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HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1928-02-09, Page 7t 1' 1, 0 n 3- y .0 at 4- a- fir n• rt a th ea 61 nd n's in ion de- ad Ing an• Ing res.- ale,' erale; Ing, tnse prix ies,i $251 ver, holt Iwn" son, with sets 1 of, ey,"y me nar" tial Alen d. \The Hoyt,inmakingaparachute.jump,N U r S h:•I,1 ready one hand to pull tho rip a Toronto Hospital Bel for XneurableM, cord, in affiliation with Bellevue and Allied The plane was found by Frank d hospitals, New York City, offers a Commons, a rancher, in a deep three Years' Course of Training to educdo o e having becoming urecan- yon four or five miles from the Com- mons ,raneli .An organized air nurses. This Hospital has adopted the ago Un- eight-hour system. The pupils -ceche search started several days g unifor}ns of the Sohoal, a meanly der the direction of Lieutenant Rus- andfnoo and traveling e�Cr further to and from New York, For sell Maughan has Sailed to find any information write the Superintendent. trace of the 111 -fated filer. Missing lane Found in Idaho Searchers Believe Hoyt Used His Parachute, but Fear That He Died of Exposure Boise, Idaho --The airplane flown by Fred Hoyt, missing aviator, was found wrecked in a •canyon in mountainous Southern Idaho recently, but there was no trace of the flier, who disap- peared a week ago when he ran into a blizzard on a flight between Salt 'Lake City and Boise. Hoyt's parachute was missing from the demolished plane and old-time residents clung to the theory that he Lad, frozen to death in the winter - bound region after making a suc- cessful Ieap from his plane. ', The plane had crashed twenty miles from Holbrook, on the out- skirts of the Minitoka National For- est, at the edge of the Black Pine Mountains. One of Hoyt's gloves was found in the wreckage. Plaquing an organized search for the flier's body, -residents pointed out that , .even if Hoyt had successfully leaped from the plane, he had little .chance to find shelter nor the equip- ment to withstand the ravages of a mountain Winter. -- Finding of the one glove in the plane indicated that E le BABY No mother in tills enlightened age would give her baby something she did not know was perfectly harmless, especially when a few drops of plain Castor'Ia will right a baby's stomach and end almost any little i11. Fretful- ness and fever, too; it seems no time until everything is serene. That's the beauty of Castoria; its gentle influence seems. ,just what is needed. It does all that castor oil might accomplish, without shock to the system. Without the evil taste. it's delicious! Being purely vege- table, you can give it as often as there's a sign of colic; constipation; diarrhea; or need to aid sound, natur- al sleep. Just one warning: it is genuine Fletcher's Castoria that physicians recommend. Other' preparationsemay be just as free from ail doubtful drugs, but no child of this writer's is going to test them! Besides, the book on care and feeding of babies that comes with Fletcher's Castoria is worth its weight in gold. Children Cry for BABY'S OWN TABLETS ALWAYS IN THE HOME A St, Ars-rev's Dpy' Stalwart Once a mother has used Baby's Own Toblets for her little ones she always keeps a supply ore hand, for the first trial convinces her there is nothing to equal them in keeping , children well. The Tablets are a mild but thorough laxative which regulate the bowels and sweeten the stomach, thus driving out constipation and indiges- tion, colds and pimple fevers, and , making teething easier. Concerning thorn, Mrs. Saluste Pelletier, St. Du- mas, Que., writes:—"I have used Baby's Own Tablets for the past ten years and am never without them ill the house. They have always given the greatest satisfaction and Y can gladly recommend therirto all mothers of little ones." The Tablets are Bold by medicine dealers or direct by mail. at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Wil- liams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. A Nice Country Quiet Tea Shop League Formed in Moscow°to Get Peaceful Places to Talk at Night Moscow.