in "' 201 Weston Road, South; West Toronts, Ont, SSRAREENAT, ORAS » CH put Sst _ a PN Tr eas SE A RRR LR EL SR SR SNE TTT hi SENSE GT v ERAN ARE Beet Harta re gg tp at To Sg 5, Sg re |B Bn Fs Lucky Teter hurtling and tw'sting side over side and end over end down the track in his famous spiral crash, the stunt that has thrilled the world. opportunity to view Lucy troupe. of wgrld famous Canadian National Exhibition crowds will be given gn when he attempts this stunt at the Exhibition, where he will show with his ell Drivers. We frequently credit a long sober face with wisdom, when the cause is indigestion. Big Boss (invited out to dinner by one of his employees) -- "I don't of- ten have such a dinner as this, young fellow." : Son of family -- "Neither do we. 1 am sure glad you came." WELL BRED? -- The Missionary Soclety of the Ludwick Presbyterians Church will hold & babe sale in Van'{~ Dyke's Leginning at 9 o'clock this morning. -- From the Greenburg, Penn. Review. Man -- "So you asked Mary to mar- ry you?" Friend -- "Yes, but I didn't have any luck. She asked me if I had any prospects." Man -- "Why didn't you tell her all about your rich uncle?" Friend -- "I did. Mary is my aunt now!" : The salesman may be smarter than his prespect, but he makes a mistake when he calls his attention to that fact. Daphne -- "Jack says he would not marry the nicest and most beautiful girl in the world." Doris -- "What a cheek. As if I'd have him!" Amnotlier thing this country needs are people who won't get hot under the collar without first working up a sweat. } "I harvest; xaore wheat = hgsi because I reat my seed with New Improved CERESAN" 'Want fo reduce root rots end other diseases--get bigger wheat yields -- better profits? Then treat seed with New Improved CERESAN., "This dust..." says a recent Divi. sion of Botany report, "effectively ' controls the smuis of oats, covered smu! of barley,and bunt of wheat, It also improves seed germina. tion," Easy to apply. Cosis less than 6c an acre. Write today for free Wheat Pamphlet, } SOLD BY THE MANUFACTURERS | OF THE WELL-KNOWN C-I-L FREE-FLOWING FERTILIZERS. FOR YOUR FALL REQUIREMENTS SEE YOUR LOCAL DEALER (CANADIAN, INDUSTRIES LIMITED vy Stranger (to newsboy) --- ('Are 'there any fools in this town?%" Newsboy -- "I don't know. Are you lonesome?" The boy wonders are burned out just about the time the dumb clucks get started. Customer -- "You made a mistake in that prescription I gave my moth- er-in-law. Instead of quinine you used strychnine," Druggist -- "You don't say! Then you owe me 20 cents more." If you are not big enough to stand criticism, you are too small to be safe. ly praised. Summer Boarder (reproachfully) -- "You told me you hadn't any mosqul toes." Hiram Coggin -- "I didn't. Them you see flyin' 'round here come from SI Martin's place. They ain't mine, "Moral Courage -- The feeling of se- curity when you haven't done any- thing that anybody could tell on you. Mrs. Professor -- "William, you haven't kissed me for three whole days." Professor (absently) -- 'You don't say! Whom have I been kissing?" A smart man can learn many things but he can never hope to know the difference between the various jobs a woman can get done on her hair in a beauty shop. " Doctor -- "I would advise you, mad: am, te take frequent baths, get plen. ty of fresh air and dress in cool clothes." Husband (an hour later) -- "What did the dfictor say?" Woman -- "He said I ought to go to the beach and then to the mountains, Also that I rust get some-new light gowns at once." Everyone in business must expect to handle some transactions at a loss Girl -- "Give me a week to think over your proposal." - Young Man -- "Sure. If I'm not mar- ried then I'll let you know." With some men emergency is only another name for opportunity. 'Friend -- "What would you do if you were in my shoes? Man -- I'd shine them." Irish Trade Returns Prove Disappointing The Free State's trade returns for the first half of this year are dis- appointing, Exports have risen by £565,000; but imports have by £2,- 453,000, The net result is -that the adverse balance for the half-year is £11,000,000, or approximately £2,- ~000,000 more than it was in the first half of last year. So far as our ex- ternal trade is concerned we sent out «£2 for every £1 that came back to us. A glance at the countries with which we have business reveals a very unsatisfactory condition, Ex- cluding Great Britain and Northern Ireland--which takes 90 per cent of our exports--all other countries still give us only one pounds worth of orders for every ten pounds we send them. The returns set out 48 such countries, and, vith one minor excep- tion, the balance-of trade is, in every case, unfavourable to the Free State. ~--Irish Independent, pitching TORTURE In A Minute of For Ble ok en Eh i J PRESCRIPTION. 