HES x m}: “Mn a beacon arrangement t'. up of its head has been handed r , no United States Board of Fish- t , .a , for examination. It has no eyes. A a zen tentacles are unwed in un Ewella fashion over the head, and rach has a small light. It ill tttt scales, but has quills lit. , ked.ehttq. mcre general use of building: constructi buildings, fire prev: have been en's-Miâ€- lo "This is luGiiii, "parted, "sinee it ditionat for as low as eiabl per cent Direct we The figures do not include tl los es, nor those caused by fires. While marine statistics not available. forest service of reported 162,663 fires and $45 120 damage in 1984. The Federal Council reports tre direct fire loss on building contents have averaged m $300,000,000 a vpar in» LA cil headed by director of the I found that loan ings amount to nually. In add are directly trac with the total , indirect cause: I The figures dc Ins es, nor thou fires. Whila rm washityt.ton----povernme,tt offie. inls say that the fire prevention w e e k proclaimed by President L'otrsevelt should be the aignal for adoption of real protective mena- ures--not Just an occasion for par- ades of fire wagons and apeeche.1 that go unheeded. Driving into records to assist in the precautionary campaign to start (umber 16, the Federal Fire Coun- ...I L_, ' ' I - b valve of the information is Lm'h. the Hungarian dance:H M14 appeared in Broadway Says Miss Losch: “She it be happier about it." i Losch adds that Lord charles' is wife are “together some-l in Germany nnd very much tes," the council added, ut two-thirds of the loss is defective commotion and ie n and lack of knowledm re ~~their mGriasre is the most ful one I know." l ms Proclamation issued recent- President Roosevelt declared ; "can largely be prevented by excrete of proper care and the of appropriate fire-prevention FillillliliTll0lt I Muvcment In US. - T Thirds of Loss ls Held Avoidable A, heating and electrical a t, and roofing, open lights, p l, Cas, sparks, explosions, . 'ish, spontaneous ignition, 'hes (smoking). are thus lat ontabYe, and hma of life f , from such origins could In " n Country Road os, mrect fire loss on buildings i tents have averaged um 0,000,000 a year, but loss 'Pft and production attributed i increase thh, 01..-! -K__, . an tt rect losses have declined t v sinre 1926. The esti 1933. including 25 per een nal for "unreported fires," ow as P40,000,00o, and . $328,000,000. Awaiting 11;: construction 1 n29, fire prevention been effective in re is l, F.nv:.--The former dane- Adele Astaire, now Lady Cavendish, is reliably rec expecting a baby in a few amination of that hare watched the nturies go by. amount to $1soo,ooo,iki ly. In addition, 7,000 dt directly traceable to such f [ and eagle-:wltt Muir. .11) horses drumming down sky-- the sun would bring Pr day. proclamation like d. tt stumbling down a dark. road. d the timeless weaving ir way riving Hunter. and the reuse this shed like we last r world alone tt from defective eltimneys, an to doubt the path _ ' sler 'lNitlff, IU W HOWthe faithful slavegirl [H', that “no†tho saved her master‘s life-. 1 mm, mm how the robber was foiled : s":,re Uutknvu; like an through a great eastern cus- tom regarding Salt-iss told in r' " sum into the sky Ficture and storyin newbook g or Children! Yours heel .. I wsrr1 . _ 1 Send coupon noznfor " Salt 'i"" .__ ',r1i,'.'; wâ€? Il/ll all over the Worl . Strange, l"' 's Humming down engagimrsalteuttomtyinahir total jurnrriitoGij,"Gi; yin moon has fallen significant," wars and wanderings by Lyman g." he Bureau of " losses on fires i are living m the the New York Burt fre included lhe fire loss i ant," the council indicates that the f the ttre-resistive ion for major rention measures, a in reducing the gotten banner total about ignition, and , thus largely of life from loss is caused include marine to we)! fires; reports show buildings and " sumGiii, 35," were and for installa- ge and in the ' forest ties were officials $45,373,- ghost in build; equip- petro- ashes, arou nd indi- "that Coun.. Briggs d eaths be in I to 100 an- Rafa! Tabla Salt ( no Running) A Wind-or Salt Pto- duct. For (lhle. cook- Ing Ind Oral lie-Illa. Uniformly pure - malnulned no by (menial control. Your Mouthwash WINDSOR SALT " t-onfitlin [laps of wateri- mild. " GGG; a Gr, 'i" f ii-. plan-gut. ".etiro and