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Flesherton Advance, 7 Jun 1933, p. 3

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â-  • i :li Kenty Gold Mines Bauffbt - Bold Quoted I7BUstcd SeparUaaat DohcrtyRoadhouse&Co. I »ik.mi:ki;s: standard Stock asd Min^f Szcbang'* 51 Zlsff W. WA. 1163 'Forage Plants For Acid Soils Most Value b!e Player >-♦••»â- â€¢â€¢ • ' Soccer Is Leading In Italian Sports (Experimental Farms Note.) The Diviiion of Forage Piaiit3. Central Kxyerlmental Farm, Ottawa, Is devutinK ccn«iderable atteDiion to the matter of securing leguminous forage plants which will thrive on acid soilsi and soils which are poor III fertility. Such plants would be of great value in part? of Eastern Can- ada and many places In the Maritime Provinces where c'.overs and alfalfa cannot be grown successfully with- out liminff. Several new acid toler- ant plants have been introduced re- cently and these are being tested In the forage crop nursery at Ottawa as well as on several Branch Experi mental Farms. One of the mo=t Interesting of these recent introduc- tions is an extra earlv strain of deso- odeza. the same kind of crop which has proven such a boom to agricul- ture In the Southeastern United States. "Harbin" Le^pedeza originated from a plant found growing wild in Harbin, Manchuria, by officials of the United States Department of Agriculture, from whom we obtained seed in the spring of 1932. In our trials la-st year it wa.s not seeded un- til about June 1. and it produced an abundance of ripe seed two weeks before frost. The plants, however, were very small, not more than eight inches high. Its chief value undoubt- edly w-ill be ia the improvement of pastures and It Is hoped that, once established, this early despedeza will seed itself down from year to Hundreds of Thousands Watch Matches Through- out Land on the Holidays Rome.â€" Of all the sports thtt have won the favor of Italian youth since fascism rendered physical fitness fashionable, none exceeds in popular- ity association football (soccer). Hun- dreds of thousands of persons each Sunday watch the championship matches at the principal cities, while even at small country centres large crowds gather on holidays to cheer local boys to victory over their op- lonents from neighboring villages. The Italians have acquired consid- erable proficiency in this game, and now are considered the finest players I year. In continental Europe, having de- . During the present season the feated all their most dangerous rivals, Division of Forage Plants is conduct- notably Austria and Czechoslovakia. | ing extensive tests under actual pas- Therefore it is with the greatest j ture conditions and the seed is being anticipation, not unmixed with con- 1 Increased. As yet there is no seed liderable trepidation, that all Italy i available for general distribution.â€" is lookir.g forward to the match to be L. E. Kirk. Dominion Agrostologist. played at Rome, in May, with Italy's International team pitted for the first time against the best that England's professionals can muster. According to Italian historians, /gotball was played in Florence in the Middle Ages, but there is doubt that modern soccer is a purely British game in its origins. Hitherto it has been impossible to gauge accurately wh't progress the Italian "pupils" have made because they have had no •opportunity of measuring themselves with a British team, association foot- ball in England being purely profes- sl->nal, while Continental players have amateur status. This month, there- â-  fore, the Italians will be playing not only for their country, but as repre- sentatives of all Continental Europe. ITALY HAS HIGH HOPES. On the few occasions when direct comparison t)etween British and Con tinental European football has been possible, England has won and retain- ed the prestige of being considered the world's master at this game. Two years ago England won with ease over Spain. Last December she won with more difficulty against Austria, by 4 'goals to 3. The Italians hope to prove that the Continental pupils have