1is = skin, Clear, greassless da int intense bod ha for be pAe TION. 98 Hay Driers When discussing recent. develop- ments in mechanized farming earlier in the year, we referred to the rapid progress that grass drying was mak-: ing in this country, and pointed .out that the future of the process was bound up with some economic rather than technical considerations. Some of the earlier small driers had a decided- ly low efficiency, an evaporative fig- ure of only 314 cwt. to 613% cwt. of water per 1 cwt. of coke being ob- tained, in comparison with about 8 cwt. achieved with larg&@driers of the more recent types. The most suitable size of drier is at present an open question, but there is no doubt that so far as this country is concerned, the demand will _be for comparatively small units for some time to come. The large drier can only be employ- ed economically under a co-operative or factory system of working, and while such systems have found favor abroad, there is no immediate prob- ability of their being introduced into British farming, and the essential question for our manufacturers is to improve the eflicilency of units hav- ing a capacity say of 214 cwt. to b cwt. per hour. Driers of this capacity are sufficiently large to meet all the requirements of the {ypical home farm. The drier-is arranged to dry the grass in two successive stages. The wet grass is first placed on a tray having the bottomn formed of a per- forated plate, through which hot gases from. a furnace are passed and dis- charged to atmosphere above the grass, After the grass has been par- tially dried on this tray, it is trans- ferred. by hand to a second tray to complete the drying process. The sec- ond tray -is-similar to the first. Peace Experts At Conference German and Chilean Speakers Listed For Economics' Institute Meeting at Lake Couchiching. Those attending the sixth annual session of the.Canadian Institute on Economics and Politics, at Lake Couchiching, Aug. 7 to 20, are having an opportunity of hearing a recognized peace authority, Dr. Hans Simons, member of the graduate faculty of the new School for Social 'Research, New York. He was general secretary of the League of Nations Union from 1919 to 1932. He will deliver three addresses on "The Present Outlook In Europe". oo Dr. Simons served in the Reich and Prussian ministry of the interfor in 1922-23 and 1928-30. He was director of the Deutsche Hochschule for Pol- itik, in Berlin, and lecturer there from 1924 to 1930. Adviser to the govern- ment conimittee for Reich reform, 1928-30, he is also the author of many articles on subjects of international importance. : Carlos Davila, former Chilean am- bassador to the United States, will present 'The Latin-American Point of View." Now director of the Editors' Press Service, New York, he was in 1932 for 100 days provisional president of the Republic of Chile, Canada Thistle Is Not Canadian The Canada thistle which is over- running a large part of the North American continent is 'not Canadian at all, a fact of which farmers in the United States are unaware when they heap maledictons on its inroads into their fields, The Canada thistle was introduced from Europe. Some of the plants bear male flowers only, which form no seeds; other plants are female and all seed. The flowers of the Canada thistle vary in <slor, and range from pale purple through dif- ferent shades of pink to white. -permit 183 King St. B, Health Great Aid In Making Beauty Last Sufficient Rest, Exercise, Pro- per Diet, Physcal Exam- ~~ ination All Important Health is the foundation of true beauty. And the older woman who is likely to lead a more sedentary life than when she was younger, should remind herself constantly of this fact. It is a mistake, indeed, to. try to get along on less sleep than you actually need simply because you were once told that "the older an adult becom's, the less sleep she requires," 'This may be trfie 'of some, but, general'y speaking each of us should sleep eigiit hours per night, certainly no less than seven. Adequate rest, more than any other one