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The Colborne Express (Colborne Ontario), 26 Sep 1935, p. 7

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THE COLBORNE EX-PRESS, COLBORNE ONT. THURSDAY, SEPT. 26,1935 7 MILLIONS OF YOUNG PINE TREES SAVED Ontario Forestry Branch Acts Quickly Against Sawfly Gatterpillar The 13th of the month fi Friday more often than < Man--How's your hay fever? Friend--So much better that I now feel safe in starting out with only three handkerchiefs instead of the dozen I usually take while it is going strong. It L „_ year the child figures how he is go ing to keep out of college, whih dad figures how to keep him there. / mediate a * ] estry Bra j young pir 1 logical Pat--When are you going to pa; me that $10 for pasturing your cow' I've been keeping her now for te< weeks. Mike--Why, Pat, she ain't worti ten dollars. Pat--Well, suppose I keep her i white for what you owe me then? Mike--No, indeed, Pat, but I'll tell you what I'll do. You just keep her two mere weeks and then you can have her. ;te. Marie., Ont. -- 1m-L-tion by the Ontario For-lch has saved millions of 3 trees on the 5,784-acre it plantation north of Thessalon from the ravages of the sawfly catterpillar, it was learned last week. Discovery of the sawfly at Thessalon marked the first time it had been found in Northern Ontario. branch officials sprayed saving most of them from | destruction. While investigating the sawfly attack, G. H. R. Phillips, chief forester, and Rod Goodall, forester, found the white pine weevil attacking ! Scotch pine. j They were told by the entomo-at Ottawa this find ^corded attack of,the vil on Scotch pine. CANADA'S FOREIGN JSOWTME WIND BY I Dominion Notes TRADE GAINS BEING TOO UNSELFISH Largely Reduced The fact that Canada's foreign commerce has held up remarkably-] well, in comparison with that of j other countries, during the foiir depression years from 1930 to 1934, is revealed in an analysis just complet-l ed'by the statistical bureau of the! League of Nations. World exports on the gold dollar basis in the last four years, the ana-1 lysis shows, have declined 57.1 percent, while these of Canada are down , by only 49.9 percent. Thus, the Do- ■ minion has resisted the decline more successfully than has the AND REAP TORNADO Bank Of Canada Has Withdrawn $87,000,000 In Six Months Mother Discovers That Spoiled Child Won't Reform In'ha An Instant. vh:>!e; of the larg Getting rich is easy. Just hold on to vacant lots and let other people build a city around you. Jewel--I asked Cleveland if the grapefruit was very juicy. Helen--And did he tell you. Jewel--No, but I read the answer Nature's Signs When you see sweet juicy apple hanging low upon the trees, And you hear a kind of yawning ii the mild September breeze, When the bees all start to act lik< they'd got drone-blood in theii Prehistoric Chinese Women Wore Furs And Used Rouge i feel ; RTC-. ; cooln( Wher yoi blooms, And the folks drift off the porches to the family setting rooms, Get a piate of cakes and cider and pull up your rocking chair, -You can bet your bottom dollar Old King Winter's in the air! the ck MacTash while walking ndy McToon < ling a new piano c Jock--Sandy, are ing again? Sandy--No, I din ' out the wheels. If : tell the ' Bride--What can I do to save steps in preparing a meal ? Married Friend--Move next door ;to a delicatessen. . SEPTEMBER BREEZES--A hay fever cure is not unlike religion, helps some but doesn't take with others. . . . The best way to feel for the needy is to put your hand in your pocket. . . . Two dimples go well with the fat of the land. Washington--Prehistoric Chinese women apparently wore fur coats and painted their faces thousands of years before modern women thought of the same ideas, the Smithsonian Institution indicated recently report of its stone age excavations in northern China. The ' archeologists dug deep into the remains of a pre-historic village in Shansi Province, where they found lumps of cinnabar -- prehistoric rouge -- and indications that the population wore furs of 1500 B.C. style. The "village" sprawled ovei area 500 miles long and 200 i wide, C. W. Bishop, associate ator of the freer gallery of art of the Smithsonian Institute, said. The inhabitants lived in bee-hive shaped houses, whose walls were plastered, and whose only entrance was from the top. "Our prehistric Chinese were not Nomads wandering about with their flocks," Bishop said. "They ' planters depending for food on what they grew." Peace at any pri war at all costs. . tates is bossed. . , have to make sens . . A pound of pi; ;of luck. ... A knows no bounds, grow fat. ... If bus: any of your time, cheaper than . He who hesi-. Slogans do not to be catching. . slighted woman . . Laugh and ss is worth th all of it. . . There is no substitute for An important factor ill Prince Sets Vogue Of Pleated Belt CANNES, France,--The Prince of Wales started another craze in n: fashions recently when he appeared on the walerfrfont