—After serving as judge in the great, accordion -playing contest which Iasted for several days, Gelzer, the prima ballerina and idol of pre- revolutionaryl millionaires and dapper officers of Moscow, danced to the strains of the favorite instrument of the Russian workers, evoking frenzied delight in the popular audience which jammed the' State Experimental Theatre. On the same occasion Anatole Lu- nacharsky, Connnissar of Education, declared that the accordion would suf- fice to satisfy the proletariat's musi- cal yearnings till the workers and peasants were able to afford pianos. One shudders to think what Moscow would belike if this ambition is ever f ulfilleid. Moscow is already as noisy as Naples. Where can a couple of Soviet business Wien go for a quiet evening's talk The home is impossible; for Muscovites have on an average only fifty-six-. square feet of floor space each, which means three persons to a room, or nearly a score to a six -room flat. And the Muscovites are an ex- pansive people, who like giving up- roarious parties. Others play the guitar, accordion, violin or piano, or, in default ofthese, their radio sets. Muscovites take turns all evening at the flat's sole telephone. In the kitchen half a dozen primus stoves and three or four servant girls roar unceasingly. Why not go to a club? -"But a Matscove club is altogether unlike the New York Bankers' Club, a place of repose bordering on coma. It is a place of agitation, just like a Jacobins' club during the French Re- volution, and one is lucky if he finds the members innocently engaged in putting down the tobacco evil and not discussing colciyed illustrations on the ravages caused by, asphyxiating gas. In Summer there are the boulevards but there'one may be suddenly startled by M. Rykoff's stentorian voice ex- plaining industrial reconstruction (broadcast from a Iamp behind one's back.• So one Moscow league has ;been formed, namely, "The Friends of fire Soviet Tea Shop," to agitate for the establishment of plain tea shops.with tea, but without agitation. The latest "nonsense" story eon- cerns a man who asked a well-inform- ed friend: "Where do all the old motor -car's go?" 'They don't," wee the reply. Suitor—"Sir, 1 am very anxious to marry your daughter." Her Dad -- "Anxious, eh? Ever been married be- fore?" Suitor—"No, sir." Dad—"Ah, thatsexpIains it." ��FiNWN@ PHILLIPS rpt UtGly r`4v dine to Aced. INOIGESfON A(•ID 9TOMACCFI HCARVIURN I.IEAOACHR What most peolile call indigestion is usually excess acid ail the stomach. ,The food has soured. /The instant remedy IS an alkali which neutralizes acids. But don't use crude helps, Use What your cob ne would advise. The best help is ?billing'. Milk of Tliegnesfa. Foe the 50 years since its. Invention it ha remained standard with pliys%Cfahs. "9'Otl will find nothing else so quick In its effeet, so•h\rmless, ra efficfst t. IOne tasteless spoonful in water lieu j tralizes many times its volume in arid. I'.1 Xie results are imniediate, with no bad aftereffects. Once you learn this fact, you will Hever deal with ex - sees acid in the crude ways.. Go learn «-now•-•"why this method is supreme,. 13e Sure to gt �f.� the genuine Phillni ' link et nia.gnesik prescribed by lrhyef- a 50correcting 'l"CO"ii 1 is for " 'l` in Ct)1 t" acids. •Each bottle conteins full direc- tions --any drugstore. THE STANES AN' BESOM AN' BOTTLE An ancient player of the game on Stormont Loch near Blairgowrie, Perth- shire. Mr. James Gordon of the Strathardie Club in the bonspiel of the Strathmore Curling province when 46 rinks played off for the fifth time in 24 years. A REMEDY THAT INSPIRES FAITH People Who -Dave -Used Dr:'Wil- liams'. Pink. Pills Speak of Them • With Praise. "Going into a decline" is an expres- sion that has come to be known as one of themost difficult •conditiions with which physicians have to deal. It often describes an alarming condi: tion because it does not yield to or- dinary treatment and the debility con- tinues with loss of flesh and strength until the patient feels hopeless. In, the majority of such cases 'the victim suffers from lack of good, red blood, and if the blood can be restored to normal no other medical- treatment is necessary. Proper food and sunshine will do the rest. Every man, woman and child who lacks health and strength should at once take Dr. Williams' Pink Pills to build up their blood supply. The mis- sion of this medicine is to make new, rich red blood, which speedily re- stores health and strength. "I am writing to tell you what Dr. Williams' Pink Pills have done for me," says Mrs. J. H. Oulton, FirdaIe, Man. "A few years ago I was in a badly run- down condition, so much so that I was subject to fainting spells which would leave me in such a condition that 1 could hardly go about. Then I was stricken with influenza and thls fur- ther weakened me, and throughout the winter I remained in this condi- tion. I was taking doctor's medicine, but as it did not seem to help me, my