if Tear thr and Nail Today CANADIAN INDUSTIII unrrzo SALT DIVI‘IO' "LL" Inn-Intâ€, A", The Good Book tells charity begins, but no where it will end. I A farmer with hay fever this fall ,is in a heck of a shape. He needs a ifrost to stop the fever, and needs a ifrost free fall for his crops. Geometry would be one of the most interesting studios in the high school curriculum if it could show where the fullback should biseet the line and the best angle at which a halfback should run. Tomas-ww, could you let me have a quarter in advance? Tommy-say, dad, I I worth to you? Dad-Alt I have in Tommy. Sourdough-t warned Billy that that girl would play the deuce if he married her. 18tadrellr--wen, did she? Sourdough ---Yes. Haven't you heard? They've got twins. Helping with the dishes mer has more to do with v rush back to college in the the desire for a higher ed are going to the West 1iiiiU."" Next Door Neitrhbor-gamaieat Hiram Henpeek-Naw, she made t-No.40---'35 It won't be Very frost is on the pm sleeve: of last yea] to be as frayed as would be. Hiram mnpeek--Me and ', Ni tkm land-pedal r: 's'lfJh"ll'. "an: .n m: the ron't be very long till the is on the pumpkin and the of last year's topcoat prove as frayed as we feared they in. ak tells us where but no one knows lands. Every home should h a v e t h i 5 book I Send coupon now I age in the fall {ban higher education. do with wantinFio , how much am the world, all sum. my wife Canada was second in newsprint with 783,788 ewt., Newfoundland being first with 982,691, Finland Canada was first in patent leather with 6,288 cwt., the United States second with 2,t68, Germany third with 520. Canada was first in the total of non-ferrous metals and manufac- tures with a value of £3,139,484, Chile being second with 21,925,874, Australia third with 21,802,683, Northern Rhodesia fourth with 21,- 246,188, and United States fifth with 21,181,057. Canada was third in machinery with a value of 2418,869; the Unit- ed States being first with £2,959,- 420. Germany was second with 21,- 759,767. Canada was first in crude zine with 48,222 tons, Belgium being second with 12,139, Australia third with 5,975. Canada was second in pig lead with 47,292 tons, Australia being first with 92,028, British India third with 24,050, and Mexico fourth with 8,350. Canada was second in unwrought copper with 26,879 tons, United States being first with 28,130. In the two previous years Canada was far ahead of all other countries with that commodity. Canada was second in hides skins with a value of £918,851 _United States Leing first with 486,420. Canada was second in wocd timber with £1,900,696. Canada was first in copper ore with 8,723 tons, Spain being second with 1,429. Canada facturci pounds. Canada was first hi logsters with 9,7?3 cwt., out of a total of 11,012. United Statés have bieriiJeriaiir, but those from Canada have been increasing. Canada was second in apples with 900,867 cwt., Australia being first with 1,275,722, the United States third with 780,790, and New Zea- land fourth with 277,480. Canada was second in cattle with 6,124 head. Canada was second in bacon with 535,918 cwt. Canada was second in hams with 104,891 cwt., the United States being first with 213,608, and Poland third with 9,708. Imports from the Canada was second in the total of grain and flour with a value of of grain and flour with a value of S7,787,902, Argentine being first with 28,848,163, Australia third with 23,072,730, and France fourth with £1,340,932. Canada was first in wheat-flour with 1,946,346 cwt., Australia being second with 773,287, France third with 577,205, and Italy fourth with 224,741. Canada was third in barley with 1,453,938 cwtxout of a. total of 1,- 654,377. Imports on oats by Great 473 in the same period two years ago, but the requirements from Canada have increased from 695,201 cwt. Canada has first place in the British market in imports of wheat in the first six months of 1935 with 1R,214,2tp2 ewt., Argentine being second with 14,702,776, Australia third with 9,221,482, and Roumania fourth with 353,886. Monthly Bulletin of the Canadian Chamber of Commerce in Great Britain. Canada's Trade Just about the middle of Dee. ember, one of the most unique and interesting annual harvests to be garnered on the North American Continent will be in full swing. No! Not