ought 7 rarm 52 Years PILE] He has just died in Bhavangar State, India, having forecast _ his death to his friends.â€"Reuter. .To the fact that he was a bacheloz: and studied philosophy, Mahant Shri Maharaj ascribed the fact that ne lived to the age of 130. increase in its armed forces is being considered. TAIL WAGGING CONTEST at WestcliT Carnival show has been w ‘y a small dog whose rat. was 820 to the minute. BEER â€" DRINKINNG â€" CHAMPION. The American beerâ€"drinking champ lonship brought fame to Arthw Axâ€" ien, of Boston, who led after swal lowing half a gallon in 17 seconds. Raymond De Val, of Milwaukee, Wis. took 19 seconds to dispose of a simâ€" ilar amount. RADIO FLIES: Mysterious fade outs in the wireless programme from Belgrade were traced to flies, which @ntered the condensers and caused short months. 22CARAT HARVEST: A gold ‘hain was attached to a carrot pulâ€" led up by a farmer in Tacoma, Wash ington. At the other end of the hain was a gold nugget valued at INFANT SMOKER: Mickey Norman of smokes a cigar every d standard. If the standard price is raised, the price of milk to the consumer would necessarily jump, said Mr. Clarke. He was not prepared to say whether the dairies could sell milk at less than the present retail price. !ffect of the summer‘s drought on grain and pasture crops has reâ€" sulted in an increase of 50 to 100 per cent. in producers‘ cost for feedâ€" grains and cencentrates, he said. Standard price set by the Ontario government is $z.1C a hundredâ€" weight for milk with a 3.4 fat conâ€" tent, Mr. Clarke added. _ Price ot milk with a higher or lower fat con tent was figured at about three three cents a point from the $2.10 retary of the Ontario Whole Milk Producers‘ League .said an average ncrease of 40 cents a hundred weight in cost of milk will be neeâ€" essary if Ontario producers are to get merely produâ€"tion costs this winâ€" _A car journey at 50 m.p.h., a vdresser of Harrismith, S. Africa, ind a passenger on his front bumâ€" ~ It was a hen, roosting on one ° â€" fast asleep. INIATURE _ ARMY: Andorra, kCt independent State in Pyrene: 191 square miles, 5,200 inhabit: s, has a standing army of one gadier and nine other ranks. An Drought Cause O f Higher Milk C os t »~»vecu, of course, is but one of the essential factors in the maintenance of railway passen‘ger service, but the safety index for the year 1935, when no single rail passenger was killed in the United States, is on a par with it Rail luxury is sufâ€" ficiently exploited to need no comâ€" ment, but its combination with swiftness and safety forms a spec tacular pattern in the fabric of the PEEDSTER HEN: 10 Cents a Hundredweight Increase Necessary Proâ€" rucers Claim, TORONTO. . BR Plorks an« the aid of a grade of less than eight feet a mile) at a Scheduled average of 83.8 miles. There are however, twentyâ€"five nonâ€"stop runs of more than 150 miles where better than a mile a minute is maintained, and the shorter runs calling for this speed are too numerous to list. Speed, of course, is but one of the which is printed in the current issue of Railroad Stories. _ Speeds of sixty miles an hour have existed it the United States since 1848, when a world record was established on the Lowell division of the Boston and Maine, and high speeds sustained over long distances hlVQ been M' iar to travelers on crack trains for the last forty years. _ But that there are 438 nonâ€"stop runs of longer tha thirty miles over which Aneri-‘ can trains average better than sixty and in many cases reach seventyâ€" five miles an hour may come as P surprise to those with but a casual acquaintance with the railway scene. The most spectacular of these is the record of the Santa Fe‘s new Diesel Super Chicf, which envare the rails from La Junta {o "'"; City, a distance of -202.47 miles n('i'd‘tl: radition Longâ€"Lived Bachelor circuits Deserving of popular attention as some indication of the many and far reaching improvements the railways are offering in their present batttle to regain favor is a carefully tabuâ€" lated list of American trains run on mileaâ€"minute or better schedules "An~Nl SMOKER: Aged five, cy Norman of New Jersey es a cigar every day. He start with cigarettes at fourteen Queer World ! 