id Cure ndisestion Di Some of these recoveries have been due to circumstances but most of them have been caused by aggressive merchandising that has reâ€"designed the old product into a modern conâ€" venience, and by advertising. It is seldom that an industry dies when its «o ~â€"=meanufacturers are alert to snatch * victory out of defeat. \ Forbodings that discoveries and inâ€" ventions would supplant and destroy other industries have been similarly falsified It was foretold that the piano would disappear before the gramophone, and the gramophone beâ€" fore the radio, whereas neither has been wiped out, and the piano in parâ€" ticular has staged an almost sensaâ€" tional comeâ€"back. Tooth paste edged out the tooth powder of a generation ago, bet today the powder is with us cace more. Candles were assumed to be killed by gas, and gas by electrict ty. There is a bigger industry in candles, for decorative purposes, than ever befbre; and il!aminating gas nevâ€" er had a fraction of the market which cooking gas now enjoys. Manufacturâ€" ers of another "old timer," the btâ€" eycle, anticipate record sales this summer. Fourteen thousand more whips were made in Canada in 1934 than in 1933. The fact is of importance only beâ€" cause it is symptomatic of the reâ€" vival in the harness and saddlery inâ€" dustry during recent years. All proâ€" ducts in the industry have shared in the increased demand including harâ€" ness sets, collars, saddles, halters, horse blankets and sweat pads. Durâ€" ing 1934 factory sales increased by $379,870 over 1933. In spite of confiâ€" dent predictions to the contrary, the horse has not been eliminated by the automobile and the tractor, and a recent census indicates that it is holding its own. forming a mat around the crowns of the grass plants thus smothering young shoots ,and it is also helps weeds to spread, as weed seeds are generally present in the cuttings and, if not removed, soon become established. tin mower a mista over two in When cuttin a grass cate P tnings, must ] grow normally supplied at cor and should be just as soon as T Eo mt on Kentucky blue grass is the best and most widely asar â€" lawn purposes. It is used as a base for most lawn mixtures, because it is very serviceable and long wearâ€" ing. One of the best grass see mixtures for lawns consists of four pounds of Kentucky blue grass and one pound of Colonial bent (brown top). To this may be added oneâ€" quarter ounce of white Dutch clover, if a little clover in the lawn is deâ€" sired. The above mixture is seeded at the rate of three pounds per 1,000 square feet. In order to insure getâ€" ting dependable clean seed, the purâ€" chaser should always insist on Grade U cover very lightly wit of sifted soil, pack do water frequently with L oy _ _ NEOGsNcred and aerates the soil around the roots. There need be no fear of pressing down hard on the rake handle; the grass will not be injured by rough treatment. Early Spring is the time also to fix up those bare patches with a little fresh seed. First rake them in the oughly to a depth of two inches. Then broadcast grass seed evenly, cover very lightly with a sprinklingl ah ahhe s . s CC l «oaFt? Persons who desire goo can have them, but it will some effort on their part, e: in the early Spring. This time when a little attenti save a considerable amount . later on. Just as soon as t] has disappeared and the soil and firm enough to walk on proper time. to remove all des by giving the lawn a good This prevents the young shoo getting smothered and acra soil around the roots â€" Tha» it A Good Lawn _ Requires Work & wn l â€" Marketing, Toronto. function properly. It is to allow the grass to grow inches long at axy time. ing it is advisable to use tcher and remove all cutâ€" s Material does harm by mat around the crowns is plants thus smothering ts .and it is also helps : number of ready mixed ractically all of which good results. It is imâ€" apply â€" fertilizer very t the rates specified on rs, because satisfactory t be expected by applyâ€" | where five pounds are l and vice versa. As fertilizer has been apâ€" ld be well watered in, ken to use a fine spray eed is not disturbed in eded areas. On these the ground should be but not flooded, for eks so that the young chance to become esâ€" 0l Colomal bent (brown his may be added oneâ€" ce of white Dutch clover, lover in the lawn is deâ€" above mixture is seeded f three pounds per 1,000 In order to insure getâ€" J 8, _ like other living have food if it is to y. This food can be mparatively small cost : applied to the lawn: s the raking and secd-‘ done. There are on , pack giqwn ï¬r}nly, and >"n to walk on, is the remove all dead grass er of ready ally all of results. It desire good lawns & but it will require their part, especially Spring. This is the little attention may xÂ¥ 1 ‘ with a fine spray. grass is the best n a good raking. young shoots from teguiar soon â€" as to allow soon as the snow d the_ soil is dry of work and the the GOLD RUSH SENSATION WILD RUSH OF AUSTRALIAXNS TO DANGONG GOLD FIELD FABULOUS FIND OF OoRK am joining him there as soon as possible. Reporting in full by mail." "They‘re not exactly bubbling over with good news, are they, Eve?" Medâ€" licott remarked. "Though I don‘t know what else I could have expected. Dan is on the job, and as soon as any reâ€" sults can be got he will get them. And then we shall hear alil about it." Days followed when there was no news at all; more than a week, and it seemed an age to Eve. And then, just when Dan Prescott seemed consigned to the limbo of forgotten things, the whole adventure in the columns of the newspapers. Will Do Your by pisacle yeast Pure Dry Fast Rising ministrator or Aor; Dept. A. Winnipeg, Canada * Tell your needs to the nearest F armer §. ‘Enfplgyme_nt_ Office, Relief Adâ€" ’ And then, after the excitement of the aerial journey, there ensued a perâ€" iod when news from Australia â€" was distressingly vag ue and scrappy. Medlicott and Cairns both _ cabled frequently and fully, and both men were restive because of the lack of response to their messages. Dan never condescended to make any reply to the cables sent to him. The only source of information, apâ€" art from the public Press, was Slade,. And Slade contented himself with sending maddening answers such as: ‘Prescott has seen Westerby. Westerâ€" )y is under orders for England." And ‘gain: "Prescott leit for the mine. I im joining him there as soon â€" as ossible. Reporting in full by mail." é’ MRACLE YFASF DyYson‘s MIRACLE YEAST Bakes Bread and Rolls in 5 Houts Unemployed Men: 1 of wh. â€" 270 _j 0 ‘Ne arid bush of Australia. They stake their claim and start the long journey to the coast. Westerby has a flancee, Gladys Clemâ€" ents in England, but when they arrive in Sydney he marries a pretty blonde. Gordon forwards a photo of Dan to former fiancee, Gladys Clements, in London and when Dan arrives she beâ€" lieve he is Gordon. Eve Gilchrist, a typist, obtains work in Medlicott‘s ofâ€" fice, the broker who is floating the mine. Eve and Dan fall in love but when Eve is confronted by (Gladys she believes in Dan‘s duplicity. Dan 7cfx§r§é‘;.: A tralia to check up JOBS OPEN! Dyson‘s Limited Dan Prescott and Gor find gold in the arid bust They stake their claim . long journey to the coast Farm Help is Urgently Needed in Ontario Does Not Require Refrigeration "SALADA NET w write Minister of Labor, Public Welfare and Municipal Affairs, Parliament Bldgs., Toronto. * marties a pretty blonde. wards a photo of Dan to ee, Gladys Clements, in when Dan arrives she beâ€" Gordon. Eve Gilchrist, a Baking in 5 Hours 7A Price SYNOPSIS a plane back up on Westerby it your grocet has not oreâ€" ceived his supâ€" ply, send 10 cents â€" (coin) _ for 1â€"oz oreâ€" gular size packâ€" age, en o ug h for 10 bakâ€" FREE sample to If 10c Package Gordovj Westerby T EA DAVID A. to to Ausâ€" "In the warden‘s report mention is also made of a party which went out from Dangong, and returned _ with ‘nearly one hundred ounces of gold nuggets in the shape o. surface slugs. He adds a warning from Prescott, the original finder of the new field, to the effect that it is not a poor man‘s {ield, and never can be one. Stores of all kinds have to be carried four hunâ€" dred miles from railhead, and the supâ€" plies on the spot were brought in by. "Warden McGoorty reports that abâ€" undant water exists â€" at Dangong, where an underground stream feeds a chain of waterholes, A bore has been put down by Messrs. Prescott and Westerby and a head of artesian water is running on the Dangong proâ€" berty. A pump, dri.en by a gasoline engine, has been provided to ensure the permanence of the water supply; but prospectors are warned that this regular supply is controlled by _ the Dangong Gold Mining Company. And should any scarcity arise, the interest of the company‘s workers must be considered first. Register w it h the Employment Service. ’ "Before these specimens had been on view an hour, several expeditions were financed and equipped in Sydâ€" ney to take up mining leases adjacent to that of the Dangong Company. All the aeroplanes available in the Comâ€" monwealth have been hired for trips to the