mother advised me to try Dr. Wil- liams' Pink Pills, and I got a couple of boxes to start on. When these were done I seemed to feel an im- provement and I got "a' further supply to continue the treatment. I took in all about a dozen boxes, and by that time I was in the best of health and had gained in weight. My faith in, Dr. Williams' Pink Pills is now unbound- ed, and I keep a supply on hand and -take them occasionally if I am not feeling quite well. I often recom- mend them to ..others, and cannot praise them enough for restoring my health." You can get these pills from any medicine dealer or by mail at 60c a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. i A FITTING CELEBRATION believe 1928 Is a leap -year, Isn't It?" "Sure, and I'm laying in it big supply of Hops you can beta" Lady (at tttheatre, to man in seat behint1) "I hope my hat is not wor- rying you." Hhe Man --;"1t is worry: ing me a-lot---ln,Y wife—wants one like "That's what I call a finished ser` - mon," said a woman when the clergy- man's droning voice had ceased. "I'n1 glad to hear it," said her neighbor. "I had almost given ull hope." Nottingliamsllire 1Yritiless4 The only time Unit u-On1a11 has spoken to isonce, o Search for "Dawn" 'Renewed in Nfld. Eight Men Heard Sound of 'Plane at Same • Hour Bt, John, Nfid.—An investigation of the reports that a plane, possibly the Dawn, was' heard off the southern shore of Trinity Bay on Deo. 24, shows that six men, bird shooting . from a boat, three miles off Hearts Delight, all declare that the sounds of a plane could be distinctly heard c8ming from a south-east direction. .&t the' same hour two men on shore state that they were so positive that the sounds came from a plane that they climbed to the top of a wood pile to catch eight of it, but the sky was overcast. Similar stories have been investigat- ed without shaking the testimony. As a result the area between Trin- ity and Conception Bay is being comb- ed by search parties- in the hope of finding the Grayson plane. The seeech has been actively taken up because of the reward of $1,000 offer ed by M. A. Mosle, of New York, for the discovery of plane or occupants. Mrs. Frances Wilson Grayson, ac- companied by Oskar Omdal, pilot, and Brice Goldsborougb., navigator, set out from Roosevelt Field, New York, in the amphibian plane Dawn, short- ly after five o'clock, eastern standard time, on the afternoon of Friday, Dec, 23, for Harbor Gr2.ce, Newfoundland, en route to Croydon, England. At 9.45 o'clock the following Sunday night the officer in charge of the gov- ernment wireless station on Sable Is- land claimed he heard distress signals from the Dawn, at that time many hours overdue. A search by United States destroyers of the waters be- tween Cape Cod, where .the Dawn was fast sighted, and • Sable Island, eubsequently conducted, failed to re- veal trace of the missing aeroplane. Power Tube Improves Multi - Tube Receivers A power tube should always be used in the,last audio stage of a multi - tube receiver. If more than one -stage of audio amplification is employed. If the receiver is required to deliver only moderate volume the CX -112 type of tube is the proper one. For greater volume and beat tone qual- ity the CX -271 or the CSC=210 tubes ehouid be used. One disadvantage of the latter two power tubes lies in their comparativelyi high plate cur- rent consumption, but where "B" eliminators are used this is not a drawback. Power tubes require higher "B" and "C" voltages than the other tubes in a receiver and for that reason separ- ate "B" and "0" connections are pro- vided. In older receivers this provi- sion may not haveebeen made. For such cases special adapters or "thip- lex bases,' as they are called, may be obtained, which permit power tubes to be used. ,in' these old, receivers without ally` 'alteration n the receiver itself. The separate connections mentioned are provided in the adapt- er. Say it with flowers, Say it with sweets, Say it with kisses, Say it with eats, Say' it with jewelry, Say it with drink, 'But always be careful I Mining Investors Intrinsic values govern market prices eventually. We shall be glad to analyze your holdings from that angle without obligation. BALL Sr. CO. stock awokeree Mail Bldg„ Toronto it ,iln 2136.7 Write, Wire or Phone Mirtarcl's Liniment for tick Animals. 