thing wards off fine lines and wrinkles, about eyes and: mouth and preserves the youthful sparkle in eyes, says Alicia Hart, beauty expert, in an article on "Don't Lecok Your Age." A reasonable amount of exercise and a sensible diet are important, too. You cannot expect your figure to stay young and skin clear if you never walk more than three blocks a day and refuse to join a gym class or do exerclsgs at home. Authorities agree and case histories prove that a wom- an who exercises every morning of her life takes a long, brisk walk or plays hard at her favorite sport twice a week need not worry about looking old when she is forty. If you are going to be sensible and have a thorough physical examination every year after you are thirty, do discuss your diet with the doctor who examines you. As the years go on, it may be best for you to eliminate certain foods that agreed with you when you were younger but which do not any more. Or to add others that you have. avoided intentionally, If possible, take a nap every day. This idea is quite out of the question for many women, of course, but, if you possibly can sleep a few minutes after lunch or in the middle of the afternoon, by all means do it. Many business women manage a 20-minute nap as soon as they get home from the office. Even a busy mother and homemaker generally can find time to rest for a short period while the children are napping or just before they get home from school. Try it for a month and sce if your skin isn't smoother, eyes more sparkling and disposition infinitely sunnier, Bettet Milk For Britain LONDON.--The government is nmov- ing for more and better milk, A per- manent milk commission is to be es- tablished, the primary duties of which will be concerned with improvement of milk distribution and with concili- ation and- arbitration between the milk marketing boards and milk buy- ers. A price Insurance plan, to which state assistance will be given, will safeguard the industry against any serious fall in the price of butter and cheese. Government contributions will be given to foster the production of quality milk, The milk marketing boards will be relieved from all £150,000 ($746,715) of a contingent liability to repay cer- tain exchequer advances made to sup- plement the price of milk used in manufacture, This lability by Sept. 30, 1940, has been estimated at £3, 400,000, endian : _ The government is to make pro- posalg to enable the municipal auth. orities to secure cheaper milk so to municipalities to extend schemes for granting free or cheap milk to expectant or nursing mothers and children under school age, Streamlined Pigs Streamlined pigs will soon be the ideal of the agricultural show judge, according to "Canada's Weekly," pub- lished in London. "The reason- why the roly-poly, lardy porkers are on their way out is because housewives are using less and less Jard cach year as chemists perfect the processes of making vege- table cooking 'oils, - Consequently, there is less and less market for the fatty-type pig. Perhaps we shall enjoy our 'breakfast bacon all the more, if there is a little more lean meat in it. : "The prediction is made that in 20 years from now very few pigs will be given an ear of corn to munch voraciously. The farmer will haul his crop of corfi to a chemical pro- cessing plant, . where the fattening starch will be removed for making syrups and alcohol for motor fuel. The residue of gluten and .oil press will then go back to the hog pen. "A leading 'scientist says that automobile motors will be developed to utilize solid fuel made from starch: in corn and other ¢rops. Meanwhile the production of lard in Canada is running around 50,000,000 lbs a year at a factory value between $4,600,000 and $5,000,000." FREE Enlargement with Every 260 Order Roll Films Developed and Printed, 260 8 rints, 25¢ Mail to PHOTO-CRAFT Toronto 2 i ~ Issue No. 34-137 # Clas ified Advertising | Re oo Ee AGENTS WANTED RR =o a < FURNITURE. PORTRAIT AGENTS WIU'TE FOR CATA- logue and prices -. Lig money waking preposition United Art, Toronto 2. CEDARBROOK GAME FARM ()rreRs, AFTER SEPTEMBER FIRST, large. hardy young Ringnecks, all breeds fancy Pheasants, Wild Ducks, Geese, Wild Turkevs, hundred Ringneck breeders, none related, imported stock. Write for ce list. 240 Jarvis Street (Department C), ronto. FILMS AND PRINTS NLARGEMENT FREE WITH EVERY 25 cent order Roll films developed and eight prints 25 cents, reprints 3 cents each. Brightling, 29 Richmond Street East, Toronto, 21) ROLLS DEVELOPED AND PRINTED Coy exnerts, mailed hack same day. Beechwoned, 173 Lambton Ave., Toronto 9. OLLS DEVELOPED AND EIGHT PRINTS with free enlarrement, 25¢. Reprints 3c each. Comrercial Photo Service, Dept. B., Outremont, Que. Twa- Year-Old Knows Alvhabet Learns More Words In Ten Months Than Most Grown-ups Use FULTON, N.Y.