wheat - but Mineral Salts. The scene will be Little Manitcu Lake, Watrous Saskatchewan. The harvesters; will be the employees of the De- partment of Natural Resources of Saskatchewan; and the harvest itself will consist of the tiny crystals of mineral salt which form in Little Manitou Lake each year at "freeze-up." It is one of the essential conditions that the harvest be completed within a period of ten days. When the was second with unmann- tobacco with 5,984,714 Harvesting In Saskatchewan At 20 Below! and the SI f and Naturally, parents are anxious to . o q make him mosttof1 then-â€15039.h Ialley ‘genera yaimn giving ere i ren With United Kingdom," chances such as they themselves . -'-----------------;'did not enjoy. But sometimes they than third with 690,101, Norway tourthlexpect too much. It may be that this at with 272,389. (boy is not cut out tor wha. his moth- Canada was fourth in the total of, er has been p'anning tor him. Not paper with a value of £693,611,' every boy is suited for a college our. the Sweden being first with s1aii,'siid,rl rlculum and I think before she insists lgat Germany second with S842,006, Finy on thrusting one on the lad she should vith land third with 2751,980. have a quiet talk with him, and try ly' Canada was first in rubber mana-' to find out what his natural aptitudes‘ al.ia facturers with a value of s287,078/are and help him along that line. i Teacher-What is the difference between . cow and a calf? Junior-A big feed bill, mum. His sister for a donkey was the bargain suggested by a young Turk of Anatolia to a cattle dealer. But when the buyer attempted to take away his purchase the girl scram- ed, end neighbours intervened. The girl was liberated and her brother and the cattle dealer arrested. Acrobats and trained animals and magic counted for a good deal, but the backbone of a vaudeville program was the comedy teams and the dane. ing. Radio has taken, over the comedians, and any night they may be heard asking each other the quest- ions and springing the answers they used to work 25 years ago. Movies have taken over the dancing. (New York Times) Vaudeville’s diminishing realm in this city is now cut in two. Of eight theatres which have been showing _ the old-style variety along with movi- es, four theatres have gone over to straight pictures. The scholastics of the amusement business make a dis- tinction between vaudeville and "stage shows." If the latter are in- eluded the eclipse is a little less com- plete, but it is a sad enough decline at best. l And yet it is the case here as with so many other conquests. The pictur- es and the radio, which have so near- ly made an end of vaudeville, have assimilated perhaps its two principall features. Occasionally you may find, when the kindling wood begins to burn, that smoke trtttrtte coming out through the crevices around the furnace doors. This is due to the fact that the chimney, being cold, docs not provide tusftieient] draft to carry off the smoke. This con- dition can be quickly remedied by opening wide the slide in the fire door-or by partially or entiiely closing the ashpit dtuttrmr-or b r. combination of the two. JT Now light the kindling and when " is burning freely, slowly add more coal. The kindling will ignite the fresh coal both above and below it, and you can then add more coal and thus quickly build up a good detp are. - Be sure that theTurnDamp- 'att er in the Ttti - ' pi e an t e M Asgpit Damper 'ari are wide open Ind the Cheek .4... Damper closed. iii' Milt' iSi"' This will create tt E thestrongdraft - which is needed to ignite the fire, Now lisrht tho, kindlina “A “aâ€- Canada was first in rubber manu- facturers with a value of 2287,078, Germany second with £108,467, United States third with 282,203, Japan fourth with £18,974. Vaudeville In New York Then spread GGi two inches of coal uniformly over the ashes. On top of this fresh coal put a good charge of kindling. consist- ing, of new'syyryr" and light.wood. 