eons aesigned to of the proâ€" excellence Manitoba industry, to the proâ€" In averam $2.000.. Clay ebration bae is to rket hat 1 @@e ids at fy M 1% 1@ in Â¥4 According to recent statistics sales of receiving sets in 1930 valued at $22.776,225. â€" This value was nearly $2,000,000 above the production of the Industry in 1929, although the 1930 production figures were slightly below those of the previous year., Three years earlier, in 1927, production of the industry in Canada was valued at only $8,789,171. Another measure of growth is supplied by the rapid rise in the number of receiving sets licensed in the Dominion. In 1923 the number of licenses for private receiving staâ€" tions was 9,956, while in 1980 it vas 424,146. AMUUSTILS, NHO MEVERCHAMCTCOCOCOS tion have requested that the service be extended and information collected on a quarterly basis. The sales value of $22,776,22%5 quoted above is the value of 223,228 units. Of thistotal, 170,082 sets valued at $18,196,936 were completely manufactured or assembâ€" led in Canada, while the inventory at the end of the year was reported at 25,852 sets. The figure given above for sales of radio receiving sets in Canada in 1930 is taken from a survey made by the Government for members of the Radio Manufacturers Association of Canada. Owing to the rapid expansion of the industry, the members of this associaâ€" A new machine has been adopted to aid in fighting forest fires, according to a recent announcement,. It is noâ€" thing more than a powerful tractor with a wide plow fixed in front. The plow is used for constructing fire lines to prevent the spread of forest fhres. It can make a burrow fifteen inches wide and will throw out thke dirt sixteen inches on either side, making a fire line almost four feet wide. It will accomplish in one hour work that would keco ten men buiy for a wholo day. " patience! but by d A study of the pa‘ent records since 1809, when the first patent was grantâ€" ed to a woman, reveals that althouzh women sti.l apply in smaller numbers than men, there has Nesn a steady inâ€" crease in their applications. Some years ago, when the last detailed analys.s was made, women were apâ€" plying for patents at the rate of about 00 a year. No figures Ate availâ€" able as to the number of applications in recent years, but it is known to kave increased considerably, since reâ€" eently a larger number of women have entcred industrial life. As might be expected, the highest percentage of inventions of the number studied a few years ago confined themselves to domestic devices; but a great many were far afield into the realms of metallurgy and other higher technicâ€" al fields. most ple tiful metals and is about oneâ€"third lighter than aluminum, havâ€" ing only 25 per cent. the weight of iron ur steel, it becomes directly son=> petitive with aluminum and thus a wide sphere of usefulness is indicated for it in the alloy field. Magnesiam alloys are extremely strong and have a wide â€"ange oi malleability. wWOMEN INVENTORS INCREA3E The tremendous drop in the price of magnesium metal from $5 <to around 30 cents a pound in the last sixteen yearsâ€"chiefly due to intenâ€" sive research and successful manuâ€" facturing experimentsâ€"now indicates an increased importance for this metal, according to a paper preâ€"sentâ€" ed before the American Chemical Soâ€" ciety. Since magnesiun. is one of the BIGGER ROLE FOR MAGNESIUY PATIENCE | How poor are they who have not ; tience! What wound did ever ’l’l‘ j Latest Notes imell, Satfe "" C e WeVanV t o 2 + j * S pmâ€"s<gl#27) â€" C | sons Researches Revea! New Autoâ€"| Few Precautions Result in es matic Control in Indusâ€" Efficient Performance ' w trial Plants by t 4 Electricity is still, in the minds of ; 80¢is entists have. long known that many people, a mysterious powor,*’mm heat kills magnetism, bng why and|cClosely akin to black magic writes | coun how it kills it had been imperfectly | Margaret Fleming in the N.Y. Her.| unde r stood until recently when the| Aldâ€"Tribun. ira~... _ 6e ts Sss Canada‘s Radio Industry T FOREST FIRE PLOW Sn M eP & _ e *4 N 9 * K 2 MWKC " e ‘ Electricity Man‘s 7“""’" electri¢ ahock investigated anca‘ OM‘ s amir ; [in the Uniteâ€"Sintés BY theâ€"National | _ This will help a great deal to reâ€" | duce the danger of fire or shock, i since it will mean fewer wires trailâ€" | ing from one part of a room to anâ€" ! other and consequently wearing them | out, less amateur tinkering, and less | possibility of overloading wires with | more current than they were made to carry. _ Even in this electrical age the great majority of homes are | inadequately wired for satisfactory | electrical«service. Many of them | were built before electricity became an accepted household servant, and even homes erected in the last ten or fifteen years, have failed to antiâ€" cipate the electrification of almost every imaginable household job. Esâ€" pecially is it important to have inâ€" stalled in the kitchen and laundry Ione or two high power circuits to ,be ready for any demands which the future may bring. Rule 3. Play fair with your fuses. The fuse was designed, not to anâ€" roy, but to protect you, by automatiâ€" 'cally burning out and thus shutting '(’.