--TFulton's child prod- igy, Eudora Louise Graves, says the alphabet, counts up to 100, has a vo- cabulary of 2,500 words and recites nursery rhymes although she is only two years old, Her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Richard S. Graves, already are plinning a for- mal home education for her. A pretty blonde baby with blue eyes - and rosy cheeks, Eudora is in most respects quite the normal little wom- an. She plays with dolls, will pound the plano keys whenever the oppor- tunity presents itself, and appears to enjoy roaming about the house. Her words are understandable, but not clearly pronounced. Without faltering once, she can name the 23 figures shown on her. play blocks. The list includes bicycle, fox, wolf, truck, ehgle, tractor, elephant, camel, seal, horse, train, car, pig, can. non, bee, airplane, dog, duck, Indian, boat, lion, mouse and zeppelin. She can recite the name of every piece of furniture In the living room. In the realm of mathematics, she can count up to 100, and also count to the same figures by tens. She re- cites "Jack and Jill," "Little Bo Peep," "Humpty-Dumpty," and can sing "Three Blind Mice" and "Two Little Feet", _ She started talking when she was .14 months old. New Ontario Peeved . The Old Ontario man knows little of New Ontario. What exasperates New Ontario as much as anything is the indifference of the Old Ontario man, observes the Sault Ste, Marie Star. We can forgive Lloyd George for his rapture over the White River pansies, but Toronto has no business not to know that the Lake Superior section grows the finest on earth. A learned Toronto professor 'told his audience about New . Ontario's moss, but he didn't know that they grew oats eight feet high on the Transcontinental . . . It's' a-disgrace that Ontario knows so: little of: itself," said an Old On-- tario editor last year as he looked at an 800-foot precipice in Agawa Canyon. . What a benefit to Old Ontario if the newspapers there would under- take a campaign to. get all Ontario people to spend their holidays just this one year in New Ontario. Look what they have to see: The great Algoma wilderness, in- cluding the Agawa Canyon. The gold belt, the silver belt, the nickel belt, the forests primeval, the paper mills, the great steel works at the Sault, the railroad trip for half a day on Lake Superior's shore. -- - And last, but not least, the pioneer, the man who has cheerfully under- taken the task of making New On- tario a great and prosperous land. He's worth meeting. School Janitor Now Doctor of Philosophy PITTSBURG, Pa.--No more mops and brooms for Dr, Edward Lee Harris-- ; The scholarly Negro, who has been a janitor at the University of Pittsburg six years, will take a pro- fessor's job at Wilberforce Univer- sity, in Ohio, he said. Dr. Harris was dusting a class- room when he received word of the appointment as head of Wilberforce chemistry department. ~For six years he has been strug- gling along--getting only four or five hours sleep daily--to complete the requirements for the highest aca- demic degree awarded, Doctor of Philosophy. At the same time he's carrying on a full-time job as jani- tor, and supporting a wife--also a Pitt graduate--and two children. Last June he received his doctor's degree in chemistry. Eye for Eye, But Not, Horse For A Horse LONDON, Ont.--The Bible says "An eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth," but when James Steele of ree Delivery to nearest freight depot 'Bank references., A. BPECIAL OFFER if you enclose this adverusement with order or. present at our showrooms if shopping "in Toronto. ; LYONS' AUGUST SALE OF TRADE-IN FURNITURE Every article completely 1} tioned Jad sanitarily treated. nto's t used piture market, Bpecial attention given to mall orders. 11.95 6.95 11.5C 9.95 11.95 Kitchen Cabinets in perfect condi. on. , Dressers, any finish, Binger drop-head sewing machines. 3 or 4 burner gas stoves. Guar- anteed. . China Cabinets, any fifish, 6 Pc. breakfast suites, enamel fin. 14.50 ish, assorted colors. y 12 95 Bed outfits, all steel panel beds, is walnut finish, excellent springs and hrand new mattresses. All sizes. 