13 :`JE No. 5—.13 Red Rose grange PekQe Top Quality In clean, bright Aluminum Whole Town R. dio Fans Place in Iowa Passes Ordin- ance to Prevent Radio Interference Out in the little college town of Fairfield, in Iowa, the wheels of pro- gress must .not interfere with radio reception between the hours of 12 noon and 12 midnight, according to the text of an ordinance passed by the city authorities, just received by the Federal Radio Commission._ . The ordinance limits the use of elec- trical devices, such as washing ma- chines, vacuum cleaners, etc., which cause Interference with radio recep- tion only during the morning hours. The city law was passed after the au- thorities had received protests from radio owners„ who complained that housewives' devices, driven by elec- tricity„ had completely disrupted choice programs in afternoons and evenings. A fine of $100 or thirty days in jail has been set as the alternative punish- ment for violation of the ordinance, the text of which said: "It shall be unlawful for any per- son to operate any instrument, device or machine of any kind whatsoever' the operation of which shall cause electrical interference with radio re- ception, within the city limits of the city of Fairfield, Iowa, between the hours of 12 o'clock noon and 12 o'clock midnight on any day after the taking effect of this. ordinance, save and excepting only such as may be necessary in making X-ray pictures or examinations in emergency eases of physical injuries." Woodsmen—Keep Minard's handy. "Hardest Working" Clock In Paris To Be 'Retired Paris.—The hardest working clock in Paris, after sixty-five years of faithful toil, may soon he retired on a pension. The instrument, created by De- touche, eloekmaker to Emperor Na- poleon III, has been in service since 1863 in the Conservatory of Arts and Crafts. During these years it has rung more strokes than any other clock in Paris, since it sounded be- tween 8 o'clock every evening and 8 the following morning the full hour at each quarter hour. That is to say, at three-quarters after midnight it peals twenty-seven strokes—an un- usual performance, always startling tei passers-by unaccustomed to the laboriousness of Detouche's master- piece. - ..,.... FOR. •• ,._�' NEURALGIA' Classified Advertisements POULTRY RISE—A NZJv4 BOOK OF POULTRY 9' Lessons. L. R. Guild & Sons, iIOZ T:., Rockwood, Ont. ARRY -- JOIN C.e1NAmAN COR- d��1I1 Rl)1SPONDENCE CLUB. Address Box 1738, Calgary, Alberta. Men Called Poor Creatures As Compared With Women London.—"Men are poor creatures compared with women," said Sir Wil- liam Arbuthnot Lane, noted physician, speaking at a demonstration of the rhythmic health movement. "It is upon the woman that the fu.. ture of this country depends, and we must do everything in our power to keep her physically fit," he said. Sir William declared it is simple to keep fit. -Good, clean, healthy food, fresh air and simple exercises would keep the body fit without any of the arti- ficial means so often indulged in. TENTS List of "Wanted inventions" and Full Information Bent Free on Request. THE RAMSAY co., Dept. W. 273 Hank St., Otts w :. Ont. 4' The New Freely -Lathering uticura Shaving Stick For Tender Faces EMOLLIENT MEDICINAL ANTISEPTIC Nothing Like It to Relieve Colds In formula and action, Buckley's Mixture is different from all other remedies. It literally " acts like a flash" in conquering coughs and healing the inflamed parts. The In- stant relief that follows the fret dose is multiplied 40 times in o 75 - cent bottle! "Buckley's" should be in every home. Your druggist sells it under a money -back guarantee. W. K. Buckley, Limited, 514 142 Mutual St., Toronto 2 UCKLE tx-runE Acts tike a /lash -- a single sip proves it Swollen Joints Sore muscles and strained liga- ments quickly relieved by appli- cation of M Ward's Liniment. You doubtless depend on Aspirin to snake short work of head- aches, but remember that it's }list as dependable an antidote for many other pains! Neuralgia? Many have found real relief in an Aspirin tablet. Or for toothache; an effective way to relieve it, and the one thing doctors are willing you should give a child--. of any age. Whether to break up a cold, or relieve the serious pain from neuritis or deep-seated rheumatism, there's s nothlin quite liras Aspirin, Just make certain it's genuine.; it tnttst have layer on the box and on every tablet. 1 et. All druggists, with Drover: directions. Physicians prescribe Aspirin,.. it doe NOT affect the heart b }rade mark (registered in Canada) indicating lts3"er Msnaf;,rturr, Voila it Is Is the a ."It.tl as r th1,11411a i Ware- roan tri'nMni<t, to n.. n c c 8 is nt , e Ta ets will means tient, the Tablets trill be stamped with (herr '"Mayer Cross" t;aticm;uk.