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Zurich Herald, 1928-08-16, Page 3Are :�Ii Ready When your Children Cryfor It. Educational Conservation Jackt� Miner Celli; Attention n n t0 Great Wealth of Ontario's Northland and Her Lakes. $100 from Tourists as Good as $100 from Wheat Shipped Out "Game and Fish. Conservation a National Asset" a By Jack. Miner. "Since making the atatemelit in a former article in the Toronto Globe, that I stood for educational conser- vation, my mail has been heavy with requests for a full explanation, and in bidet I will say that, during ths last fifteen years I have been lecturing I have no doubt spoken to a million or more school children in North Ameri- ca, to whorl I have emphasized the importance of building bird houses. If I can get a child to build a bird- house he will naturally erect same on a pole, and that boy or girl at once becomes a conservationist; More- over, he becomes a better citizen be- cause of the love kindled in his heart: He certainly will not kiln the bird that is going to nest in a house that he has Baby has little upsets at times. All made, nor is he likely to allow any 'your care cannot prevent them. 'But other person to destroy a bird in his you can be prepared. Then you can vicinity. do .what any experienced nurse would "This I call 'educational conserve- do—what most physicians would tell tion.' But we must not lose sight of you to do—give a few drops of plain I the fact that we have got to have Castoria. No sooner done than Baby I laws—and strict laws—for experience is soothed; relief is just a matter ofIand personal observation have taught me/that kindness without firmness is a total failure' And we have got to have qualified game wardens to en - safe to use as often as an infant has :force these laws. There is a slilall any little pain you cannot pat away. percentage—less than five per cent.- (And it's always ready for the crueler •pangs of colic, or constipation, or diar- 'rhea; effective, too, for older children. ;Twentydive million bottles were bought last year. stripped of its valuable timber, and at present practically good Q;tilY fQr ,rai.n jag, hig game hunting and #ishing.'No State in the United States or Province in • Oanada has such a vast eporta- m,all's paradise, and if we will take 1- deer u p It the d out .nd e sa the wolves crease, not only by the actual money paid out ..for licenses, but that left in the oountry by teuri:sta and hunters will give a bountiful return. Step and think of the different places tourists leave money—railways, gas stations, hotels; stores, tans, boat. faros, rent of cottages, rents of boats, and,' snost encouraging of all, the money he would leave with the guides and set- tlers. moments. Yet you have eased your child without use of a single doubtful drug; Castoria is vegetable, So it's q who are outlaws, and this small per- centage of people easily can upset what has been accomplished lSy the majority of people. "Too many citizens look at conser- vation as merely a sportsman's pro- position, when the fact of the matter is it is one of. Ontario's biggest as- sets. Between Sudbury and Fort Wil- liam there are thousands of square miles of territory which has been "I still stand for raising the bounty on wolves, and at the same time rais- inghunters' license fees enough to meet the ext&Aa bounty paid. Get the wolves out of the country, allow deer to increase and thus bring more tour- ists to Ontario. We all know that $100 brought in by tourists has just as much purchasing power as $100 re- ceived for, wheat shipped out. Let's get together and educate each other, how to make our lakes worth`enore. It was told by one of Wisconsin's Gov- ernment officials that lakes' in Wis- consin and Minnesota were more valu- able to these States through money brought in than the same area of cleared agricultural land, and we all know these States border on Ontario. Such being the case, what is the value of our lakes, which up to the present time are free of pollution? "Think it over. Don't let us get gether to 'talk laws.' Let us get to- gether and 'do something.' " TIM UNTOUCIIED NEAL' People 'Who Go Hungry With x+'ood on the Table, I simply cannot eat Actual tragedy is suggested by these simple words, so often beard, because loss of appetite is the beginning of trouble that sooner or later reveals itself as indigestion, nervous dyspepsia, with violent'headachee and .other serious symptoms. Loss of appetite, whether a mau or woman, is a symptom you 'dare not ignore. If you do, much suf- fering is' sure to follow. • The secret of a good appetite—the keep UP — ;✓-�'- ern i. • •• ' , r� � ° :.moi'-°��'l"`.'-- •r" r-------a+–•v—'-i 9 art-•`�.s; a- ter" " e. ete `fir -r _�- vet' -S� .�- .. -`, TORONTO ONTARIO THE. greatest and most thrilling sport- ing spectacle in the world will be the 3rd Wrigley Marathon. From the one and a half miles of Canadian, National Exhibition shoreline, thous- ands will view this gigantic spectacle of Internationally famed Catalina and English Channel Conquerors .striving for the World Championship laurels and the $50,000 purse. 