‘ whenever more is being drawn lthrouzh the wires than they can ! safely carry. This safety lim‘it is | indicated by .the electrical company when it puts in fuses of a certain Iamperage‘ When one blows out. It means either that you.are sing too many lamps or appliances on that cireuit, or that one or more is; defective. To meet the difficulty by putting in a fuse of higher amxer-' age, or, as some _ household dareâ€" | devils have even beea known to do,| to substitute a penny for the fuse, is‘ to invite trouble. | The average circuit in a private home calls for a fuse of fifteen | amperes. The high power circuitt which supplies the electric range‘i carries more. In this connection ; it is well to remember that any | electrical appliance supplying heatâ€" such as a range Or a heaterâ€"-uses,' generally speaking, more current than an appliance supplying powerl â€"such as a washer or refrigeratorâ€"i or one designed to give light, such | as a lamp. l Rule 4. Remember that water Is a conductor of electricity, . that all electrical connections should be proâ€" tected from dampness, and that no part of any eletrical _ equipment should be touched with damp hands. An analysis â€" of electrical shocks shows a high percentage resulting | from failure to remember these facts.| The strength of a current is in in-| verse proportion to the resistance | of the medium through which it isl passing. Normally the skin of the | body has a fairly high resistance, ; and thus serves to shield the inside | of the body, which has a low resisâ€" | tance. If the skin, however, is wet.l or even damp from perspiration, it becomes an excellent conductor of electricity, and a shock which would otherwise be slight, may become grave. _ You should, therefore, be especially on your guard in all parts, of the house where water or dampâ€"| ness is likely to be encountered, j such as the bathroom, the laundry and the cellar. Of thirtyâ€"one tnal’ Rule 2, In wiring your house, have plenty :of outlets, not only for toâ€" day‘s needs, but those which you anticipate tomorrow. These, briefly, are the electr rules which every home â€" ow should observe. _ Rule 1. Have y wiring done by a reliable expert. "The hard times and scarcity of money makes it more important than ever to economize. One way I save on clothes is by renewing the color of faded or outâ€"ofâ€"style dressâ€" es, coats, stockings, and underwear. For dyeing, or tinting, I always use Diamond Dyes. They are the most economical ones . by far because they never fail to produce results that make you proud. Why, things look better than rew when redyed withâ€" Diamond Dyes. They never spot, streak, or run. They go on smoothly and evenly, when in the hands of even a tenâ€"yearâ€"old child. Another thing, Diamond Dyes never take the life ont of eloth or leave it limp as some dyes do. They deâ€" serve to be called ‘the world‘s finest s‘xteen to twenty persons a year meet their deaths in this way, and 95 per cent would still be alive if they had followed a few _ simple rules in the use of their electrical equipment. w"’l; Few _ Precautions Result in Efficient Performance Electricity is still, in the minds of many people, a mysterious power, }clonly akin to black magic writes Margaret Fleming in the N.Y. Herâ€" aldâ€"Tribun ; Magazino, Generally speaking, we are its masters and can make it perform unheard of labors, but once in a long while we use the wrong formula to Invoke it, and the "whateverâ€"it4s" rung amuck and ofâ€" tem destroys its own evidence, and this makes it ©asy, whenever eviâ€" dence of the cause of a fire is lack-‘ ing, to avoid the trouble of. fnrther| investigation by concluding that elecâ€" tricity was somehow responsible. l Each year a small number of tatal-l ities ‘Are vused in homes by ordinâ€" ary lamp _ voltages. Careful lur-| veys have shown that not more thani sixteen "to twoent? â€"narenma / a ama«l "THESE HARD TIMES" t UEDNRIRECTL . ~ ABok â€" the electrical home _ owner 1. Have your ' An electric heating pad is a great conven‘ence, but do not take liberties with it. Heed the warning that ecmes with the padl