reached the level of the masters. The Italian team this year, un- doubtedly the best in Europe, is l)e- lieved here to be sufficiently strong to 'triumph over England. On paper, the Italian chances are excellent. England, last December, barely de- feated Austria, which, this year, was defeated by Czechoslovakia. Italy, in turn, convincingly beat Czechoslo- vakia at Florence. No other contest in the history of modern Italian sport has caused near- ly so much inter-ist as the forthcoming match. International football games, hith- erto, have never been watched here by more than yo,000 spectators, while for this coming game 60,000 tickets have already been sold. Disappointed fans I're so numerous that speculators are now selling the few remaining tickets it four t'n\t^ the stated pri:e. Nor is interest limited to Italy, for many p.'«rties are arriving from aU countries in Euioj)e and even from South America. .-V block of si.xty tick- ets was reserved by cable some weeks ago for a group of enthusiasts who are undertaking the costly ten-d*y journey to watch the contest. ,> Italians Turn to Equator for New Study of Cosmic Ray Rome.â€" An expedition to study cos- mic rays almost on the equator has been organized by Professor Bruno Rossi, physicist of the University of Padua. The project is being financed by Premier Benito Mussolini's Nation- al Council of Research, of which .Mar- nuis augliclmo Marconi, wireless in- ventor. Is president. The expedition will have Us head- quarters at Asmara, capital of Italian Eritrea, Africa, near the magnetic equator. •> Britain's Backbone Lauded By New Zealand Weekly Biideit ditliiiiUi»'s a:e pleaded by the United States in demanding pay- ment, and by Hrilnin's debtor.-s in seek- ing relief, writes the Auckland Week- ly New''. Britain, paying on the one hand, not being paid on the other, has Had to face Budget difflcultles a» grtat as those rontfronting any others coTI- cerned In this great problem. Xffey are met In Britain by measures from which the others shrink, by sacrifices Ihetr citizens are not called upon to ^ar. Typist Sculptures in Her Spare Time A twenty • tour - year - old London typist. Miss Valer ie Clarebout, who has been studying sculpture in her spare time, mingled with famous paint- ers and sculptures at Burlington House on "varnishing day" â€" the day for ex- hibitors only, for she is one of the ex- hibitors. A bronze bust of a man, which she submitted tor this year's Royal Acad- emy, has been accepted. It was the first time she had sent anything to Burlington House. Miss Clarebout, a shy blonde, has been earning her own living since she was seventeen. Every evening she goes straight from the office to the Polytechic to attend sculpture classes, "Two years ago I began modelling in clay for amusement,' Miss Clare- bout said. "I found it eas.v, and start- ed attending modelling classes at the Polytechnic. "Last month I fiuished a bust of a man, and, greatly daring, sent it to the Royal Academy for this year's ex- hibition. To my utter amazement and delight it was accepted." Miss Clarebout's was one among 12,000 works sent in â€" and it remains among the 1,100 accepted. The first ingredient in conversation is truth, the next good"Sense, the third good humour, and the fourth wit. â€" Sir W. Temple. C. "What is the use of worrying about 'Happiness' with a capital H?"â€" Have- look Ellis. Charlie "Chuck" Klein, s'u';ging outfielder of the "Phillies," with the cup presented to him for being voted most valuable player in the National League during 1932. HE HAD toTeDUCE Elasiest Way Proved the Beslj A man who had been advised by his doctor to reduce, writes thus: â€" "I had put on weight to the extent of 206 lbs. This was excessive as I am only 5-ft. 6-ins. in height. My doctor advised me to reduce, and I tried hot baths and massage. This, however, was too fatiguing â€" and I am a very busy man. I then saw an an- nouncement about Kruschen Salts, bought a bottle, and commenced tak- ing them right away. Last Saturday I weighed myself, and o my surprise and delight I had reduced my weight