with a pleated cord belt fastened with a five silver anchor. Dealers, swamped orders, rushed demands to Paris who'esalers for thousands of simila belts. The heir to the British Thron wore the belt with a white sport all business is promptness. . . . Even a mule will develop horse sense if you treat him like a gentleman. . . . But he is never afraid of the boss if he knows he is doing first class work. . . . Our idea of a soft job is a feather renovating business. . . . Probably a man becomes a grave digger so he will be prepared for any undertaking. . • . Ii criminal hasn't a scar by which they can catch him. they are hopeful he has a woman. . . . The prayer meeting is the only attraction that isn't discouraged by empty seats. . . . The best way to break a bad habit is to drop it. . Tibet*' Tear Off and Mail Today CANADIAN INEUSTH3ES LIMITED SALT DIVISION „T T „ WINDSOR, ONT. LL. Without obligation please send special Children's Booklet, "SALT all over the World". nations, has a be.ter record. The comparison; are interesting. The decline of Canadian exports by 49.9 percent, contrasts with a decline of 66.9 percent. 0f the exports of the United States; with 57.2 percent, of those of the United Kingdom; with 65.8 percent, of Germany; with 58.4 percent, of France; and with 58.1 percent, of Italy. Japan's deel: approximately 47 percent., the dnl major exporting nation with a bette In the analysis reveals alto that i point .of volume of trade, Canada coi: tributed 3.71 percent, of the tote world exports in 1929, while last yea she boosted ber share to 3.99 pei Ottawa.--The Bank of Canada :en functioning for six t commenced activities March 11. In the period elapsed, a total of Mrs. Wilson sat looking at the j $87,000,000 of the old Dominion sea. She was alone because she was notes have been withdrawn from cn a rest cure, 'but oh, how soothing ! circulation and replaced by the it was, the, friendly sea, to which s-he j smaller Bank of Canada notes, could talk and not have to listen to j When the central bank opened there an answer. i was $08,000,000 of Dominion notes She marshalled the facts that had ; outstanding. Now there is about tumbled cut of the blue in the past j $11,000,000. The total of both Bank week. They were these. She was j of Canada and Dominion notes out-tired and ill; the doctor said she. standing August 28 was $80,000,000. would have t0 have a change; there) On January 1 next the chartered banks of Canada will be required hey had was to be spent on Burk's M.A. course so he could teach. It had been hard getting Bulk through college, and now it seemed he needed as more "letters" to get him a school. ,ly j But when Jerry, her husband, heard er ' what the doctor had to say, he went | off and bought her a ticket and gave in ! her enough to pay her board at the m.1 little- resort for a month. Burk had elbcen pretty silent. He had not said ar j anything, but she could not forget blank look when he heard the to reduce circulation of their notes five percent-, the first of the cuts under the new Bank Act which over a period of years will see chartered bank notes in circulation gradually reduced to a minimum. Already the chartered banks are taking steps to be ready for this five percent, contraction. There's No Tobacco like Ogden's "That's why "roll-your-owners" everywhere are getting back to Ogden's FineCut--theonetobacco that assures cigarette satisfaction: And Ogden's costs so little that it doesn't pay to deny yourself the best tobacco, you'll roll Ogden's best with "Chanfecler'* or "Vogue" cigarette papers. 52 Poker Hands, any numbers, no accepted as a complete set. That i and teresting information -- ing. It is proof that Can-trade has suffered less any other nation except foreign than that of Japan. It is interesting to note that the Dominion now occupie: ond place as a source of supply for bad brought -his young wife home Great Britarin in contrast to fifth I that was ^,11 there was to it. She UNEXPECTED TIDINGS In her hand now, flu tered a night letter. She had read it over fifty times, but.still she clung to at as one would hold a snake that would strike if released. Burk was married. He place ten years ago. Similarly, it has moved up from eighth place to fourti place in the ranks of Britain's customers in the same period. --Stratford Beacon-Herald Warm Water Route Discovered In Arctic a. thing about house- 18, did work, and the; would be frantic. She could picture the place with her away and Jerry making scenes. Her heart fluttered and she held her side. It was all her fault. If she had taken a stand and refused to leave it would not have happened. What did Burk mean? He hadn't said anything about a girl; she Moscow.