itself and take care not to let it get wet, not to stick pins in it (pins are eloctrical conductors) and not to put it snugly ; over a wet poultice, on the alling ! one‘s chest, as some trustinz souls lhavo been known to i0‘ Bestow thy youth so (that thou mayst have comfort to remember it when it hath torsaxn thee, and not sigh and grieve at the account thereâ€" of. Whilst thou are young thou wilt think it will never hawe.an end; but tehold, the longest hath his evening, and that thous>. alt enjoy it but once, that it never © turns again; use it therefore as the springâ€" time, which soon departeth and wherein thou oughtest to ~plant and sow all provisionsâ€" for a long and happy life. © â€"Sir W. Raleigh: To wander forth, and view an unâ€" known race; Of all that I have baen, to find no trace, Not footstep of my byâ€"gone pilgrimâ€" age. Thousands I pass, and no one stays his pace To tell me that the day is fair, or rainyâ€" Each one his object seeks with anxâ€" lous chase, And I have not a common hope with anyâ€" Thus .ike one drop of oil upon a . fiood, a+ In uncommunricating solitudeâ€" Single am I amid the countless many. â€"Hartlcy Coleridge, Poems. ‘"Tis strange to me, who long have seen no face That was not like 4 book whose every page I knew by heart, a kindly commonâ€" placeâ€" And faithful record of progressive Rule 8. Always disconnect, before leaving it, "any electrical appliance which is in contict with inflamâ€" mab‘e material. In handling the cord of any piece of electrical appliarce, grasp and pull by the plug rather than by the cord itself. This is made easier for you in a type of heater cord and plug, new on the market and â€"especâ€" ially recommended for such things as irons and toasters. It has, above the plug, which cornects with the appliance, a new pullâ€"grip which reâ€" lieves the strain on the wiring itâ€" self. Such cords have always been easily purchaseable, and now _ the houseâ€" holder may avail himself of as exâ€" tra protection, a rubber waterproof connection cap. Rule 7. Wherever an extension cord is used in any damp place see that the cord is one with waterproof proâ€" tection. Screw base receptacles or outlets are no longer _ approved. Where they exist equip them permanently with the detachable screw base secâ€" tions of attachment plugs or have your electrician replace them. This will prevent inquisitive children from poking their fingers into the sockets and possibly receiving shocks. Rule 6. Secure the use of molded composition or porcelain sockets in your bathâ€"rooms, basements ind all other damp locations and on extenâ€" sion cords. Rule 5. Never touch an electric apâ€" pliance of any kind while you are in the bathtub. If it should chance to be defective the danger of shock is greatly increased. All these facts mean that almost all electrical shocks resulting from dampness could be avoided if we would take a few more precauticns. "Why yes indeed, he just loves to sit in a shady grandstand and watch the players perspire." Of thirtyâ€"seven cases investigated by the National Electric Light Asâ€" sociation, eleven rere bathtub faâ€" talities, and wet basement floors acâ€" counted for seven; extension cords under cellarless houses, where the householder rigged up a bulb at the end â€"of a nonâ€"waterprooft cord and crawled over the damp earth to inâ€" vestigate some problem or other, brought eight to the‘x death. Three fatal cases which occurred last sumâ€" mer were in hot, muggy weather, when the skin of the victims was damp with perspiration. 1 "Is your husband fond of athletic sports ?" ® be anfeesnntater ditics d sA sds a t id Safety Council, twelve occurred in bathtubs, &nd seven happened to perâ€" sons who were standing on wet baseâ€" ment floors. From Country to Town Advice to the Yomng It‘s a simple thing to get too sick | mm mss to work and still feel just well enough‘ Fond Fatherâ€""Wasn‘t that mnice? to go fishing. All salesmen are Scotchl\'ou like having a ride on father‘s when they‘re payin‘ their own exâ€", knee, eh?" penses. A real estate agent was dentedl Small Sonâ€""Not bad, but I‘d rather entrance to Heaven the other day; St.‘ride on a real donkey." Peter didn‘t . want the place sub-? omm divided. She was just the landlady‘s| Mss Cutey Funnyface, of Brushville, daughter, but everyone wanted to s@ays that anybody easily discouraged know how the land lay.