'HEAIING HINTS (Ill WI $12.3: First of all, if there is a layer of ashes on the grates, leave it there. About two inches of ashes on_the grates help a lot. Prairie winter comes in real earn- est, and the thermometer shivers down to 20 below zero, the De- partmental men, warmly attired. and wearing waist-high rubber boots, gather up these crystals with specially constructed shovels, and store them in the Government warehouse at Watrous, from where they are later distributed. The medicinal qualities of this saline lake, known for many years, are becoming more and more widely recognized, and as a consequence th ese harvesting operations are assuming ever-in- creasing proportions, and the Lake is proving to be one of the Province’s most important natural resources. - __ ---- ___ ._- -......... IO job but, as in GlGviil'ni'r' else, there is a right and wrong way of Iioing it. From my experience, the quickest and easiest way to light a fir? " this: BUILDING a ifre is a very simple ioh but, a: in ovnvufiunn “i..- NOTE: The writer of this column is a trained psychologist and an an. thor of several works. He is willing to deal with your problems and give 'you the benefft of his wide exper- ience. Question: regarding problems of EVERYDAY LIVING should be ad. dressed to: Dr. M. M. Lappin, Room 421, " Adelaide Street, West, Toron. to, Ontario. Enclose a (3e) stamped, addressed envelope for reply. me to guage the real problem and give a helpful answer. In order to give the best advice lt is necessary to have something upon which to base one's Judgment. I would like to ask correspondents who write to me about their problems to give enough information to enable of Full and Winter titrord op- portunity for mental Improve- ment. You can overcome Interi- ority Complex, develop a power- fut memory, learn the secret of succeu. end improve. your mental calibre by fascinating correspondence com-lee which you can study in your were time and in the quiet of your own home. For run pertlculere. write to . . The hum of Produce] and I have known young fellows grow tired ot school, give it up and rind a. job and. after working tor a comic of years as messengers or something else, realise their mistake and go back to school and matriculate trom High School. In every such case that I have come across the individual has made good. My candid advice to this‘ worried mother is not to worry. Don't force the boy to continue at school it he does not want to continue, but try to make him realise that he has a. responsibility in life and that he can only tulfll1 that responsibility as ‘he is able to cultivate a sense ot manly independence. It she can do that, then I think she will find him amenable to reason. Whatever else she does, she must no. spoil him by pandering to him and encouraging him to be lazy. She should treat him kindly but firmly. She should lead him along tho PM M _ own desires or him. He is " that stage when he might cam: he lost to usefulness in society and nothing will help more to lose him than compelling him to follow a course that he definitely does not like. The Longer Evenings I It is sheer toliy to force a lad into! a protesdon tor which he is not titted) and toward which he does not natur.1 ally incline. it the boy's bent is to-i ward engineering, then it is no use] trying to make physician or a lawyer; out of him. There are already plenty! ot 'mistitg' in the world without add.. ing to their number. To force this young fefiow into something that he does not want would simply be a case1 ot trying to 'fit a square peg into al round hole', and it would do more harm than good. In all probability, this young man would rather be out wcrking. He may be one ot those who . find, contentment in earning a. iirir, dollars for himself. I would not force! so'tool upon him. I would rather bei' inclined to encourage him to go out. and take the first job he can rind l and work. in the meantime, she 1 should watch him carefully. tor he I will undoubtedly give some hint, ei her in his conversation or in " ' actions, that will give her a clue Lili to the direction in which his inclin. t ations lie, and when she has dim. c covered that the can act aeeording,'y. Now there is not very much in that to Indicate where the trouble Mes. This mother does her letter by ask- ing me if I think her son could do better it he tried, but that Is a ques- tion that no one could answer pro- perly without knowing something more about the lad. "My son has never been able to make 'good. He does not seem able to accomplish anything. He says he feels incapable. He Went to High School bu: did not ftniah his course. I gave him a business course. but he did not tiniah that