3 32 50 4 Pc. Walnut Mohair Chesterfield 4 Bulte in perfect condition. Revers- to.e Marshall cushions. A wonderful bargain, 24 50 3 Pc. heavy taupe repp covered hy suite with reversible Marshall cush- 1.08, in perfect condition, 8 Pc. solld oak dining room suite, 24.00 large round table, and buffet, with 81% chairs, leather upholstered, completely re- conditioned. 69,00 9 Pe. 2-tene walnut dining suite, large buffet, glass door china cab- inet, square table with 6 panel back, leather This upliolstered © chalrs, $200.00, when new, BNAD, suite 'cost over Looks perfect, A real 8 Pc, bedroom suite, walnut fin. 38.00 ish. Large dresser, chiffonfer and full size bed with sagless ;epring. and new heavy roll edge'all eotton mattress, Al con- dition. A snap, - - 67.00 6 Pc, Moderne walput bedroom : suite, large dresser, chiffonier, triple mirror vanity, full size bed, sagless spring and new, excellent quality all felt roll $ige mattress. A real bargain in fine furnl- ure, Send. money order for complete price of goods, Any chartered bank our reference, Money back guarantee, -] LYONS, CHESTERFIELD MANUFACTURERS TRADE-IN DEPT., 478 YONGE BT., Toronto, PERSONAL B yeks EVERY MARRIED COUPLE AND those contemplating marriage should read. "Entering Marriage," 24 pages, postpaid, 15¢. 'Sex and Youth," 104 pages, postpaid, 25c. Our 20 page Illustrated catalugue of books, drug pplies, and household novelties, free upon request. Supreme Specialty, 169 Yonge, Toronto, POULTRY AND EGGS PULLETS AT ROCK BOTTOM PRICES AY FROM GOVERNMENT APPROVED Blood-tested breeders--Barred Rocks or White Leghorns, Grade. A, 3 'weeks old 18c, month old 22c, 5 weeks 26c, 6 weeks 30c, 7 weeks 34c, 2 months qld 38c. Assorted Breeds, 4 to 6 weeks 22c, to 8 weeks 27c. Special Mating, 2c per pullet more. Write for prices on Older Pullets, Terms--Shipped C.0.D anywhere, 1004; llve dellvery guaran- teed. TWEDDLE CHICK HATCHERY, LTD., FERGUS, Ontarlo. OULTRY FARM WHITE EGGS WANTED Highest premlum. paid _on all = grades. Zammit, 5 Kane Street, Toronto. the fourth. concession of West Nis- souri Township, tried to adjust that old principle to include horses, he got himself into tiouble. He told Magistrate C. W. Hawk- shaw's county police court about the Mosaic law as he stood accused of horse theft. "It doesn't say anything about a horse for a horse," interjected Crown Attorney Norman Newton. -- Stecle said he took a horse from the barn of his neighbor, John Daly, because Daly had failed to pay for a horse he bought from him seven years ago. After Magistrate Hawk- shaw heard the story, he registered a conviction of horse theft but allow- ed Steele to go on suspended sent- ence when he paid coyrt costs. Steele told- the court that Daly bought a horse, and sold it without paying for it. "All he paid was 80 cents and a little work," Steele said. "It says in the Bible, 'an eye for an eye, and a tooth for a tooth. He, beat me out of a real horse, so I went and got one from him." World's End Some day I'll do it--I will go WY, From all the old, heart-broken, tired days; I'll 'piece together all my broken heart; : Perhaps I'll laugh and sing in strange, new ways. Some day you will awaken at the dawn, And then, despite bright skies and nesting birds, temision You all will realize that I have gone, And it will be too late for kindly words. I could not leave you all at eventide, When limpid stars come silent o'er the hill, For I would have you rest, though I had gone, ' And let you think that I was with you still, Of course, my dear, some day I'll do that thing, Pers But you must never weep for me that day; For I'll have gathered up my broken life, | And I'll go laughing, singing, on my way. --Anna MacDonald. ---- Guinea Hen Saves Life MEXICO, Mo.<-Miss Nellie Hubert credits a ji 'bile working in her garden Miss Hobos heard 'the hen cackling 'pecu liarly.. She turned and found a dead- ly copperhead snake coiled at her feet, ready to strike, Bhe killed the snake with a hoe. "lar employees. 