> Uneasy lies has no business opening a beauty parâ€" the face that wears a frown. After lor. careful observation we report that two | ; «_ may possibly live as cheaply as one,‘ First Mountaineer â€" "Wal, I see but not as quietly. , where Jake‘s wife had another datter." Teacherâ€""What cow is best known for the amount of milk it gives?" Johnnyâ€""Magnesia." Teacherâ€"*"Magnesia?" Johnnyâ€""Yessum, all the drug stores sell milk of magnesia." The hardest thing for a wife to forâ€" give a husband is having him call the evening meal "supper" if the company present is snobbisk. Then there‘s the Maidâ€""Well, ma‘am, I ain‘t done no singin‘.to speak of for years, but if youâ€"all insists upon it, you can put me down for ‘The Holy City‘." Mistressâ€""Now, Matilda, I want you to show us what you can do toâ€"night. We have a few very special friends coming for a musical evening." Hubbyâ€""No, let him live. He didn‘t have anything to do with it." Wifeâ€""Dear, toâ€"morrow is our tenth wedding anniversary. Shall I kill the turkey ?" CA S T ORA BABY FRETEUVL, RESTLESS? Look to this cause When your baby fusses, tosses and seems unable to sleep restfully, look for one common cause, doctors say. Constipation. To get rid quickly of the accumulated wastes which cause restlessness and disâ€" comfort, give a cleansing dose of Castoria.. Castoria, you know, is made specially for children‘s deliâ€" cate needs. It is a pure vegetable preparation; contains no â€" harsh drugs or narcotics. It is so mild and gentle you can give it to a young infant to relieve colic. Yet it is as effective for older children. Castoria‘s regulative help will bring relazed comfort and restful "sleep to your baby. Keep a bottle on hand. Genuine Castoria always has the name: Showing Her Majesty Queen Wilhelmina Helena Pauline Maria» reigning sovereign of the Netherlands as she leaves the parade grounds near Amsterdam after reviewing the recent army manoeuvres. Owl Laffs Queen of the Nethertainds Reviews Troops Second Mountaineer â€" "Yes, . that makes six Reckon he‘ll have t‘ get a doubleâ€"barrel if he wants t‘ get ‘em all married." Eleven men are expected to comâ€" prise the exploring party which he is now organizing at his headquarters in New York. ‘Those already definitely selected, in addition to himself, are Captain Erskine Loch, a British veterâ€" an of the World War; George Româ€" mill, now attached to the Pan Ameirâ€" can Airways in Cuba, who will pilot the plane, and Robert Cutler. Comâ€" plete radio and motion picture equipâ€" ment .will be included in the baggage and plenty of knives and axes for tradâ€" ing purposes with the Indians, Comâ€" mander Dyott hopes not only to find more definite traces of Colonel Fawâ€" cett but to make ethnological and geoâ€" graphical discoveries of importance in the region. Legends of an unknown tribe of Indians living in stone houses are strongly current there. ‘The party will make the journey from New York pIapMIURE MEDUVICIICE UR â€" ARAPUEUARIEE feel jor activity that i in the region. Legends of an unknown nw::g“gmd m&e woj?: tribe of Indians living in stone houses . always wanted to do and needed to de are strongly current there. ‘The party . to keep you in good condition. will make the journey from New York . nc and up the Amazon in a yacht, ISSUE No. 43â€"‘31 Miss Cutey Funnyface, of Brushville, says that anybody easily discouraged has no business opening a beauty parâ€" lor. Carlâ€""Do you believe in the old adage about marrying in baste and reâ€" penting at leisure?" Jakeâ€""No, I don‘t. After a man marries he has no leisure." A good loser is one who feels like you would have felt had you won. Very few big jobs are held by men who honk and honk in a traffic jJam. The modern girl isn‘t affected by the movies. They go in one eye and out the other, A man never knows what a woman thinks of him; he only thinks he does. When Commander G. M. Dyott takes off in another month or so to explore the Brazilian jungles in the Maita Grasso region to the nerth of the Xinâ€" gu River he will not only be returning to familiar ground, where he sought three years ago to find some trace of Colonel P. H. Fawcett, who was lost there with two companions in 1925, but he will be returning to a mode of travel in which he was among the pioneers, the airplane, He will take a Bellanca seaplane which will cut laborious canoe trips of weeks to days and make it possible to fix his base at Alta Mira on the lower Xingu, 670 miles from the confluence of that river with the Amazon. of two classesâ€"those who do their best work toâ€"day and forget about it, and those who promise to do their best toâ€"morrow and forget about it. Most people you meet know there is someâ€" thing wrong with the country, but very few of them even think they know how to right it. sap who wanted to weed the garden, but couldn‘t distinguish between the weeds and plants, so he turned the chickens loose and pulled up what was left. Man does