from 206 lbs. to 199 lbs. My health generally is better, I sleep well, and eat more heartily. I have spread the good news to my friends who are BJitting on weight." â€" W. H. K. Kruschen contains those six min- eral salts, proportionately balanced, found in the waters of those famous European Spas used by generatiom of fat people "to reduce weight Kruschen helps blood, nerves, glands, and body organs to function properly â€" you gain new strength and energy â€" feel voaro younger â€" look bet- ter, work oetter. Why postpone a sure, steady return to normal weight and vigorous health? â€" Start th^ Kruschen treatment today! i^ . Many Americans Visit Britain London. â€" Despite the nearness o£ France to England, more Americans than Frenchmen are visiting England this spring. In March 6.11S travelers came to the United Kingdom, 1.494 from across the Atlantic and 1,162 from across the channel. : So^^|ay . â-  ' "Not to t)i.- alivfc to tin.- 3erv).e of our fellowmen, eternal hope and lov,e ofGoil, is. t« itp de^'.'v'E.vjMi' • geline Booth. ..'. .,-â- ;*.;_ ;.:.,.w:,/_'-.' ,' •'Wei'have . • â- â-  -X i'aU'iigi^\)^o-^ rein' 61 hum;. '. ';h a ilgahtic' mass of silly !it:i;i;iial.;on. correspond- ence and accouutiag. " â€" ^.cuce Barton. "You judge- a •coijB.ti'yirfftt-.biF wtoatj It is in times' 5f-p«"5p'^Ity. .'but. -fry', what it is in harit irtift*«:''s^F!njt- (^THiff- del. I "Xo problem -of imp.'H'rajjie to aji.inr; dividual is {oo-^kil -ty-'eiigiii^.'tite'i attention uf the hlghf^t jjftii'i^lii- (jif !H' country." â€" .\<'wton D. Ba^er. • â-  â-  " "It is eurioua.bosyjLitlit,>-:huiuprirBvo- InUopai-y .leaders. ..se^'qj. -'to . have.'"^-^" Lady .\s(iuith. "Only iiy clear thfnltlfig "and-.^bur- ageous action can we. JtOli*io g«tj back on to otiT course.'."^â€" Sir WaU«r T. Layton. ' â-  <. --i-^-.-:: »â- -•â- â€¢â€¢ "Only those. wliA^hjtye., learned, to obey- iWA- Later b».able.ta give orders." â€"Adolf Hitler. . ... .... . . ; •. "Worry and fret and irritation are emotions which serve, no pstrppae.â€" Bertrand Russell. 'â- .""â- .; "'' "No man dares write the truth about marriage while his wire' "J5veK'' "-^ George Bernard Shaw. - "In my limited; experience I've found no country which I should not be happy to live in." â€" John Erskine. "The society of the future is to he no place for loafers." â€" Ramsay Mac- Donald. "We have got the goods'; it ie only a question «f dellvetlng- . them." â€" Rover W. Babson. "The genera! public today demands higher, not lower, social standards from the screen."â€" Will H. Hays. "The man who enjoys marching in line and file to ilie strains of martial music falls below my coiiteihpt." â€" Al- bert Einstein. > . "The difficulty is not so much to know what ought to be don© as to screw statesmanship up to a pitch of being ready to do it." â€" David Lloyd George. "One finds happiness when one is not searching for it."^Eugene 'Briex. "Modern communities contain a large percentage of relatively primi- tive individuals-."â€" Aldous Huiie.v. "We are unconsciously sinking into a Middle Age far worse than the first, for it will be a Middle Age with nitroglycerine ! "â€" Guglielmo Ferrero. "To make a home under any and all conditions, with whatever is at hand, is genius."â€" Mrs. Franklin D. Roose- velt. ".\merica has discovered that her real gold lies in her children.'"â€" Kath- leen Norris. "The stury of" the past helps one to orientate himself in the present." â€" Leon Trotsky. "Our worst enemies are not men, but the false notions and destructive prejudices by which men are misled." â€" Owen D. Young. I 3 LONGER SMOKE Each pipeful of Plug Tobacco lasts li longer ... a worth-while saving in the «ost of smoking appreciated by thrifty men. DIXIE ONLY 20C A BIG PLUG Elnds 63-Day Voyage â€" <•- "luflation is a respectable form of repudiation â€" like taking to drink to get an artificial stimulus." â€" Viscount Snowden. An Aristocrat ., Crop Rotations (Experimental Farms Note.) t\'ith over 57,964,000 acres of land ia crop in Canada, It is apparent that the most efficient methods of prod- uction should be learned