0. â€" E. H. Clarke, secâ€" the Ontario Whole Milk Railway Runs‘ American railroading. Stopping afâ€" 50 m.p.h., a which covers Another shipment of approximately 25 tons of 80 percent copper nickei matter from the Cuniptau Mines smelâ€" ter was loaded at Goward last week for shipment to Montreal. Officials of the company state that this shipment is of similar grade to the previous week‘s shipment which comprises 48, 000 lbs. of matte. Dewatering of the Alexo property is well under way and it is expected that a sample carload of high grade ore will be made to the smelter some (:me this ~eek. A surâ€" vey of the company‘s holdings adja> ent to the present â€" orkings h>s been to survey the various shearings and vein structures preparatory to _ the carrying out of an ~tensiv© diamond drilling campaign, while Mr. Fairburn is arranging for the isportation of additional equipment and supplies to the property prior to the freezeâ€"up. Construction of new camps is well adâ€" vanced and opening up of the two principal veins is beinx continued. Oilficials of Black Eagle Red Lake «lines report preparation are underâ€" way for enlarging the scope of operâ€" ations. Gordon F. Summers, O0.L.S., and W. H. Fairburn lo‘t for the pro perty recently to prepa . for future work. Mr. Summers has been engaged Drilling of the deep hole at Lake Maron Gold Mines is continuing with a depth of 450 ft., reached at last word from the property. At 379 ft. a miner alized quartz vein wa intersected and a section of the core ias been sent out for assay. It is planned to contin ue the hole another 1,000 ft. at least to give a cross section of the structâ€" ture at this point. The most favorable area has not yet been reached. aps o 1t C one s ~OU the Mayrand property of Dunlop Conâ€" solidated Mines with No 5 hole interâ€" secting 23 ft. of mi; sralized aplite; 55 ft. of mineralized biotite schist with blue quartz stringers and 4 ft. of blue quartz with pyrite chalcopyrite and arsenopyrite. Assays are now. being made and results should be available shortly. BACKACHE s x 4. S009_ VECCG and your bladder isf irritated â€" and passage scanty and o ten smarts and burns you need Gold Medal Haarâ€" lem Oil Capsules, a fine harmless stimulant and diuretic that always works and costs but 40 cents at any modern drug store. It‘s one good, safe way to put healthy activity into kidneys and bladder â€"â€" you‘ll sleep sound the whole night thru, But be sure and get GOLD MEDAL _ right from Haarlem in Holland â€" you are asgâ€" sured of results. Other symptoms of weak kidneys and irritated bladder are bnckache.‘ puffy eyes, leg cramps, moist palms. Diamond drilling is 40 CENTS PROVEsS it mManeys of Waste Matter, ns and Acid and Stop c"“in. Up Nights ur kidneys are Cneys are clogged _ is irritated and d often smarts and Gold Medal Haar. continuing on The machinery necessary to comâ€" plete both the mininng plant and the mill has arrived at ‘~e property and is being installed under the direction of William Taylor, Mine Maunager, !ate of Dome Mines. Some twentyâ€"five men d@re at work prospecting on surâ€" face and drifting will be started imâ€" mediately on the No. 2 vein, drimng‘ ‘n both directions from the tunnel at ' At a meeting of the "oard or Direeâ€" ‘toz's of iHIllside Mines, Limited, held at the Head Office of the company on Tuesday, the 29th of September, on the recommendation of Mr. Douglas Baird, M.G., the Board of Directors authorized the management of the company to enter into a contract for a minimum of 2,0(\ feet of diamond drilling. This work will commence immediately and it is intended not only to drill from surface on the proâ€" mising showings which have been disâ€" closed in recent work, but also to exâ€" plore at depths of not less than 300 to 400 feet, the large ore body on which a mill test is now being made. it was expected that it would be cut in the crosscut. The crosscut has rea ched a length of 165 ft. and is proâ€" ceeding rapidly, with an average rate of 11 ft. per day being made. The vis ible gold encountered in the "A" vein had not been indicated by diaâ€" mond drilling but now it has been esâ€" tablished in both the "A" and "B" veins. > Lapa Cadillac Gold Mines, controlâ€" led by Sudbury Contact, has now inâ€" tersected the "B" vein in crosscutting on the first level and visible gold has been exposed. Drill Hole N. 4 in this section encountered visible gold and The diamond drilling programme is continuing on the Halliwell Gold Mines, where thres hol:s are being sunk at various points t~ prove â€" the extension of the indicated orebo . Directors of the company have under consideratio t‘ sinking of a thaft which seems justified by the recent lyâ€"made findings. Sufficient funds for