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HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1928-06-07, Page 7SAME SYMPTOMS MANY C ES An Anaemic Condition Easily Recognized — Calls for a Blood Builder. In most cases of anaemia the eymn- toms are almost the same, The suf- ferer grows pale and is easily tired after the least exertion, The appe- tite is fickle and the patient loses in weight. Sometimes there are head- aches, and often inability to sleep well.„ As the blood becomes thinner the symptoms become 'more pro- nounced and often there are fainting spells. All this shows that thc blood is thin and watery, and at the very first eymptom of this condition the patient should take Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, the most reliable blood - builder and nerve tonic known. The sole mission of this medicine is to enrich the blood and when that is done all the distressing symptoms disappear. Among those who have reason to praise this medicine is Mrs. M. E. Patterson, Shanklin, N.B., who says: ---"About four years ago I be- came very much run down, I could not eat, sleep nor rest, and I grew so nervous that the smallest things would annoy me. Eventually I grew so weak that I did not have strength to move about without help. I was just a miserable wreck, and became very much discouraged as I had tried many medicines which failed to help are. In this wretched state a friend urged me to try Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. I clid so and before long found they were helping tie. Gladly I con- tinued taking the pills until I fully regained my health and strength and I have since continued in the best ot health. Later rn.y daughter became anaemic and six boxes of the pills re- stored her to health, strength and color. Naturally, I consider Dr. Wil- liams' Pink Pills a blessing to weak, run-down people." You can.get these pills through any dealer in medicine, or by mail at 50 cents a box from The Dr. Williams hiedicine o., Brockville, Ont. Wife (to returning husband at sea- sidgme. Ne heard that'Vsome 1 you've coresort): "Oh, darling, I'm l so idiot had fallen. over the cliff, and I felt sure it was you!" Little Marjorie returned from her first day at school looking rather gloomy and disillusioned. "How did you like school, dear?" asked her mother,. brightly, "Not very much," returned Marjorie. "'Cause when I went in the teacher said, 'You may sit here for the present,' and I sat there all day, and there wasn't any present," The British custom of serv- ing 4 -o'clock tea in business' offices is fast "taking on" in Canada. Many Cana- dian, as well as British - born, executive 'S now order Red Rose Tea for their office staffs, because it is the same quality as the finest English teas. Sold by all grocers, in bright, clean aluminum. 15EW , 'How MuchWater Should Baby Get? L-AFamous.Authority'sVule ‘73y Ruth Brittain Baby speciallats agree nowadays, that during the first six months, babies mast have three ounces of. fluid per pound of body weight daily. An eight potted baby, for instance, needs twen- ty-four ounces of fluid. Later on the rule is two ounces or fluid per pound of body weight. The amount of fluid absorbed by a breast fed baby is best determined by weighing him before and after feeding for the whole day; and it is easily calculated for the bot- tle fed one. 'Then make tm any de- ficiency with water. G.tviug baby sufficient water often relieves his feverish, crying, upset and restless spells. If it doesn't, give him a few drops of FletcheiSe Ca.storia. For these and otber ills tif babies and children such as colic, cholera, diarrhea, gas on stomach and bowels, constipation, sour stomach, loss et sleep, underweight, etc., leading physicians say there's nothing so ef- fective. It is purely vegetable—the recipe Is on the wrapper—and millions of mothers have depended on it in ever thirty years of ever increasing %Ise. It regulates baby's bowels, Makes him sleep and eat right, enables him to get fun nourishment from his food. so he Mereases in weight as be he should. With each package YOU, get n ;rok on Motherhood worth its weight in gold., Just a word of caution. Look for the signature 'of Chet. i1. Pletcher on the peeitage so you'll be sure to get the ecemine. The forty tent bottles contain thirty -flee does. I6SUE, No. tz-va 411119110118•134.11110111411•11.140•1.0/0t Air Express Inaugurated Before the propeller stops whirling the Canadian pacific Express truck is an its way to the city with parcels for delivery. A new air route giVes biweekly express service in each direction between Toronto, Ottawa, Mont- real and the steamship off Rimouski. Two days is gained over regular ex- press schedules; western consignments being transferred to the Vancouver , s Express at Toronto, -- OY .vv. (o WITH LAUGHTER) 1N ANIMAL LAND A balky mule has four-wheel brakes, A billygoat has bumpers. The firefly is a bright spotlight, Rabbits are puddle jumpers. • Camels have balloon -tired feet, And carry spares of what they eat; But stillthink that nothing beats The kangaroos with rumble seats. JUST THREE THINGS If your nose is close to the grind -stone, rough, And you hold it down there long enough, In time you'll say there's no such thing As brooks that