-The Soviet ice breaker! ha(in't known n(; was 'n '°v*: He "ev" Sadko reported by wireless last week 1 er toId. her anything about his affairs, it had discovered a warm water! but she put that down to his being sensitive and shy, although his tather had another through Arctic ice which i might be a section of an open channel through which steamers could j navigate to . the Far East from j Europe by way of the polar regions, j George Ushakbv, head of the expedition exploring Arctic areas, said j the passage was 650 feet wide, ,. ,, . . , , its jib got UlUtr.l, iUUi UiUlfU 11c1 til- ting through previously unexplored. tentiong to keep a grip on nis af£ec. She tried to think back over th years. She had shielded him and sheltered him, had gone shabby time and again to get him the best ol "lothes, had taken few summer trip, so he could go to camps; and then, got older, increased her at- •itory between Franz Josef Land and Nickolas the Second Land. He reported the water lane was flanked by fields of impassible ice. Ushakov, who also announced the discovery of a new island, said he believed the water was a part of the Gulf Stream. The passage was reported extending due north from the position of the Sadko, given as 81% degree northern latitude, approximately 700 miles from the North Pole. i of his j / Boy Problems Grow Up (An edi.orial from the Kotarian . Magazine). To most men, a boy is one 0t the ost interesting things on earth. No ro are alike. To one, the description i noise with dirt on it" may apply, nother will be shy and serious with Idly conflicting ideas struggling for. cpression in action. Wise adults un-jrs and this, for they know that the towing" period of a youngster is iove all a time for adjustments to constantly expanding social and But boys grow up, and so do their problems. Youngsters have had an especially difficult time in making their adjustments- in the past five years, for the conditions about them with which they would come to terms have themselves been shifting. Uncertainty in the world has hyper-complicated the task of "getting set" faced by youth in the late teens and Every nation has its "youth prob-m." Superficially, it may vary from country t0 country, but the same eco-ial factors that baffle i North America today tuation of the unad-l England, or France, elsewhere. that she felt was slipping. Cruel ies to keep him in Hence to hiirJtather boyish escalades. Extra dessertstyperpetual laundering, light ;<3 turned down just so. MARRIAGE FOR SPITE And without a word to her, her boy had done this. He knew it would bring her home, too, at once. The telegram almost seemed to "Well, you shelved me this ti No Limitation To Size or Cost Of New Houses May Borrow Up To 80 Per Cent. For Homes Costing $10,000 Or More. Ott.wa.--Under the new Domii ion Housing Act there will not I any limitation on the size and cost of any house a person availing himself of the terms of the act wishes to build. There already have been inquiries from persons wishing to borrow to build homes costing $10,-000 and more. In this regard it is pointed out that the purpose of the act is to as-I sist in the building of more homes and while the hope is that it will mean a large increase in the type of homes suitable for the greater mass of the people, there is the conclusion that the building of higher-class homes will also contribute to more employment and greater use of Canadian building materials. Interpretations of the act are being made as points arise. For instance, it has been ruled that whle the act permits boi cent- of the cost of OGDEN'S FINE Your Pipe Knows ( CUT en's Cut Plug New Light Aids Dentists Rays Of The Mercury-Vapor Arc A Help In Diagnosing Defects The blue-green rays of the mer. cury-vapor arc, under which the skin appears dead and the veins look like dark rivers, has its dental uses. Gums turn purple--almost black; teeth fluoresce and stand out brilliantly white. All this makes diagnosis eas- '11 s No, she ■ Burk young man i underly the s justed youth i Australia, o Sharp Winter Ahead Warns Indian Chief -Old Jeremiah Rundle, chief of the swampy Cree Indians came down from his Norway House ation last week to tell the white folks a cool, open Fall was anticipated in the north country- Coal "11 need filling shortly,, he the thought; it wasn' couldn't be like that. In her heart she ki truth. The boy had lost sight of everything but himself. Gratitude She had supposed all children partially grateful for wh„j *3ir parents did. But the scales had fallen. Parents meant nothing to children nowadays. Only a source of supply. And it had been her fault. They would be expecting her now by next train. Suddenly she sat up and threw the telegram through the rail. She walked down to the office and sent this message, "Congratulate Burk, but tell him he is stronger than I am. Will not come home. Rent the house furnished if you can and join me here. " Burk can support Mary if he takes that joty_ at Meyer's." When Burk got the .word he exclaimed "She couldn't" take it, eh? My own mother. Come on, Mary, we'll get cut and stay out if we starve. 