and adopt- ed. Should the various crops be grown continuously year after year On the same land or should they be 1 grow^n in suitable rotations? Should : any consideration be given to the ] adaptation of different crops to dif- ferent soils or should they be grown Irrespective of the soil type? Recent experimental work sup- plies much useful information on these problems. Some crops such as wheat, oats and corn. It ha.s been j discovered, produce decidedly high- 1 er yields -when grown in ro'ation 1 than when grown under a system of continuous cropping. Other crops. I such as timothy, tobacco and pota- ' toes, ma.v. it desired, be grown satis- i factorily in a system of continuous [ cropping provided the soil fertility is ' maintained. Legume crops, such as alfalfa, clover and peas, have a very beneficial effect not only ia increas- I ing the amount of protein In the feed 1 but in creating soil conditions very I much more favorable for subsequ- ! ent crops than is possible with non- 1 legumes. I The effects of weeds, diseases and i insect pests constitute individual j problems w-hich may require in each \ different case, a different treatment. I A rotation may or may not assist in I controlling the problem: certain cul- j tural treatments may be re<iuired if , eflScient control Is to be secured. The largest yields can be obtained only when the best metliods of pro- duction are followed. Experiments have shown the best rates and dates of seeding, the most suitable manure and fertilizer treatments as well as the proper time and methods of harvesting various crops. Information on this subject is con- tained in a new bulletin, No. 163, ney series. "Crop Rotations and Soil 1 Management for Eastern Caiii.idai " â- â€¢vhich has been prepared by the Kield Husbandry Division of the Central I Experimental Farm, Ottawa. It may [ be obtained fr^e by writing to the I Publications Brunch, Department of ' Agriculture, Ottawa.â€" E. S. Hopkins, •Dominion Field Husbandman, Ot- tawa. Classified Advertising FOB SAI.E. â- ^;:-:k1' J"VER.VilE^ _ -Approved Chicks fr'qS blood-tt'stfd tretders. Leghorns. .OSH Barred Rocks, .OSJc: White Rocks .Og|a Free Circular. Baden '71eclric Chid Hatthery, Baden, Ont. .! R.OP. AQENTS -WANTEB. S' ELL PAl'ER HiJXES FOR PROKIJ Baird and iloii Toraery I^imitSq 'f or'. i;'.o. BIBLES for the BUND ' (KIH-Q- JAMES VEBSION) DUtribatea In Braill* WlUi the Aid of FhUantliropy V luntary contributi.ins ayr^'euiaiod. Special Price: SI per volume. J21 complpte. bbah^e bib=.e society, mo. 739 DTcrtJi Vermont Ave., IiO* Anjelef,' California. ,j -*- Eleanor \Villiani«on. sianddaughter «( \V. K. Kellogg i» shown with Kirah. seven-year-o!il .Arabian horse she has entered tn the Pasadena Juvenile Horse Show. Captain J. S. Corfe, who return- ed to England last week-end in the Cunard liner Alaunia, -with his ot- llcers and crew. He sailed his ship, the S.S. Baltic, to Japan 'Where she was turned over to Japanese ship breakers. They re- turned from Yokohama across the Pacific by the N.Y.K. Line through Vancouver and by C.N.R. to Mont- real. The voyage to Japan was made in 63 days, via the Cape of Good Hope. â€" (Cunard Photo.) Rule For Living Never crush the proffered ro.?e Brought in the hand, Never kick the castle down Built in the sand; Never throw a gentle word Back in the teeth, . Never pluck the laurel leaves Out of the wreath ; Never (juench the radiance Lighting the eyes, '. Never stamp your boredom's heel Over soKprise â-  . ^ Never flick a scoffinjr smile Over a trust Lest you throw the soul of you Into the dust. â€" Ellen Hovey Davis. Lily Blooms After 20 Years Durban. .Nala!. â€" tUii-t-ii Viitoria's I .Biant water lily, the Victoria. Regina. t I is in flower at the fiotiDvical G&Td^rtS'' ! her for the fir>Jt time in twenty years. ! It was grown from a sppU obttHned- fv<rm i\w j-fiyal plant in Krw' Gardens. England, 'the V-i<'tffrta -R-fgina has niant leaves of such bucivaiuy that a >mall chihl- can.sl«nd on them. Scholars Aim to Restore Ancient Egyptian Tongue Ann Arbor. Mich. â€" Egyptian, a tongue heard before the