'Gaspe Plans War pet guinea hen with saving | Ontario May Take ' Up Youth Training F. Provinces, \Vith BB ipiorn Provinces, 3 ~~ Make a Start . Ontario, it is reported, is to take up the plan for the training of youth, g rtart at which has already been made ty the. western provinces under 'a & scherie by which the Dominion Goy- ernment meets half the cost. a 0 i This development {1 the result o proposal made in the House of Com. mons by two of the younger members, Denton Massey, -a Conservative, and Paul Martin, a Liberal. It was en ©» dorgsed by Hon. Norman Rogers and turned over to the National Employ- ment Commission. .to work out. In the four western provinces it is hoped that 5,000 young people be- y tween the ages of 18 and 30 years will be helped, Generally speaking, five branches of & activity are being opened up to un. employed youths of both sexes by the agreements roncluded with the west- ern provinces: 1. Reforestation, 2, Mining and prospecting. 3. Training for farm life. "4, Industrial leadership courses. ~b. Specialized training in domestic service. ] The reforestation scheme follows, not too closely, says the Financial Post, the broad pattern of the conser. vation camps operated under the Rooseveltian New Deal. The purpose of the scheme, in addition to fitting employed youths for work in future reforestation operations tq be carried out hy governments and . as ~ forest rangers, is. to~ recondition younger men who have deteriorated both from the standpoint of physique and of am- 4 bition during their years of idleness, The mining and prospecting scheme is confined to British Columbia, where placer mining properties abound. The idea is to have the unemployed youth of the province who have sufilcient initiative left to enter upon a rigorous it healthy outdoor life, work these properties under experienced direc: g tion. It is planned, furthermore, that after having gained experience. in practical placer mining, they will be given the opportunity of joining pros- pecting parties and of scouring the mineral lands of the province for gold and silver." The agricultural training plan is provided specifically for the benefit of the youths of the drought areas. Both young men and young. women will be - included. They will be sent to suit- able agricultural centres in the Prairie provinces and given practical courses in mixed agriculture and in rural homemaking. The industrial leadership courses « are being offered chiefly in Manitoba, They should be distinguished from an apprenticeship plan. The intention is to give unemployed young men and young women short term courses in various branches of industry with re- lated technical instruction. In no cas-, es will the courses exceed 12 months. Placing of learners in any industry, it is stipulated, must not displace regu- Supervision of the plan will be in charge of the Provin- 4 : cial Mininium Wage Board----and -pro- -- -- -- vision will be made for fair remuner- ation to the learners. : oA RJ 'e ~~ On Sneeze-Weed Quebec Undertakes Task of Driv- ing Out Hay Fever Scourge A 100 per cent. "sneeze-free' refuge L ry is in the offing in Quebec's pictur- esque Gaspe peninsula for sufferers of hay fever and its equally irritable mate, asthma, } . The department of agriculture has undertaken, with twin objectives, the task of driving out the main offender --a simple plant called rag-veed, an- athema to "sneezers", and scientifical- _ ly recognized under the names of am- brosia artemisifolio and ambrosia tri- fida, § ' Trifida is the smaller of the two varieties bf the weed, held responsible for 80 per cent. of hay fever cases. It is the dust-like pollen from the plant that causes the sizzling wheezes -of hay fever sufferers. Second alm of the drive, seemingly remote from hay fever and its cause, is the creation of wider markets for Gaspesian farm produce. Hence the reason agriculturists and not the pro- " vincial health bureau are shouldering * §' the burden of smothering the few re- maining colonics of the noxious weed ' on the peninsula. If the department succeeds in erad- cating completely the sneeze-produc- ing weed, the hope is that at least 2,000 hay fever sufferers annually will visit the area seeking rellét from thej sneezing spells, thus creating bhetl markets for the Gaspe farmer, Pretty Boys' Contest TORONTO.--Entries are being re- ceived here for Toronto's first male beauty contest, being held to raise "¥ funds for the St. Clair Community Y.M.C.A. fresh air camp. About 76 were expected to parade before, Miss Billie. Hallam, recently chosen 'Miss Toronto," and Miss Merle Foster, sculptress, who. will act as judges. * Ea) A "ah a oe | a i Fw EE ol CPiSES vet nf Sl de Ta hd Gl het et oh he bd mh he a an - "Those people who have overrun Germany for the time being can't make me any less a German."--Thom. Fy as Mann, : a