such ‘ogramme are on hand, with 1 the company; having cash, ca‘ls loans and accounts receivab‘ of $150,00%. In addition there are 1,000,00 treasury shares unissued, but under câ€"tion at prices sufficient to provide enougul :oney, it is estimat * to pay fur l“u' erection and installation of a mill. "AC‘l alacDonald Red Lake Gold Mines has put down eight test pits on Watti Island, ‘ccording to M. L. Bouâ€" zan, in charge of operations. The vein on which the pits ere sunk has been traced for approximately 300, and is persistent with good &‘ ‘cture, J. i. _ msel taces, cons "r: encinc ;. who has recommended a programme of diamond drillings. T ite <~me 5 veins have been located on surface with principal work confined to the showing on Watti Island. _ * ~~â€"muJ, mine manager of Myâ€" Lamaque Gold Mines in a report to aresident, G. E. Farrar, states that No. 2 drill hole has reached depth of 300 ft. Several quartz stringers were intersected and one new \cin showing a width of 5 ft. The latter oc currence showed heavy mineralizaâ€" tion. The programme of drilling is beâ€" ing continu.d. ® C Cee ~Oul â€"O7 â€" Hgys Lundberg with indications said to be pointing to the continuation of the ore to the south A diamond drilling campaign on this portion of the property has been re commended by the Cuniptau enginâ€" eers. Kert LiacDonald Red O‘Reilly, mine out by Hans _Nessons are vonderfully helpful and inspiring." "1 ba.s been able definitely to change the habit of â€"* "You are a great help and 1 hope it is given to measure up." "Results are wonderful." We could «quote from manyâ€" more letters, but the above extracts are proof that others are being helped. If others, WHY NOT YyOU# Give that mind of yours a chance. Write today for particulars of an atensive course of mental training. Line breeding is the practice which is generally adopted in all successful hords. The owner selects one particuâ€" lar line of blood which has been promâ€" inent in producing highâ€"class dairy stock, and adheres to that line. it has been found that this is more cerâ€" tain and quicker method of breeding up a herd of high producers than is the practice, so often adoptea, ot choosing a bull from one str@in and then changing over to a different strain when making another purchase. Proo{ { The official census for Japan as of October 1, 19835, was 69,251,260 for Japan properâ€"a gain of 4,801,â€" 255 in five years. This pressure of numbers on Nippon‘s limited re sources is the basis of the world problem of Japanese expansion. _ TOKYOâ€"Japan‘s natural increase \in population, the margin of births over deaths, was 760,239 for the first nine months of 1935, the government statistics bureau has announced. If this rate was maintained for the last quarter of the year, it produced a population gain of more than 1,000,â€" 000 for the year. Only in one preâ€" vious year, 1932, nas the population risen by more than a million. The margin of births over deaths accounts accurately for Japan‘s population growth, for emigration and immigration are neglible. The Institute of Practical and Applicd Psychology name! Stubbornly refuse anything else. 2¢. feel "up and up". Harmless and gentle, t t‘:qw make the bile flow freely. They do the work of calomel but have no ealomel or mereury in them. Ask for Carter‘s Little Liver Pills by A mere bowel movement doesn‘talways get at the cause. You need something that works on the liver as well. It takes those good, old Carter‘s Little Liver Pills to get these two pounds of bile flowing freely and make you feel "up and up". Harmless and gentle. Referring to the nice things that had been said about him, he recaltea Oliver Wendell Holmes, who wrote to the effect that when young, one is content to have praise in teaâ€" spoonfuls, as one reaches middle age it is very acceptable by the table: spoonfulâ€"but when one is old one likes it ladled! Morning Rarin‘ to Go The liver should pour out two pounds of liquid bile into your bowels daily. If this bile is not flowing freely, your food doesn‘t digest. It just decays in the bowels. Gas bloats up your stomach. Youget constipated. Harmful poisons 30 into the body, and you feel sour, sunk and the world looks punk. Japan‘s Population Gain Put at Million And You‘ll Jump Out of Bed in the WAKE UP YOUR LIVER BILEâ€" Sir Robert Borden is turned 80. His enthusiasm keeps him young. When tribute was paid to his war service he replied that in those dreary days one vas thankful to be able to give something