THE COLBORNE EXPRESS, COLBORNE, ONT. THURSDAY, AUG. 29, 193 DO YOU KNOW YOUR SALT FACTS? Can Be Used In A Hundred Ways On The Farm Of all materials purchased for farm use, salt, properly applied, is the most consistent money maker and money saver. It is truer economy to buy a bag too much than one pound too little. The things that interest a practical farmer are such topics as lard, livestock, field crops, barns fertilizers, butter and cheese, meat and eggs. For all of these, salt has some definite, practical, money saving or money making use. In feeding of livestock, it has been shown by Dominion Government tests that the cost of salt, properly fed, is returned to the farmer 3 to 14 times over. Because salt is so universally necessary, it often used a vehicle to carry other food necessities which nature fails to supply. This is the reason for such products as iodized stock salt and iodized table salt. There are large areas in Ontario and the Western Provinces where natural foods contain almost no iodine. Iodized stock salt, in block form or loose, should be given the farm stock. This simple step saves thousands of young pigs, calves, Iambs and foals, for the farmers of Canada every year. Take no chances; if you suspect iodine deficiency, use "Windsor" Iodized Salt regularly. It means stronger, healthier, more productive livestock, CHOOSING FARM SALT Coarse salt is salt or large grain size; fine salt is salt of relatively small grain: that is all that the words "coarse" and "fine" imply. As applied to salt neither word has any reference to quality, purity, or Why Deprive Yourself? Why deprive yourself of the best when you don't need to? Times are better so get back to Ogden's Fine Cut Cigarette Tobacco. Yet get more pleasure from Ogden's because it's better tobacco . . . and it rolls best in "Chantecler" or "Vogue" papers. 52 Poker Hands, any numbers, nc accepted as a complete set. OGDEN'S FINE CUT Your Pipe Knows Ogden's Cut Plug price. does , "crude and cheap," nor d< mean "refined and dear." Coarse salt is made by the "open pan" i evaporation of brine which uses heat less efficiently than the "closed pan" method employed to make fine salt and it is therefore more expensive to produce than fine salt. Fine salt is purer and drier than coarse salt; it contains more actual Bait per 100 pounds. Because it is in smaller grains it is more adaptable t0 mixing with feeds, for spreading on hay, etc. Fine salt is actually Coarse salt should be purchased only for such special uses as curing hides and for freezing mixtures. For those purposes specify coarse salt. For other farm needs specify tine salt. SALT FACTS A mixture of i;e and salt, three parts ice to one part salt will give a temperature well below freezing, in which many dainty desserts may sadily frozen. Remember this on HI C0IAEC10RS "Indians of Canada," by Diamond [Jenness, published by the National Museum of Canada ($2.00), beautifully printed and bound, is a book everyone who prides himself on his library should have. Many photos and illustrations throughout the four hundred pages lend interest and highly instructive. The chapter ... "The Eskimo" I found exceptionally informative as these people living in the far northern hinterlands have always fascinated me. i Eskimo Song, music and words, reproduced on page 207. I found a charming little melody.--M.M. hot s • days. Use for this purpose. A top dresing o roads and paths, n and smooth. It dam: dust, yet prevents e in wet weather. Ke ing tracked into the The e of h exhaustion is los3 of salt through ex-cesive perspiration. Salt in drinking water makes up the loss and prevents such conditions. At haying and harvest time give your work horses extra salt. They will work better. Salt is a controlling factor in an animal's use of mineral substances " such as calcium, phosphorous, iodine and iron. No mineral supplement is complete without salt. Proper feeding of salt increases the value of m'in lixtui lit cm r_ sady r tained freen of charge by writinj Canadian Industries, Limited. (Salt Division) Windsor, Ontario. Other free information--"The Romance of Salt"--interesting facts about salt-scores of special uses. "Salt all over the World"--for boys and girls (and grown-ups) colored pictures--uses-how salt is made, etc.--"Oral Health" --All about "Windsor" Salt for den-tifrce, mouthwash and gargle. -- "Spontaneous Combustion"--Greatest cause of barn fires, except lightning. All about "Windsor" Salt for curing hay--"Salt--the Farmer's Friend" all about the special uses of salt < the farm. FOURTEEN ERRORS OF To expect to set up our own rd of right and wrong and nee in youtJ To endeav ions alike. Not to yie! To look fc action:-. To worry about what • iniformity of opinio ■ judgment and ex] r to mould all dis] medied. can all that needs alleviation. Not to make allowances fcr the weaknesses of others, To consider anything impossible that we cannot ourselves perform. To believe only what our finite minds can grasp. To live as if the moment, the time, the day were so important that it would live forever. To estimate people by some outside quality, for it is that within which- makes the man. Owner's Son: Dad, all of our boarders got mad tois afternoon" and left. They said this place was advertised as one of the most magnificent resorts in the world but that was just Summer Resort Owner: No wonder they said that. Young man, don't ever let me catch you wading across Bottomless Lake again. Same people are now installing revolving doors in their homes so that 'ohey can g0 out the same time the bill collector comes in. Wife* John, there' Yont.