1 thought she was my friend. Well, this ends it. She'll never see me again." id. Fake British Employment Agencies To Be Closed Fake employment agencies are to be put out of business in Britain. The Ministry of Labor is considering establishing a special Labor Exchange in London which will devote its whole attention to finding domestic employment. This bureau will serve the double purpose of finding employment for girls from the distressed areas, and checking the activities of agencies which exploit girls. There is a certain type of agency in London which brings girls from the North-East and from South Wales on the promise of finding them domestic employment. After extracting a fee from the girls these agencies send them to situations which the girls cannot 'leader | tolerate. The proposed domestic exchange1 mistress j maid, will carefully investigate! that'ducks the hona-fide of all employ Chief Jeremiah than 70 years ag ber just how much more -- at yay House, 150 miles north of here. He has just retired )f his tribe and at present is enjoy-1 ng a little holiday in the city. charging no fees to One indication of a sharp Winter n the offing, he According to information supplied by A. B. McKenna, Westinghouse engineer, we distinguish red only when red rays are present in the illuminating rays. Reduce the number of colors in light and the appearance of an object changes. It turns black, gray or the color of the rays that shine upon it. Hence the contrasts are sharpened. Apply this to the mercury-vapor 'ing of 80 per | arc. It is predominantly blue, green, home, it is not yellow, Flood the mouth with light of " al tl ncessary to borrow that much if a' these hues only and the gums, prospectve builder has an equity jgUe and tissues, having no red light higher than 20 percent. Further, it j to reflect, turn dark purple. On the has definitely been laid down that! other hand, diseased or affected tis-no second-hand or shoddy materials! sues do not change in aspect simil-shall be used in homes constructed j arly. Hence there is a sharp contrast with money borrowed under the act. i between sound and unsound portions - | of gum. The course of the blood ves- IVLa-vi^Si*"* Ciiet-mma I sels is more easily traced. Abscesses meXICan V^USlOmS ' d inflame(i areas are accentuated. PlpaCO Canadian* With the teeth it is the same. Tar-* 1Ctt3C VCUIttUIttlia tar and film deposits do not fluoresce, - | but healthy enamel does. Enamel de- Ontario Woman Records Herfects Detray themselves by differences !- density. Ragged fillings and super- Impressions Of Visit No need to go to Alaska to be cool or to Egypt to see the pyramids, according to Mrs. E. B. Flint, of London, Ont., who with her husband, attended the Rotary International Convention in Mexico City. It's never too hot and never too cool down there and the Aztec pyramids are almost as interesting as the famous ones on the banks of the storied Nile. cr Mexico, situated 7,500 feet above j ~ sea level, has an even temperature,! -never above 78 and never below 60, the visitors were told. It has retained many quaint customs and as yet has no large stores and few tourists, owing to the lack of good motor roads In a city of more than 1,000,000 inhabitants there are only two chine laundries, Mrs. Flint Laid, for the women still adhere to the primitive method of washing their clothes in the streams with a flat rock to rub on. The fruit and flower kets were a sight. The pyramids built by the Aztecs several hundred years ago, were of great interest, Mrs. Flint said, ai not the least amazing feature was primitive but effective shower i stalled in a niche in the wall. The delegates had a Mexican dinner a restaurant made in a cave below the pyramids. The Floating Gardens, where land is so valuable that no houses i built on it, was also another pi: of interest. It is possible to ra crops of corn a year on t land, and if a man sells a strip he lerely digs another canal instead of building a fence to define the boundary. jveal themselves at ■ "The truth is t ditions nations cai than individuals." --Viscount Cecil. Classified Advertising IHVESTOBS ! I OFFER TO EVERY INVENT1 Woman To Spend Winter In Northern Mining Camp the Issue No. 38 -- '35 Edmonton. -- Undaunted by prospect of a long cold winter J the northern mining camp of Lake Athabasca, Mrs. C. Shearing is ph "At no time is one s character and ning to return to Goldfield, Sas temperament, one's charm or its lack, J with her husband who is working a so clearly evident as in the playing of claim. Mrs. Shearing will be the games or in the pursuit of sport." only woman in the far northern --Emily Post. camp. TIKES AND BICYCLE BARGAINS P; BICYCLES ion paid. Free c 105 Dundas W< FARMS AND HOMES PRIZE CONTESTS AUTHORITATIVE COUNSEL ON WINNING PRIZE CONTESTS This article and monthly listings of Prize Contests, Syndicate Markets and Markets for Illustrations for Designs, Greeting Card Designs and 'Verses, Stories and Poems, supplied for a yearly subscription of $2.00. A Sample Sheet for 10c Or a 3 cent stamped envelope for full information. GIFF BAKER 39 LEE AVENUE TORONTO

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