babble and birds that sing; These three things will your world compose Just you, the estono and your darned old nose. Some men think it's smart to write such a poor hand that nobody can read it, but it isn't. Waiter: "Will you have some des- ert, sir?" Diner: "Is it essential?" Waiter: "No, sir, it's rice pudding." Young Nell was about to enter his house carrying a dead mouse by the tail when his neighbor taught sight of him. "What are you going to, do with that mouse, son?" asked the neighbor. "I'm going to take this in to mother and she will give me a dime to take it out," answered the boy. "One of my girls recites so well really believe we should give her a course in electrocution." Most anyone can attempt to say something smart—but all do not suc- ceed. "You're a lucky dog, Bings," said tbe fellow in the next chair. "They tell are you're making three times as much money as you did Iast year." "Yeah," Bings replied wearily, "but my women folks found it out." Great inventions are often the simplest: The architect took the door off a clothes closet and called it a breakfast nook. Ann: "Do you have a dictating ma- chine In your office?" Betty: "Yes, darn him!" A man must have both patience and lying ability to be a good fisherman. Good wishes are cheap; let's give them freely. "What! Fifty cents a dozen for fresh eggs! I thought the price had gone down." "Yes, it has, but I bought these be- fore it went down—three weeks aeo." ••••••••••••••••••• "Do you act toward. your wife as you did before you married her?" "Exactly, 1 ,remenebet. just how I used to act when 1 first fell in love with her. I Used to lean over the fence in front at her house and gaze at her shadow on the curtain, afraid to go in. And 1 act just the same way now." Herman Trelle, of Wembley, Peace River, Alberta, who, in 1926 won the world's championship for wheat and oats at the International Grain and Hay, Show, and last year at the same Show retained the championship for oats and was awarded a first prize for wheat, has been granted an honor- arium of $5,000 by the Province of Alberta. This money was recently voted by the Alberta Legislature in reeognition d his services to the Pro - Vince. Mr. Trelle was barn at Hend- rick, Idaho, and came to Canada with his Parents when quite young, His first venture in farming was on a homestead at Wembley, Alberta, which he has since made one Of the 'fittest farms in Alberta. A curate, who was also a keen na- turalist, went to see a sick woman in his parish. She,hatt bait e'iliecting him for some days, and said with a. sight: "Had 1 been a rare toadstool, you would have come to see me long, long ago." 00100•••••••1•01.1.000.16.0.0.1. Side Light- on China. • "]3oy Emperor" Watches Movies as Others Strug- gle for Power Peking.—Among those who have caused all China to shiver in the past, and. who are now preserving them- selves in the cool confines of Tien- tsin, are four fermer presidents of China, 169 high military and political officials, and one ex -Emperor. The "Boy Emperor," now no longer a youth but a married man, well along in his twenties, has resided in the Japanese concession of 'Tientsin ever since the episode, nearly four years. ago, when he was driven out of his golden -tiled Forbidden City. Feng Yu-hsiaug, the "Christian General," Ordered h1s.expulsion at .that tinie, lest his presence in the capital might be a constant invitation for a mon- archist uprising. So Henry Pu Yi and a number of his loyal Manchus dwell in an alien concession, amusing them- selves through the long days as best they may by holding miniature court and watching. motion picture exhibi- tions. The successors in authority to the "I3oy Emperor," now his neighbors in exile, are former Presidents Li Yuan - hung, Hsu Shilechang, Tsao Hun and former chief executive Tuan Caged Birds and Poetic Scrolls Tsao ICun, although scarcely feel- ing free yet to leave the safety of the foreign districts, is less a prisoner than during the two years of Tuan Chi-jui's rule when he literally was kept captive on a email island within the high pink walls of the Peking pal, aces. During those lonely and anxious months he passed the time playing withhis caged birds and writing poetic scrolls, and it is said that he con- tinues these pastimes now in Tientsin. Li Yuan -hung is not so much a re- cluse as are most of the other former officials. He welcomes foreign vise tors and still takes a keen interest in Chinese politics. Ouly recently he published a thoughtful plan for re- storing peace to the nation, based on the idea of reassembling members of the long impotent, but more or less legal, parliament of by -gone days. Many other prominent men have sought safety under foreign flags in their own country. Nearly all of these men in their days of authority declared themselves opposed to the unequal treaties and foreign conces- sions of China, but when they were forced out by fortunes of war, all de- posited their money in foreign banks and took refuge in Tientsin. Wu Pei -fu's Independence When the weather becomes warmer some officials move to Dairen, Beppu, or other resorts of Japan, while those who can afford it not infrequently go on long tours in Europe. Of all the prominent men of China who have met defeat in war or poli- tics, one alone—Wu Pel-fu—stands conspicuous by his proud refusal to accept refuge under foreign protec- tion. This scholar of the Chinese classics for many years was the great- est war lord hi the Country. But even in his most acute hour of adversity he never fled to a foreign zone of safety. He drifted about the country for a long time, finally retiring to the remote Province of Snechuan, where he now lives by sufferance of the Szechuan leaders. 