of ones energy and strength. London Overseas Daily Mail ob serves: At Vernon House, St James‘ recently, each guest had pinned to corsage or buttonhole a little cara naming the country which she or he came. Strangers could talk to one another without introduction. Among those, returned from Vimy, were whiteâ€"haired Sit Robert Borden, the first overseas minister to enter a British Cabinet; vivacious Lady Perâ€" ley, whose husband Sir George, was High Commissioner here in 1917â€"22; and Archideacon Frederick George | Scott of Quebec. He is famous tor! his dash nto .aoâ€"man‘s iand, when | wounded himself, to recover his son s | body. | a point 580 feet from the portal. Et . 20 n o es S td The finding of a new ore body a half mile from the present workings in the Greenstone formation is quite imporâ€" tant in that up to date, nothing has been found in this type of rock. $19 Confeders‘‘on Bnildi MOKTRZAL, P?.Q. Exports of gold bullion was worth $10,424,300, all of which went to the United States, and compared with $4,045,089 in Lugust last year, while exports of silver buillior were valued at $696,769 against $1,791,â€" 940 last year At the same time silver bullion exported dropped to less than half the__value of August, 1985, Canada‘s export of gold bullion during August was worth more than double the value of the same month last year, the Dominion Bureau of Statistics reports. But Silver Trade Less Than Half of Month Last Year Of Gold Doubled Canadians In London Line Breeding ng "Love at first sight" is the world‘s greatest time saver. Miss Johnsonâ€"No. Mis‘ Jackson. He done bettah dan dat. He gave her a engagem@nt wringer and wash. tub. Mis‘ Jacksonâ€"Say. Mis‘ Jackson, did Mose give Cel¢stine a engageâ€" ment ring foh bein‘ engaged? After Years of Tears Each sweet love song _ brought _ thoughts of him, though he was far away. "T‘was years since I had seen his faceâ€"a love of yesterday. The books I read ail seemed to bring his presence very near, A man so handsome, charming, tall â€"that love of yesterday Each rose reécalled the ones he‘d sent; then I‘d feel sadâ€"and cry. Such cruel fate that made him leave! My love of days gone by. Today we met apon the strgets. "Had time wrought changes?"â€" Oh! No disappointments quite compare | to loves of long ago! 1 TORONTO Professorâ€"My dear young lady; I said a ‘knotty problem.‘ Professorâ€"I1 thought you said there was a naughty problem in it. Economy is the thing that supâ€" plies old age with an easy chair. Girlâ€"I found that book you lent me frightfully dull. Joe E. Brown â€" She told me to call on Friday night, as that‘s amaâ€" teur night. Nothing worries a woman more than having nothing to worry about. Clark Gableâ€" And what did Mae West say when you kissed her? Deborah â€" Sureâ€"he holds the chisel in his mouth and hits himself on the back of the head. Deborahâ€" See that man over there? He‘s a famous sculptor. We recommend to your attention the fact that man is the only animal that can be skinned more than once. "Yes, as fast as she u'ett in they keep her moving." 4ohnsonâ€"It‘s all wrong about the Irisk teing good fighters. Jecksonâ€"Really? Johnson â€" Yes. Last week my brother and 1 and two other fellows almost knocked an Irishman silly. "Maude says she has always moved in the best society." A boy with a large mouth was shopping for a mouth organ. Critic wly he tried every harmoniâ€"a in the shop. but couldn‘t find one to suit bin. Finally the clerk led him to a grand piano. "Here," he suggestâ€" ea "try running your mouth over these keys." \ _ Young man â€" Won‘t you please give me a kiss? Still no answer. Young man (shouting at iength) â€" Please, please, just one? No answer. "oung man â€" Are you deaf? She (snapping) â€" No. Are you paralyzed ? \ Kathléeenâ€"But he has only one we‘e sealed in a dim corner, Young man (pleading)â€"Give a kiss. % were "Wall sometimes I buy a gold brick but mostly I just keep my whiskers on." A timely headache now and then is suffered by the best of men. "How do you keep summer bom- eres amused?" A young man and his best girl The insect pest that does the most rm is still the humbug. HJAVE girl made no answer. neARD y o U â€"Lyla Myers NOTE: The writer of this column is a trained psychologist and an au thor of several works.. He is willing to deal with your problems, and give you the benefit ci is wide experi ence. Cues =s regardin . PRKUBâ€" LEMS _ OF EVERY JAÂ¥ LifFE should be addressed to : Dr. M. M May 1 crave the induigence of corâ€" respondents whose letters are still unanswered? My mail uas been unâ€" usually heavy in the past few wee.. and work has a way 0‘ piling up when one is on vacation. 