't4t0Sept First International. Air Craft Display anal H.M. Royal Air Force Band (England) ; Ex hibits from nearly every coun- try; 2,200 voice Exhibition' Chorus; World's Largest Agri- cultural Show; an Amateur To witness a Wrigley Marathon is to witness Sports Program rivalling an a world spectacle that may never be repeated olympiad; , auto races on the in this country. Be sure to see the Big Swim fastest dirt track in America; this year—twe events Wednesday, AUG. first showing 1929 motor cars, 29th for women, and Wednesday, SEPT. and feature after feature every 5th, for both women and men. hour of every day.. Send for literature describing the entire four- teen -day Golden jubilee Year, Canadian National Exhibition, Toronto, Ontario. H. W. WATERS THOMAS idA President W. General Manageredit Ontario Agricultural College GUELPH SEND YOUR BOY TO THE 0.A.C. To the Farm Boy it offers a training that will better fit him for the Occupation of Farming and for Citizenship. FOUR YEAR COURSE Leading to the Degree of Bachelor of Science in Agriculture. TWO YEAR COURSE Leading to the Associate Diploma. SHORT COURSES Short' Couirses in Live Stock and Field Crops, Poultry Raising, Horticulture, Dairying, Bee- keeping, Farm Drainage, Farm Power, Baking. STUDENTS IN THE FOUR YEAR COURSE May specialize in the Third and Fourth Years in Animal Husbandry, Field Husbandry, Horticul- ture, Dairy, Bee -keeping, or any one of the Sciences of Bacteriology, Botany, Chemistry or Enitornologsr. COST OF COURSE The total cost for Board and Room and Tuition 'tie , ;s;t Year Students does not exceed $200. Iey.PtAiS km. X'11 .., Ask for College a Calendar Descriptive of Various Courses. Gr. I. CHRISTIE, ]3.8.A., D.Sc.y A. M. PORTER, i3.S a President, oti Long Ago, Too! Britons Smoke Less But Eat More Candy Englishwomen, However, Are 4u._ ttin Down onSweets and Taking to Tobacco The trade papers of English con- factionery and tobacco. manufacturing show by 'statistics that Englishmen are eating more candy and smoking less, while their women are smoking more and eating less candy. The causes were debated in Lon - file quality of the blood, secret of keeping wellto don recently at a confectionery ex libition .organizeci by the anufac 3Y omen. nrich turing Confectioners' Alliance, held at Ing and' purifying the blood Dr Wil- •h it Mtion had become Hams' 'Pink Pills supply strength to Olympia, I e situation The enfeebled organs of digestion, and enable them to digest thoroughly the food eaten without causing pain or distress. Proof of this is given by Mr. William H. Kelly, Kingston, Ont., whosays:—"I cannot recommend Dr. Williams' Pink Pills too highly. I had been bothered with indigestion in a chronic form for ahnost ten Years. Everything I would eat would turn' sour. I felt as though there was a big ball in my stomaclf all the time. I felt tired and weak and would' often turn dizzy.I doctored and tried many medicine-, spending many, many dol- lars, but to no avail, One day I heard a lady praising Dr. Williams' Pink Pills and I decided to try them. I am more than glad I did, for soon I found relief, and after taking the pills for a couple of months the trouble had dis- appeared, and now I can eat all kinds of food, and have again my old time health and strength." Send for These Health Books. Sumerian Ladies of 4500 Years Ago Had Little to c. Learn About Jewelry London—The royal treasures of 1Tr of the Chaldees, found by C. Leonard. Wooley and his associates, have been placed on exhibition in England for the first time and are attracting great public interest.at the British Museum. = mong visitors amazement at the artistry and design of the articles is general, and some -visiting jewelers have remarked that the present age has little in this respect to teach the Sumerians. . The collection includes the 'beauti- ful helmet of King Mes-Kalam-Dug and the headdress o, Queen Shub-ad. Both are • of ! gold:, and exquisitely fashioned. The exhibits show that women's hair as then worn coiled Into "a bun at the back. There are a number of vanity boxes not greatly different from .those sold to -day in Bond Street and Regent Street. A woman's cloak belonging to the queen gives an idea of fashions at that time, It is a beaded garment opening on the right side, and with a fringe of bugle beads at the bot- tom, to which are fastened gold rin.ga. It was held together by a large ofd pin. One .twist of fashion in the course of time is shown by the fact that earrings were in the early days a male fashion and some very fine specimens are shown. There are also a number of the gold and silver mas- cots which were fastened to chariot harness. Most of the nonroyal ob- jects shown date from the Sarganid period, about 2700-2600 B.C. These Include rings, bracelets and frontlets, mostly made of gold. Two useful books, "Building Up the Blood," and "What to Eat and How to Eat," will be sent free by The Dr. Williams' Medicine t Co., Brockville, Ont., if you mention this paper. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are sold by all dealers in medicine or will be sent by mail, post paid, on receipt of price, 50 cents per box. serious the head of one firm said, be - cause "while girls had gone off sweets, the deficit in consumption has not been made up by the men. Smoking kills the taste for sweets, and sweets kills the craving for smoking. We are not ingested in kow soon men will return to smoking. Our problem is how to increase the consumption of sweets among women." Another, on being asked to account for the change in the habits of the sexes, said: • "The war caused it, The manufac- turing of confectionery was cut down; that of tobacco was increased. Cigar- ettes were plentiful everywhere. The best sweets then made were sent to the front. In the trenches smoking was very often forbidden, but the men could eat on -all occasions the millions of pounds of sweets sent over, while the women over there and at home began to smoke because they considered it more in keeping with their war work than nibbling sweets. The men brought back the habit witb. them, with a particular taste for cara- mel flavors. "You can see them chewing toffee nowadays at horse and greyhound races. When they want strength of mind for a difficult niblick, they again chew toffee. As for the office, there is many a man to -day who keeps a bag of sweets beside him on his desk in the city. Sweet -eating has ,at any rate annihilated tobacco chewing in the lower classes and snuff -taking in the upper." Renunciation. You would renounce the fabled sea, Forego adventure and abide An unprotesting cavalier Domesticated at my side. • Xe -C70 "IrAnal' l 7 ixiir Keele) UP, TWll)NTC } 'Reale It .,) one Samples free. $tocicintl Mills, . Dept. 1, �rll Iii • Ont._ yy Ne1NTI-JOl3N CaUCllal ci11*T 1a CIPAIV 1..4 traction, `d0 horse, first class rano Ding order. Prise $400. Claude Wilson,, Bolton, Ont, GENTS, Ll`t'T'1L;R. SEX,7.Al�lil orders for Christmas Cars, highe. e commission. No experience neee4- sexy,. Sample book free, "Manui'aotur' errs, Dept. "0," P.O. Box 931, Montreal. WE PAY TEN TO FIFTEEN DOlr, y t) , LAltS3 weekly Por spare time at home. Write for particulars. The Auto Knitter Hosiery Company, Toronto, Da, partrnent 7. Sun Bath Cures In Extremes Lead to Serious Illness Sunburn , i.n Moderate Cases Has Good Value Although Care Should Be Taken. CHOLERA I'NFANTUM_ Washington.—"The general public has been so impressed with the value and necesisty of sun baths in the pre- vention and cure of illness that peo- ple, in some instances, have gone to extremes and severe sunburn have re- sulted," says a bulletin issued by the U.S. Public Health Service. "Several cases of persons who have become quite ill following extensive sunburns have been ifeported recently to the Public Health Service. "Sunburn over large areas of the body may be as serious as burns from other causes. While sunlight is of great therapeutic value to children and adults, exposure to the powerful violet rays should be given in the pro- per doses. 'Exposure should be grad- ual or sunburn will result. At first the baby or child should be given di- rect sunlight for about ten minutes. This period may be increased from three to five minutes daily until the child receives approximately one hour in the morning and one hour in the afternoon. This will vary in some cases, depending on how the skin re- acts. For adults, the initial exposure may be longer and the increase larger each day. "In case sunburn does occur, It should receive prompt and careful treatment. The following treatment has been found effective: Take one- half a pint of hot water and stir into it a level tablespoongul of boric acid powder, then add twenty drops of carbolic acid and shake well. The solution should be dabbed on the in- flamed skin with a small piece of cot- ton or sprayed on with an atomizer. It should not bo rubbed into the skin. It can be applied every half hour if necessary. If no medicine is avail- able, cold compresses will give relief to badly burned areas." TLLTIE IYIO'V13R—PIONDEP. DIRT ) TANCE Hoover» .r.tf Canada. Largest speedy padded vans, New. Lquiprnent,. latest methods. Two experienced me every trip. All loads insured. Bayonet compare for skit) and care, Before yeti Move, write us or wire and reverse thet. charges. Head offloe. Eamilton. Ontarlor 1 rarer -in. Hill th,+ Mover. , Cholera infantuni.is one of the fatal ailments of childhood. It is a trouble that comes on suddenly, especially during the summer months, and un- less nless prompt action is taken the little one may soon be beyond aid. Baby's Own Tablets are an ideal_' medicine in warding off this trouble. They reg* late the bowels and sweeten the stom- ach and thus prevent the dreaded summer complaints. They are an ab- solutely safe, medicine, being guaran- teed to contain neither opiates nor narcotics or other harmful drugs. They cannot possibly do harm—they always do good. The Tablets are sold liy medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. The Nightingale Blue Bi ds for Canadi .n Pool You ' proffered twice your gallant dreams, Afid left your freedom at my feet, And planned a colorless career In some inglorious retreat! Calgary, Alta.