1 -Te has taken up the study of Buddhism and has lost all Interest in warfare. Don't Do This— Use LEON R EAR OIL An ear MI Of great beneilt In eases or Catarrhal Deafnesa and llead Noises, Simply Insert in Nostrils and Huh in gently battle of Ears. Soothing 11_11Q1letletratmg, 00 the market since J 00i, and many thousands have writ- ten of the relief obtained. This treat- ment is recommended by Dr. Jelin Bergeson, the eminent Ear Specialist. Price $1.05 at drug stores, Polder about "Deafness" on request.. A. O. LEONARD, INC. 70 Fifth Avenue, New York City Provide Courses in Religious Education tinted Church Board Would Supply Alternative for Mass Evangelism" The board of religious education of the Crated church announces five new graded courses of study, thereby pro- viding assistance for any ministers who refuse to turn aside from religious education as a method of evangelism. At a recently Presbytery meeting some Toronto ministers, unwilling to commend the bringing of Gipsy Smith to this city, declared that the day of mass meetings for evangelistic pur- poses is past. • Several of these .courses are now ready, it is stated at board .oilices, and the others are in process of pre- paration. It is claimed that these studies, while having a definitely evangelistic aim, will fit into every normal activity of the church. The study courses will also corre- late, it is Stated, with the plans made for he next two years by the board of evangelism and social service, GIVE CONFIDENCE TO YOUNG POTHERS By Always Keeping Baby's Own Tablets in the Home. A simple and safe remedy for the 'common ills of babyhood and child- hood should be kcpt in every home where there is either a baby or a young child. Often it is necessary to give the little ones something to break up a cold, allay fever, correct sour stomach and- banish the irrita- bility that accompanies the cutting of teeth. f reealgi Experienced mothers always keep Baby's Own Tablets in the home as a safeguard against the troubles that seize their little ones so suddenly and the young mother can feel reasonably safe with a box of these Tablets at hand and ready for emergencies. Baby's 0141 Tablets are a mild but thorough laxative that act without gripping and they are absolutely guaranteed free from opiates or other harmful drugs. They are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. British Election 'Woman's Affair, a Declares Member Miss Susan Lawrence Speaks at- National Conference on New Responsi- bilities Plymouth—Miss Susan Lawrence, Member of Parliament, presiding at the National Conference of Labor Women here referred to the next gen- eral election in Great Britain as a "woman's affair." "We will have with us," she continued "young wives and mothers who are fighting the bat- tle of life side by side with their husbands, and who will now go with them to the polis, exercising the full rights of citizenship. We will have with us young women in industry. "Until now women in industry have been very much under -represented be- cause their average age was low; their needs regarding protective legis- lation have been argued and settled aver their heads; they will now be able to speak for themselves. We have therefore a great accession of strength. This next fight will be no propaganda fight, it will be a battle for power." She urged au open road from the nursery schools to the university— not a grudging education cut short by poverty, but equal opportunities for all, and money enough to place the child of the poor on an equal equality with that of the rich. In Parliament, she said, the question of unemploy- ment was like Banquo's ghost, because the present period of reaction meant national insecurity and poverty for the mass ot the workers. Mrs. E. J. Long, a magistrate, in welcoming tbe delegates to the con- ference, referred to the coming en- franchisement of 5,000,000 more wo- men and declared that women would be predominant at the next election Child that the remedy for social evils would reset in their hands, Air Beacon Visible 60 Miles Can Hardly Be Seen from Street Cleveland, 0.