely oothing voice. She ulars" in the hotel who call her in 'just to hear her arcremng It is a great spirit that obtains in the drouth-ridden, grasshopper devastated areas of the West. At Bergfield, south-west of Weyburn, the farmers unable to get further help from the Department of Education or from the municipal council were not daunted in their effort to educate their children. An "emergency meeting" was called and one farmer offered to donate his granary for a teacherage, others volunteered to plaster it, whitewash it, windows in and equip it from meagre supplies of their homes, teacher was engaged and sustained out of their restricted food suppli and school is going on. There a many like instances in these days difficulty. Their churches are kept up in the same way. Ministers cheerfully living on less than half their salary in manses and par ages segregated in one or two rc to save fuel expenses and are : istering to their flocks without thought of further comfort or muneration, bring sweetness light into homes where were it not Air Route Coal Costs Are High FOOTHILLS, Alta.,--Seventy tons if coal are being prepared here hpment by rail and air to Arctic trading posts, unique in the annals jrtbern air freighting. Transpor. a costs will be $100 per toil. LONDON--Experts have again-ad-ised the foundations of St. Paul's Cathedral have little margin of safety and work improperly carried on e vicinity might disturb subsoil even cause collapse. CLASS Cosy public rooms and cabins . . excellent food and plenty of it . . good sun decks . . ippy days of sport and fun fine steady ships. om Montreal to PU LONDON, and I Article No. 12 THINNING IMPORTANT Thinning of both flowers and vege tables is most important' after th plants are up an inch or so. Witi flowers a good rule s to have half a much space between as the plant: are high. This will be about a foot between ordinary Marigolds. Petunias and asters, two or three feet between Cosmos, and Dahlias but only an inch or so separating tiny Alys-sum, Lobelia and other edging plants Well spaced flowers will be l sturdy, thus resisting heavy wind and rain, and the plants will be i symmetrical. Even the smallest v tables such as lettuce and radish, must be thinned too. An inch or sc will be sufficient and that is also all the room that will be needed for car. rots and beets, because when these things have developed roots an inch thick and two or three long, every plant .should be removed and used, and this proceeding followed until the whole.row is used up. HOT WEATHER VEGETABLES nder beans, tomato plants, the famous rubbing liniment CUNARD WHITE STAR ANCHOR-DO NALdV ON should not be planted outside both weather and soil are really warm. In order to get a long and steady supply of green beans make at least three plantings at intervals of ten days and use several varieties. To do the same thing with tomatoes one may use a few well started plants for the first crop and hurry these along with fertilizer and possibly mulch paper. All garden tomatoes should be staked, using either wooden or steel stakes about six feet high. Trim off all side shoots as they develop, training the main stem up along the, stake and tieing loosely lout every foot. All these warm eather vegetables prefer rich open il and any members of the melon mily, that is squash, cucumber, ci-in, etc., take special delight in hot ndy soil though it must be made rich with well rotted manure or good garden fertilizer. Along with the vegetables mentioned one may set egg plants, well started peppers, and the first planting of celery. The latter must have very rich soil and during dry weather. CAN STILL HAVE GARDEN le \t iS important to get a por-if seed in early in order to i out the season as long as le, in practically every section of Canada it is possible to continue ing isuch things as beans, spin-radish, lettuce, carrots, beets, co*n, right up to July, and If well started plants can bo obtained, this late work may include, tomatoes,-cabbage and cauliflowers, too. In flowers it would be well to secure well started plants from the nearest green house, Of course where the whole garden is put in late, say after the middle of June, it would be well to hurry along a portion of it at least with quick acting commercial fertilizer and if possible, water. Frequent cultivation Is essential. One Sample Lesson in Water-Colour Painting--25c A preliminary water-colour art course ....... $10.00 An advanced water-colour landscape course .. $35.00 A Commercial Art Course $50.00. Personal Art Lessons by Special Appointment Send 3 cent stamped envelope for other information. GIFF BAKER 39 LEE AVENUE TORONTO, ONT. for these ministrations might come gloom, discouragement and despair. It is hard to discourage a people used to vicissitudes. Such determination is bound to bring its own reward. man can become serene ise to live for his sense -H. G. Wells. BEFORE BUYING TIRE SEE THE HIGH Speed TIRE Firestone Tires have always been noted for their long, low cost mileage. Now, in the New High Speed Tire for 1935, you get 50% more Non-skid mileage*-- at no extra cost! Put these -- the last word in tires on your car -- see the nearest Firestone Dealer today. FIRESTONE SENTINEL TIRES AS LOW AS $5.25 ♦Compared" with previous Firestone tire. built i N CicUmnte; of today's needs >t*f Tear Off and Mail Today CANADIAN INDUSTRIES LIMITED SALT DIVISION "T.T," WINDSOR, ONT. ^ Without obligation please send special Chil pen's Booklet, "SALT all over the World." • In certain parts of France the bride's wedding costume has salt into the s to ...! 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