field, and Constable McGoorty of Baroona, who has been appointed temporary warden, is in charge at‘ Dangong. Representative Mr. Westerby who is in charge â€" of the exhibit, states that be took â€" all the stone out of the golden hole at Dangong in the course of an hour or two, and carried it away by aeroplane for fear it might be removed by some illâ€"disposed person while his partner Prescott was absent in England. Mr. Prescott himself is now on the goldâ€" field, in charge of some sixty or sevâ€" enty men, who are exploring and deâ€" ve‘oping the reel on the Dangong proâ€" perty. long crowds have struggled about the window for the sight of this stope, the like of which has not been seen in any Australian city since the palmy days of the West Australian discovâ€" eries in 1894. ’by his partner, Mr. Gordon Westerby. _ "Attention is called to the richness of the field by a display made in a shop window in one of the principal streets of the city. The display conâ€" sists of some hundredweights of the quartz taken from the Dangong mine and estimated to contain gold worth‘ at least ten thousand pounds. All day a rich find was made some time ago by Mr. Daniel Prescott, the hero of the record flight from England, and by his partner, Mr. Gordon Westerby. SsYDNEY CROWDS DRaAwN BY A PUBLIC DISPLAY OF GOLDEN STONE (From Our Sydney Correspondent) Gold fever has broken out in Austâ€" ralia again, and a rush has set in to the desert goldfield at Dangong where ht hoi a 26e S ‘"‘The manager of the mine, Mr. Juâ€" lius Slade, is about to leave Sydney for the field. Mr. Slade deprecates any hasty conclusions drawn from the richness of the stone found at the cap to cross the desert afoot. The Governâ€" ment has issued instructions that no tickets shall be sold on the State railâ€" ways until more is known of the new field, and until arrangements can be made for preventing the loss of life in the efforts to reach Dangong. "Mr. Westerby who is the holder of oneâ€"fifth of the shares in the Dangong Company, was offered five pounds a share for a portion of his holding or five times the original allotment valâ€" ue. Mr. Westerby is understood to have declined to accept the offer. "In spite of these warnings some hundreds of adventurers set out for the new field in the course of the day. Some have gone in cars, well loaded with stores, and others are making Up motorâ€"cycle parties. Traings are crowded by prospectors who propose: camels, for the use of the Dangong Company. Mr. Prescott wishes it clearly understood that prospectors must bring in their own supplies as there is no store of any kind at Danâ€" gong. ONE OF THE WORLD‘S GREATEST ILLUSTRATED weekâ€"Enp NEWSPAPER S Send 20 cents in stamps or coin (coin preferred) for this pattern to Needlecraft Dept., Wilson Publishing Co., 73 Adelaide St., Toâ€" ronto. Write plainly PATTERN NUMBR, your NAME and AD. DRESS. 4 Issue No. 18 â€" ‘36 Hlotha«! Tfga D. j 1 . ", Need white and pastel shades for Summer clothes! Use crochet cotton. Pattern 1175 comes to you with detailed direction for making the gloves shown in a small, medium and large size (all given in one pattern); illustrations of them and of all stitches used, material requirements. sininle mack ein .1 1 _ _ _T iE WNMDIG to crochet, too, for the same, simple mesh stitch is used for hands and cuffs. _ And why stop at just one pair, for you‘ll need white and pastel shades for Summer clothes! Use crochet cotton. Happy, Healthy, Cool!â€"the hands that spend : lacy and airy glo:res! They‘re simple to crochet sinimla muas wndetds c su ul h ah m A . FOR CANADIANS BY CANADIANS PRODUCED IN CANADA CROCHETED cLovEes Simple Glove ve Chic Is at Your Says Laura Wheel of the reef. ‘It is a wonderful display he said, a‘ veritable jeweller‘s shop,‘ and there is probably more of the same stone waiting to be secured. But some months of hard work will have to be done in the mine, in tracâ€" ing <and proving the deposit, before any positive opinion can be pronouncâ€" ed. "When I heard of the King®: I began to weep "For my love for him â€" was deep. "I felt in my heart I had lost friend "So unto you this blessing I "May God give you health you‘ll live to see "What a glorious King your going to be." death of King George, When _ King George died, Dora painted a card and underneath wrote this poem she composed hersel{: TORONTO â€" Thirteen . year â€" old Dora Downs has received a letter from the pricate secretary of Queen Mary, thanking her for her letter of sympathy with Her Majesty in the death of King CGanven TO MY BELOVED QUEEN MARY Queen Replies (To be Continued) spend