either. He is a. problem to me and I wonder it you; can help me tind the solution." I Parenthood alwnyn but its prob- lems Ind mothers are especially prone to worry over their children. Let me quote from a letter that I have se- lected trom among my mail this week., It has come to me trom an anxious mother who is worried about her son. I wish she had given me a little; more detail. She writea:-- , EVERY DAY LIVING A MOTHER'S WORRY A WEEKLY TONIC by Dr. M. M. Lappln ONTARTCS "Remember Main Street" can show results tom-Maclean', Magazine. "Remember the Maine" once rous- ed the United States to patriotic fervor. Manufacturers, mesmerized by Mass Buying, have too often neglect- ed to enquire into the importance of the well-established independent deal- er; the buying importance of the community he serves. As a people we have been too ready to- think that it is size that counts; that power always must lie in concentration. l They are made over the counters of stores on the corners of country cross-roads, on the Main Street: of our villages, towns and cities. And the owners of those stores are in- dividual citizens, not eorpotations. They are Main. They are essentia} to results in merchandising; they are momentous in consequences. Ponder that fact. Sixty-nine of every hundred retail sales are made not by the big departmental stores; not by mail order houses in big cities; not by the chain stores. The 146 departmental stores Canada do thirteen per cent. of total business. The 8,476 chain I es, eighteen per cent. In the 125,000 independent stores. of which a large percentage line streets such as there, is done tsixty- nine per cent. of the eountry's re- tail business. In the trade attairi of this Domin- ion, Canada's Main Streets are pre- cisely that. The meaning of the word rrnrn-ain is --important, essential to results, momerytous in consequences. And Sinclair Lewis's "Main Street" Cave too many city folk an unwar- ranted sense of superiority over those who live in small towns. Kipling's line about Caniayaeing Lady of the Snows never brought joy to the travel agencies. A phrase or title mated by an author can so stick in the public mlqd glut it becomes a nuisance. merclal Art Course or a Water Col. our Lindaclpe Course valued It 850.00 for the but copy. tour Inche- wlde. made from thu portal: of the most popular youn‘. mm tn the Britt-h mantra. Entry a: Twenty- live cert" tor each entry unwanted. A "Jubi- prlu for everyone who enters null contest. which close- October tl, "as. . GIFF BAKER " LEE AVE, TORONTO, ONT. For Amateur Artist: (That is any- one who is not earning a living from Art). GRAN) p'ytgr' PRIZE of . Com- MONTHLY PRIZE CONTESTS 00-35 TORONTO What "Main Street" Represents PLUG SMOKING TOBACCO DIXIE LARGE PLUG Me , in , the stor- Deni AN OFFER To EVERY i.NVb List of wumed Inn-mums a. Information tsent from. Thu L o-. World Patent Aunrne: Bank Street. Ottawa. Canada. Classified Advertis: Whe- lim some in to stable with win- euu or add]. boill. or can have and udder. the thing to do In get the Min-N'- bottle " om, u Mr. Dowd of Chainâ€, Hannah. known. He writes: “I lit. your [land'- Llui-mn. Like to hare it In the home. I In" (mind your Kin-tofu Uzi-tom. cuddly god {or hotbed win an. on but..." A (may be†M Ilmd'u Llnlmt m " in no. mm hula-bl. in my ubi- and can bun. u "When [unmet reluse to one. or the weather I. too rough to go at or these giant a h, have a “we revo:- ver pracllce by :imotinz at pon. noises," says Mr. W. W. lbwding. the yarn; British sponsmnn, who returned to Scarborough after A tun- nyJishing expedition on which he clash; I. 484-pounder. "Porpaims," an Mr. Dowdlng. "are very numer- oua, more numerous than many at times, and it 1; great sport taking pctshotl " them. It is jun about im- muible to get . porpoise to take bar. on . line. The only way to kill them. In to shoot them, in when (use you have very mm cha nee ot landing the tish, or of hurpm nfng them. which in very diilicttlt inrltiU." --Bearborougtt Evening Nr-ws and Daily Post. IN UP-TO-DATE STABLES --old Reliable Minard's ‘OOL CARDERS a paid. Guarantee RETURNS FROM EXPEDITION 203-1189 WOOL 01231112.; IWZHTOIS E workman. who all after I tun- 1 on which he er. "Porpa'arcwa," are very tanner. than many " at sport taking LI jut about int- mine to take but. The “may At lumen. :73 tl ll