—Six great ' beacon' rights in the tower of Cleveland's 1.1111011, germinal building, said to be visible in Canada and for 60 miles around the city, afford new security to lake ships and to airplanes to which they are visible for even &eater distances. The beams protrude frorn the tower, 58 stories above the street, like spokes in a *wheel. With all of their power and bril- liance, however, they are hardly visi- ble to people down towe, to whom they appear as only lighted windows. Their great height causes this, offi- cials said. The beet jobs of faee-lifting are those Which are done by sudden proe- perity, Minawd's Linitneht toe Toothathe, The Orange Pekoe is something extra—a special tea 14 In, clean, bright Aluminum Stocking a Fishless District According to all available reports, and information no species of trout has been found in the waters of south- ern Saskatchewan. Beginning in 1924; the Dominion Dept. of Marine and: Fisheries planted brown and Loch Leven trout fry in several streams in the Cypress Hills district and closed; these streams to fishing. Up to the! present the fish have done very well. They have survivedthree winters; some reproduced last autumn in their third year; and specimens have been caught nearly a pound in weight and over a foot in length. While it is too soon to form an opinion regarding the final outcome of this introduction, the evidence to date is causing much local interest and enthusiasm, as the pros- pect of angling in a district that has hitherto been devoid of such s.port is viewed with pleasure. Minard's Liniment for trisect bites. Politics and the Law New York World; Upon the acquit- tal of Harry P. Sinclair many of us begin to do some hard thinking about the jury system. The verdict was so patently absurd, and it was so simi- lar to the verdict which had been given some time before in the Doheny case, that we had to ask ourselves whether a system that was devised to ascertain simple questions of fact was not certain to break down when It was given the task of digesting great masses of technical evidence, weigh- ing the propriety of acts done by high officials, and making nice distinctions between discretion and dishonesty. The only form of hostilities from which the people ever benefit is a price war. Classified Advertisement! MOVING AND STORAGE, • IS ILL THE SIOVER—PIONElalt D,L.S• TANCE movers, or Canada. Largest speedy rr IP:11 Idoedds vaTnsw.o NesepwerilnencleAliPmmeneti every trip. All loads insurecl_,Beyond compare for skill and care. Before you move, write ue or wire and reverse the paanragoet. nHei ll tho f:Icle,lovner.arnsiton. Ontario, BABE CHEOZO WB HATCH FOUR VARIBTIBS, Write for free catalogue. A. H. Switzer, praeton. Ontario. Judge: "One of your witnesses says he saw you in church at the time the crime was committed, another saw. yon M the inn, and the third in the fields, I cannok take their evidence.' Accused: "I can call another who saw me in the wood, your honor!" • Typist—"This `To te done today' note on yout desk calendar is two months old." Boss—"That', all right; I haven't done it yet." MOORED, 0 404 D7VA,41,-CHICKSJ Our breeders are bred for high egg production. White, Brown and Buff Leghorn,, Barred and White Rocks, It. I. Reda, Ars, coma, Buff Orpington', White Wyandotte.: Ge and up. 100X, live delivery iruaranteed, woto taw for FREE CHICK BOOK, goggEGLER's ingrogstg,..e SIOATIVAPTON, SUFFALO.NaL. DOORS $2.75 UP BARGAIN PRICES Write to -day few Spring' San: gain Circular, and Free Catalogp kiALL1DAY CO., Hamilton have Good Hair And Clean Scalp' Cuticura Soap and Ointment Work Wonders Try Our New SI -saving .Stir4r. wrgoiwax..riorgrom A Reliable Antiseptic. Make sure no infection of mei, and wounds takes place, by applying Minaret's Lin:merit. .11612W1.1,01,9.51...-011.11X•NAttt. A Tire For Your Every Need Firestone Dealers offer you a complete line of tires, each supreme in its class, headed by the famous Firestone Gum -Dip- ped Balloon. All are made by Firestone in the world's most economical tire plants—an as- surance 'of the most for your money. Firestone distributes tires only through regular service -giv- ing dealers direct from Factory branches and authorized distri- butors — never through mail order houses or so-called special jobbers. See the Firestone Dealer nearest you. He is prepared to serve you better and save you money, no matter what price tire you want to buy. FIRESTONE TIRE Se RURBER CO. OF CANADA LIMITED Hamilton, Ontario MOST MILES PER -DOLLAR GUM -DIPPED TIRES Firestone Huilds the Only Ginn -Dipped Tiree "k OF MA 6 iINLLj. &t GOOD ADVi6E FROM ,,OTHER OF SEVEN Recommends Lydia E. Pinkharrx's Vegetable Compound Toronto, Ont --"I began taking Vegetable Compound for nerves and other troubles and I must say 1 felt different aft" the first dose. I nave been told this last six months that I look t w enty-five, although 1 and now f orty-sev en and have had seven hildren. 1 have takentheVegetable Compound regu- larly for some time and sleep well, rise early and feel young." --MRS. McKEe, 18 Laurier Ave., Toronto, Ontario. .04u IN, 4„.....P11v ell!ALLPS dour: ET st.:Aubcsi Ee! For 0 :,'ClIrg GSTS0;°Flt H HEARTBURN HEADACHE 'AV Ex( ess twitt is the connnon cause of indigestion. It rtmults in pain and sourness about two hours after eating. The quick corrective Is an alkali which neutralizes acid. The best corrective is Phillips' Milk of Magnesia, It has remained etandard with physicians in the 50 years since its invention. One spoonful of Phillips' Milk of Magnesia neutralizes Instantly many times its volume in add.. It is harm - and tasteless and its action is euiek. Yea will never rely on crude methods, never continuo to suffer, i when you learn, how quickly, how pleasantly this premier method acts. Please let it show eote-enow, Be sure to get the genuine Phillips' 1Miik of Magnesia prescribed by phyo. clans for 60 years in cosy:sting excess !acide. Each bottle contours ftill reetions—any drugstore.