-ver ki: Girl : (at window): Po.'ic that t ; que^u be possible to obtain a reputation for being wise by simpiy keeping still and saying n-.ihii-c;. hut tb§re is one person that will not be foo'ed--------yourself. vJoe: 1 never clash with my boss. Heard of a man the other day wh eally enjoyed going to a dentist. H vas henpecked and it gave him h Young Man: May 1 ire of the next danc Sweet Young Thin . -A SHAVINGS A postfege stamp sticks to just one thing and succeeds. Many a self-made man might be happier if he could blame the job on somebody ehe. If you play with your money, how can you expect it to go to work? In some cases the life of a very sick patient might be saved by showing him the biography that the minister expects to read at this funeral. They used to beat the swords into plow-shares. But now they beat the plow-shares into niblicks. A checkered career often ends in a striped suit. The world contains an over supply of average men. Generally the, fellow who (makes the most fuss about the way the election goes did not vote^, Thy fool thought requires just as much time as that which turns out to be a big idea. Love is the sweetest story ever told until somebody pulls the trap door from under you. MORSES DIE OF EPIDEMIC Strange Disease Strikes Quick And Sure At Manitoba Equines -- 75 Already Taken. WINNIPEG-r-New supplies of serum were being rushed to Manitoba to combat an outbreak of disease which *s killing horses in central and southwest sections of the province. Provincial and Dominion authorities co-operated to fight the strange ailment. The nature ot the disease, which has taken a tell of at least 75 horses, was not definitely known, but it was believed to be vencephalomyelitis, which attacks the brain and spinal columns cf horses. The bite of a new type of mosquito was thought to transmit the minute virus. Viscera of the dead animals has been sent to Ottawa for laboratory diagnosis.. In the meantime, local quarantine measures in the infected areas are being enforced. At a meeting, at which preventive measures were discussed, Hon. D. G. McKenzie, Manitoba minister of agriculture, promised the co-operation of his department with the Dominion health of animals branch. Whatever measures may be ordered by federal authorities will be backed by the pro-Serum for combating the outbreak has been exhausted, and orders have been rushed for fresh supplies. The serum is difficult to obtain and is expensive, the three applications recommended by veterinaries costing $25 per horse. The outbreak first appeared in southwestern Manitoba, rapidly spread north and northeastward. Provincial authorities have no accurate estimate of deaths, or the number of horses attacked. One report told of 126 deaths in one area. Reports of new outbreaks were received from Hartney, Elgin, Boissevain and Pear- EXPECT 3 MILLION IN A YEAR FROM AMUSEMENT TAX Two Months' Revenue Amounts to $504,574 foil Treasury of the Govern* ment. Toronto.--Based on returns fop the first two months' operation o| the new Act, the Provincial Treasjn ury will be enriclied more than $3^ 000,000 through the amusements tax in 12 months at the expense dt theatre owners, sport organization^ and patrons, according to statistic^ compiled by the Allied Sports and Amusement Association. Taking Heavy Toll This will be mere than four times greater than the Amusements Tax revenue of $745,056 for the fiscal year of 1934 and 200 percent, greater than the tax total of $1,016,-793 collected in 1932 when the Government granted exemption on admissions of 25 cents and under. "Amusements tax returns for the last two months plainly indicate how the people of moderate means and children are being badly hit by the new impost," declared W. M. Gladish, secretary of the association which is waging a campaign against the entertainment levy. "The chief changes in the new, Amusements Tax Act were th6 wiping out of the exemption on low-priced admissions and a tax increase of 150 percent, on the 30-cent ticket, which was the lowest admision previously assessed. The tax revenue for July was five times greater than that for the same month one year ago. Therefore it is the ordinary man and his family who are shouldering the burden. The figures only emphasize the need for amusements tax modifications without delay." "The one big blunder is in calling the English simple when they are subtle."--G. K. Chesterton. CANADIAN NATIONAL EXHIBITION view of The Prince's Gate showing a small section of the huge crowds that a iunds of the larges STOP THAT ITCH In One Minute D. D. D. Prescription Speeds Relit! It is really surprising to see how Dr.D. D. Dennis' ptire, cooling, liquid, antiseptic DDD Prescription quickly stops itching tortures of eczema, pimples mosquito or other insect bites, rashes and other skin afflictions. Forty years wcrld-wide success Its gentle oils penetrate the skin, soothing and healing the inflamed tissues. No fuss--no muss. Clear, greaseless and stainless--dries up almost immediately. Try V. D. D. Prescription today, btops the most intense itching instantly. A 35c trill bottle, at any drug s%\isTfur\rarV Issue No. 34 - When in Toronto SAVE YOUR EXHIBITION EXPENSES By Buying Your Used Car or Truck From Canada's Largest Automobile Dealers A.D.Gorrie&Co.Ltd Head Office and Showrooms 354 VICTORIA STREET 14 SHUTEReSTREET (Opposite Massey Hall) 400 YONGE STREET (at Gerrard) PHONE ELGIN 9171 RAISE MINK BARGAIN PRICES Must Sell to Make Room Proven Breeders and Young Stock Easy To Raise I. K. Martin GALT, ONT. - ARTIFICIAL LIMBS. TRUSSES ANDABDOMINAL BELTS. '"!" CHURCH57TORONTO 97dl General Motors Products of Canada, Ltd. 208-210 Spadina Ave. Toronto --:-- WA. 1831 LEARN HAIRDRESSIN& While visitie.fr the , Toronto inspect our Aeadem formation.: will be the different Cours. Write f-.r Free I'.onklet. ROBERTSON'S HAIHDRESSIN ACADEMY rni AT THE UULt"° EXHIBITION 3 DINING ROOMS Ontario Government Building, Coliseum, and Women's Building. In Toronto Call at Canada's Greatest Super-Service Station See and Duggan's "Ten Minute Car Wash" (3 blocks below Bloc-r^ between Yonge and Bay) Quick Service --All Makes of Car SEE THE 1904 FORD! "The most important thing in life : work."--King Carol. Y.W.C.A. RESIDENCES r.W.C.A. Cafeteria, j WAverley S30G Kennedy and Menton