1 hope to overâ€" take all belated correspondence w‘ in the next few days If that is impossible, or if it fails, then there is no valid reason why she should go on living in misery. Her husband refuses to agree to a separation on purely selfish grounds As a last resort she should consult a lawyer. If things are as the letter now before me portrays them, this woâ€" man will have o difficulty in securing the protection of the courts 1 am always hesitant to give that advice, bit in this case the circumstances are such that the woman would be far better off if the partnership were dissolved. There is little likelihood of this man changing his attitude unless he can be dealt with directly and per sonally, and that seems impossible. If there is a clergyman in whom "A Worried Wife" can confide and whom she thinks would be able to exercise some influence on her husband, she could consult him. He might manae to bring her husband to a sense of reason. 1 Well, my correspondent was fool ish in the first instance in marrying a man who had so deceived her withâ€" out first satisfying herself as to his innocence. But sometimes it is hard to see things in advance. And some men are very smooth and plausible. From the facts before me 1 can see little hope of happiness in this union. and the union promised happiness. But it wasn‘t to last. The husband "started stepping out with women," and for the past few years "A Wor ried Wife" has been living in conâ€" ditions which make the partnership impossible. She is willing to forgive all if only bhe will settle down and behave himself. But he is not amenâ€" able to reason and he refuses to agree to a separation until he is able ‘to pin something‘ on his wife and then he will not be required to support her. "Do you think he will change his attitude later on and how should I treat him in the meantime?" Thlt‘ is the question which "A Worried Wife" asks me. "A Worried Wife" fell in love with a ‘man and began courting him. He posed as single, but it turned out he was married and his wife divorced him. When taken to task, he was able to give a quite plausible explana tion, and "A Worried Wife", thinking him an innocent victim, agreed to marry him. For the first two or three years of their marriage everything went well, two children were born, Among the sheaf of letters awaitâ€" ing my attention when I returned from my vacation last week there is one which is signed "A Worried Wife." It tells a story that is tragic and reveals conditions of married life which one would like to think are unâ€" usual. I shall not actually quote from the letterâ€"it is too intimateâ€"but here is the gist of the story:â€" AN IMPOSSILBLE PARTNERSHIP $25.00 weekly made growing mushrooms for us or your local market. Patented formula, write for information and free offer. North American Spawn Comâ€" g‘ny (Dept. A), Ontario Buillding oronto _ _able improved household articles. Literature, sample free Labor Saving Devices. Timited, 670 Queen East, Toronto. Shows how io read character from handwriti»g, at a glance 10c PREPAID Colonials. ‘This Magnicarocious collec= tion free for be postage. GRAY STAMP Co., Dept. PC., Toronto. AN urPER TO EVERY INVENTOR, List of Wanted inventions and full lnformauo%vsert free. ‘THE lm:g Company orld Patent Attorneys, Bank Street, Ottawa. Canada. ZANZIBARâ€"Also Sudan, Somaliland, imascecucine. T L L L LC Classified Advertising es FANNING MILL â€" Kline Champion. Farmers say best made. Kline Come pony, 121 Empress Cres., Toronto. GREYING HAIR INSTANTLYy UNEE ase o e TB * Ahmaliz: en ReQCIHT TT SkG 25¢. Annette, 220 McDermot, Winnipeg. Snmsmeememeneeuue s 00. 1 0 t C 0e PP3 "~ Tigerstamps, ‘Togoland, Caribbean, Algerian, Central Americans, British Teacher â€" My goodness, Willie! How did you get such dirty hands? Willieâ€"Washin‘ my face, Lappin, Room 421, /3 Adclaide 5t. West, Toronto, Ontario. Enclose a 8 cent stamped addressed envelope for reply. TORONTO LONDON _QUEBEC MONTREAL OTTAWA XCLUSIVE TERRITORY _ AVAILâ€" Craphologist Room 421 73 Adelaide St. W. Torontc N OFFER To Graphochart Issue No. 41 â€"‘36 DTQ C3 NUA _ INDIANTLY Darkâ€" ened. No dye. Safe. 60c. Trial size _ Ammatia: mea mem .Cnd enD ROOFERS SUPPLY CO., LIMITED MUSHROOM SPAWN STAMP COLLECTING AGENTF WANTED FANNINC MILL INVENTORS: The PERSONAL iture â€" on