days of the pyramids, but unspoken for the last 900 years, is giving up the secrets of sounds familiar to Tutankhamen. Moses and Cleopatra through research into Coptic documents here. Professor William H. Worrell, in the institute of archeological research at the Uuviesily of Michigan, is mak- ing the study. Scholars have been able to trans- late the stone and papyrus writings, hilt heretofore have been no more than able to guess at the sounds of the characters. Professor Worrell uses the science of phonetics, which tells what sounds may be formed in the human mouth and throat, and studies the dialects of Coptic, .\rabic and Greek. By starting with sounds used to- day in related languages, and observ- ing spelling variations, he hope.s to trace individual sounds back to the forms silent for centuries. London Extends Traffic Signals Loiidon.-:â€" -riie biggest concentration of -autotiiattt -signals so far attempted in London is now being tried out in Trafalgar Square. It in regarded by trafljc authorities as a special test of the efficiency of the mechaniied sys- tem yJt,m;;jJHc.c,optr-ol. tot the linality Is one ot th^ b.asiest traffic centres ill the London area. Tho one-way circHJi, or roundabout system, has long been in operation ihcre. . , (I "fhe i«w ch-anw gicla bad been quar- reJMh'!t-W<t^rty for an hour. ".Vnd not only that." saiu one, flnally. "Sut you crow UK>1er ever day." "Tliai's an- iithei thing 1 can do and .vuu csn'l,"' >a?d' the other, swortly. Eats 12-Hour Meal Washington. â€" Jacob Williams. Chester, Pa., has eaten his fill once. Complaining that he always waa hungry, Williams ivon the c6-operatiiSn of a restaurant propristor, sat dov^ at the table at S a.m., and ate mo?a or less steadily until 8 p.m. Here! what he had: Breakfast: Half a pound of bacon, 18 eggs, potatoes, four bowls of cot eal, three oranges, five cups of coffS^ five rolls, one quart of milk. Lunch: Two pounds steak, onk pound potatoes, tomato salad, two cups of coffee, four bottles of soda water, one quart of ice cream, ona quart of strawberries. Dinner: Five pork chops, two Fraakj furters, potatoes, spinach, salad, tS'q cups of coffee, two dishes of cream and a dish of jelly, P.S. â€" Williams weighed 406 poun^ when he began his repast. His weig afterward unfortunately was not corded. :'S Snowman: Ah me! Ah me! I'll soon have to leave these pieas< â- nt quarters for parts unknown. In Borneo a wife will wear, day and night, one ot her husand's swo^ while he is on head-hunting expedt tions. â€" â€"a Kennedy & Menton 421 College St., Toronto Harley Oavidscn Distributors Write at once for our ijdr.galn list ot used motorcycles. Teru'S nrrai s<d. IT'S LIVER THAT MAKES YOU FEEL SO WRETCHED Wake up your Liver Bile -No Calomel nel:e^^ary out nto bile, For \*ou to fe«J h«i!thy Aud happy, yo li\*«r must pour iwa poinds of LiquiJ bile in your boweu". every .lay. Without that biU, ts)uble starts. Poor digeation. Slow olimiri:4t:iia, Poieona ia the Kvly. t.;enerai wretches! new. How ?an you expwt to clear up % ftitviatioo like Ibis conipleiely with mere bowel-ajo-. .ag •lUts, oil, miiicrAl water, laxaitve camiy or ehewing ^um. or roughft^eT They iou t Wnk« up your hver. You ne«<ii Csrter's Iit'Ie Livirr PiHii. r.irely v«(e(«bte. Safe. V<>iok and «ur» reeulTs. Ask lor them by uan.c 1;ef';M subeuiuit*. a^o «| ftO dr-igei^tii. M HELP FOR TIREO WiVES Take Ljrdia E. TitikUatn's Vfgetable Compound Wl»e» C^t t:ri»J tlurUu^ thc«o hard ttmcs. rh<-y are tha ones who niu*r bfnt the buTi-'.Mi* of •!>• fantllr. >Vben tha huatfand ci.-rui'4 banie with lv«^ moucy In hi* pa.v en»'l»ts< . . It U the nife xbo mu«t «tTtii;s44 *bni anv! ain^e ..be beat of tblTiii. H you «fo ISreJ . â-  . t»r.m our . . . nerroua, try Lvc^la E. rtntUirr""* Votfatl- ble Compound. Hbat Toa oi.'tO is a toata that will fiTe }<ia tbe trvr-^^ih '.i cmtff oo. W out 01 c»«rT iv3 r-rTCo ^iio report to U3 aav that th.> uio htnrt:.-<l t» tbla iiKjIclne. Buy a bottle (k/io >our .itut« fttnt (u<la.« â-  . â-  aniJ «auli the mu:t» ISSUE No. 11- -}3

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