not understand woman. That is his tragedy. Woman underâ€" stands man. That is also his tragedy. The modern woman‘s idea of showing backbone is to hb ve no waist in the rear of her evening gown. Men are Seaplane to Be Used On Jungle Journey Fortune is not on the side of the faintâ€"hearted. â€"Sophocies. Mail and Empire (Toronto) â€" Ever since the war the Duke of Connaught has spent his Winters at his villa at Cape Rerrat, on the French Riviera. This year, though 81 years old, and not robust, he will remain at home in England ds an example to others, In thus emulating the example of the King, who recently gave up a portion of his income because of the national crisis, Canada‘s former royal governorâ€" general sets a standard of citizenship which, if followed in this country, will this year diminish the size of the Canaâ€" dian colonies in Florida and California. The world, which took but six days to make, is like to take six thousand to make out.â€"Sir Thoma® Browne. And 1 shall gather the little wind flowâ€" ers there, * And press their sweetness upon my heart to stay, Then I shall go back to the walls and the roofs of the town, Stronger than 1 have been for many a day. Something of the look within their eyes Of upland pastures, and of clean wind blownâ€" The tranquil, trusting look of those who know And shepherd watches, 1 shall make my own. Patriotism and the Depression Warm is the hill upon which 1 shall walk toâ€"day; Gold is the sun upon the closeâ€"cropped grass, And something of the peace of grazing sheep Shall permeate my being as 1 pass: I shall forget the wails and the roofs of the town; * s This burden, strapped to my back, shall be unloosed, And 1 shall leave it there when 1 come down. By Grace Noll Crowell, in "Scribners." I shall walk toâ€"day upon a high green "It‘s Best tor You »»1Boby too * I was very stout, and 1 have taken Kruschen Salts for 3 months, and have reduced from 212 lbs, to 182 lbs. (age 40). 1 am a hearty eater, and have never dieted in any way. Also I :v': never felt any ill effects whilst I been taking Kruschen salts."â€"T. H. That is an instance of Kruschen succeeding without assistance, But if any fat person will be satisfied with a moderate dict, and will take one half teaspeon of Kruschen Salts in a glass of hot water before breakfast every morningâ€"they can lose fat in just the same way, "doune pat tpe impratitioe in your it out impurit your blood by keeping the bowels, kidneys and liver in splendid wrm m and fills you with a vigor lese I'O GET RID OF CONSTIPATIO N LOST 30 lbs. FAT IN 3 MONTHS AT THE AGE OF 40 EgeDr.Carwr',f'am‘tlamlM‘ ver Pills. Entirely rl‘. Gentle but effective. No bad after effects. For 60 years they Indigestion, Acidity, Bad Com» BABY‘S Gâ€"~ n 1 Shall Walk Today ~| ®~ Classified 25¢ & 75¢ red packages Ask your druggist for | The World ONTARIO ARCHIVEsS TOROoNTO acid, and the symptoms disappear at once, zgu will never lllse «'rnge methods when once you learn the efficiency of this. Go, get a small bottle to try. Be sure to get the genuine Philhgs' Milk of Magnesia prescribed by physicians for 50 years in correcting excess acids. 50c a bottleâ€"any drug store. (Made in Canada.) information sent free. The WH_â€" ay Come 'm. Norle Patent Attorneys, 273 gaok ; Street Ottawa Canada One spoonful of this harmiess, tasteless alkali in water neutralizes {qgt_antly_ many times that much WHAT many people call indig sâ€" tion very often means exe. s acid in the stomachk, 1% ~ i. a nerves have bosn OVG s.uuw e , and!oodsoun.'(‘hec mP3C .1\ ©ab alkali, which neuiralizes the acids instantly. And the best alkali known to medical science is Phillips‘ Milk of Magnesia. _ 4 more activs oays 0oN poG, YoUNG, FasT, SILENT trailer, loud barker; treed 15 coons last Fall. Scotch, English Collie pups, 2 months.parents naturalâ€"born heelers, Trained cattle do£ Trained fox, deer hounds. Wilfrid Zeron, Morrisburg, Ont. "I have always looked upon indjusâ€" try as an art."â€"Charles M. Schwab. F\)R BALEâ€"PURE NOVA .COTI@ mink,. My customers won #weepâ€" stakes and firsts, cmc-gu. .‘oru.nq‘ Stoâ€"lhoim Mink Shows, 1930 Limite number to book. Satisfaction at iNova Bcotla‘s oldest minkery. Brook Mink Farm, West Middle River, Nova Scotia. W hen She Dances on "Bad Days"too Snl never watches the calendar ; .. never has to "break" a date. She dances . . . and enjoys it. ‘The modern girl has learned how to esse those “cyinq times", A few days before ; : . you‘ll find her takâ€" ing Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Vegetable Compound. _ Gone are those headaches : ; ; N OFFEKk To EVERY INVENTOR List of \wanted inventions and full COMCS HBAIN D0GS FOR SALE