the Summer in these my heart I had lost a good TORONTO STAR WEEKLY THE TORONTO STAR WEEKLY ~ PATTERN 1175 Girl‘s M essage CONTAINS ALL THE BEST COMICS \TORON[I{QfsTAR,WEEKLYISA@I the King‘s death hard work will °> mine, in tracâ€" deposit, before n be pronouncâ€" ssing I send " #&Z FLAME in the FO was â€" very son as that Flax can be grown on clear land, he said, but requires more careful handling than other grains. Flax â€"growing w as "misunderâ€" stood," he said, and had been unâ€" justly libelled" in the past. In the United States, North Dakota alone produces 20,000,000 bushels â€"annualâ€" ly. The yearly requirement for the United States is placed at 40,000,000 bushel!s. NORTH BATTLEFORD, Sask. â€" Canada imports more than oneâ€"half of the annual flax seed requirements of this country, Dr. J. B. Harrington, University of Sagkatchewan cerealâ€" ist, stated in an address here. Canâ€" ada annually requires 2,000,000 busâ€" hels of flax and only _ produces around 660,000 bushe!s. Commissioner So it might some attention All your work is for him, and the fate of the nations and of humanity is in his hands. All your work is going to be judgâ€" ed and praised or condemned by him. Your reputation and your â€"future are in his hands. THscpore ROSCOE He will assume control of your cities, towns and nation. He is going to move in and take over your prisons, churches, schools, universities and corporations. He is going to sit :tâ€)";t’l;-('ie;k in the Senate, and occupy your place on the Supreme Bench. Even if you make leagues and treaties, he will have to manage them. You may adopt all the policies you please, but how they will be carried out depends upon him. He is a person who is going to carry. on what you have started. He is to sit right where you are sitting and attend when you â€" are gone to those things you think are so important. THE SALVATION ARMY ANNUAL SELFâ€"DENIAL APPEAL aneda Imports Half Flax Seeds The The The our generous support of What Is a Boy ? work of The Army has neve problems have never been ; urgency of the Armvy‘s anvnea be well to pay him Author Uniknown Please send your contribution: John McMillan, 20 Albert Street, Toronto 34 colored comic» ONTARIO AKCHIVES TORONTO THAN TODAY port ol a great and nec confidently solicited. RLY 5 sections â€" in fact, 5 newspapers in one â€" every weekâ€"Entertainâ€" mentâ€"Amusementâ€"Inâ€" formation â€" for every member of the familv. IHIS Great Canadian Illustrated Weeklyâ€"â€"proâ€" duced in Canada by Canadians â€" for Canaâ€" dians â€" on e of t h e world‘s greatest newsâ€" papers â€" is as Canadian as Hockey and quite as vigorousâ€"with news of the world, stories and articles by worldâ€"famed writers and artists and by Canadians of internaâ€" tional reputation. â€" A clean, happy, youthful, illustrated newspaper .. Their 1936 Garden Bo« and the most complete logue ever put out in Specialists in uk 2 Seeds and Garden Accessories 935 St. Lawrence Blvd., Montreal Who Know S ippeal h or wall Thes shou the c When you have fi about a foot away fror facing the middle of the ing your feet together, fa"l backward again. t face, then, vertebra by â€" ten the entire lenoth a Hold the position a jew seconds, then relax, lowering the legs,. Reâ€" pert two or three times. This teachâ€" es you correct posture. You should stand as you were lying â€" base of spinal column curved forward, hips turned in, stomach flat and shoulders square. n _ Lie flat on the floor with arms at your sides and knees bent so weight of the legs is on balls of feet, Now, begin at the nape of the neck, press each vertebra, except the last four or five at the base, of the spinal colâ€" umn flat against the floor. Turn these last four upward from the floor. As you do so, pull your stomach in as far as it will go. If you do it corâ€" rectly there will be absolutely â€" no space between the middle of your back and the floor. 276 *wo important ones which though done only two or three times a day for one month, will remove the hollow from your back, make your stomach flat and hips look a good deal smallâ€" er: been many requests which will correct bad are two important ones done only two or three for one month, will rem A Hollow Back Causes Bad Posture T wo den Book (156 During the iter o Daily Exercises Which Will Help You to Over. come Defects ing the past week there have many requests for exercises will correct bad posture. Here ney n ‘2O% ilo0 pages), bilingual, te and beautiful seed cata_ in North America, is sent on Request, n family. Buy From nished, stand m a flat wall, e room. Keepâ€" let your neck U she £0