—Considerable inter- est was evinced when the Prince of Wales, heir to the British throne, join- ed the membership ranks of the Al- berta lberta Wheat Pool last year. The popular Prince owns the E. P. Ranch, which is located west of High River, Alberta. Just recently another British noble- man signed an Alberta Wheat Poole contract. This personage is George Bridges Harley, eighth Baron of Rod- ney, who operates a thousand -acre, farm east of Edmonton. In 1918 Lord Rodney and his wife came to Canada. On their arrival in'. Edmonton they hired out as "man and wife" employees of a bachelor farmer near Fort Saskatchewan. While Lady, Rodney did the cooking, her husband worked as a hired man. For a whole summer they cooked, slept and work- ed from sun -up until sun -down. .k few years later Lord Rodney bought a farm in the district and has since increased its size to a thousand acres. He is a real farmer and tolls as hard as most of his neighbors. Another British peer who is a mem- ber of the Wheat Pool is the Duke of Sutherland. The 7,000,acre Suther- land farm at Brooks has been under a Pool contract for a number of years. The Duke of Sutherland's farm at Brooks Is one of the show places in that district. . The land is irrigated and the farm beautiful with large groves of trees. Alice (acidly): "I hear that you've accepted Jack, I suppose he never told, you he proposed to me?" Ethel: "No, not exactly. He merely said that he had done a lot of silly things before meeting me. But I didn't ask him what they were " Because I love you foolishly, I bid you go—I must be wise .. I could not bear the daily fear Of anguish dawning in your eyes. Because I love you all too well, I shake my head and make you go; I give you to the seven seas— Perhaps I shall not lose you sot Alice Porter. The Color Problem in Hark! how through many a melting note She now prolongs her lays: How sweetly down the void they float! The breeze their magic path attends; The stars shine out; the forest bends; The wakeful heifers graze.. . 0 sacred bird! let me at eve, Thus wandering all alone, Thy tender counsel oft receive, Bear witness to thy pensive airs, And pity nature's common Cares, Till I forget my own. —Mark. Akenside. South Africa Round ' Table (London) : The na- tive in South Africa will slowly pene- trate into the higher ranks of labor and establish a claim to equality of economic opportunity with the white man.. .. There are many who fear and oppose the doctrine of economic equality, for they see in it the road to social and political equality --not in the immediate future, perhaps not for five or ten generations, but in the end inevitably. With social equality they see the extinction of the white race, with political equality the dlsappearanoe of white ideals. . . They fear that five hundred years from now Sir Rarry Johnston's prophecy may have justified itself and it may have been shown that the colonization of Africa by alien peo- ples produce a compromise—"a dark- skinned race with a white .man's fea- tures and a white man's brains." ' ' ' But what the dim future may hold no one can now usefully predict.. Jean: "When Tom proposed he acted like a fish out of water." Peggy: "Why shouldn't ho? He knew he was caught." THE • RIFLES ° CARTRIDGES SPORTSMEN'S SUPPLIES tacCheaper r forCatiosa T. W. BOYD b' SON -- it Notre lame St. W., hiONTREAL PROTECTIVE ASSOCIATIONI of Canada Established 1907. lus to policyhets olderssover 5150,000.00 TSE ONLY SURELY CAN.; Sickness COMPANY nd Ao lent issuing i slice to Members of the Ma -1 uonio Fraternity Exclusively. j Agents in all principal Cities and Towns , S E. GLEASON. a. G. PtrLLEE, Pres. & Gen. Mgr. Secy. Ass. Mgr. Send Office: GBANBY, Que. Maid: "The furniture u'e man is here." Mistress: "I'll see him in a minute. Tell him to take a chair." Maid: "I. did, but he said he would start with the piano and radio's" Custom in Dress Cincinnati Enquirer: Custom is whatmakes it so improper 'for a Mai to appear in company with his elis- pendete showing and perfectly proper for his wife to go around with her garters visible as the sun. Author: "Yes, I- am doing very well: I make jokes and my wife makes pictures for them." Painter: "With me it's the opposite. I inalce pictures and my Wife snakes jokes about them!" Minard's Liniment Universal relnetly +OF tlAGAts. icy For Troubles due to • INDIGESTION ACID STOMACH HEARTBURN HEADACHE GASES.NASEAJ Let Minard's-Liniment Relieve Paln. What most people call indigestion is usually excess acid in the stomach. The food has troiired, The instant, remedy ie an alkali which neutralizes acids. Bilt don't use crude helps. Use what your doctor would advise. The best help is Phillips' Milk of Magnesia. For the 50 years'since �its invention it has reniai>vied stand with physicians. Von will find noth- ing else so t itiok in its effect, s harmless, so eiUcient Try the 'New Cuticula Shaving Stick Freely Lathering Medicinal and Emollient Stings and Bites The pain of insect bites disap- pears Quickly with the appli- cation of Mlnard'a. Try a bottle. One tasteless spoonful in water neutralizes many times its volume in acid. The results are inrinedlate, with no bad after-effects. Once you learn this fact, you will never deal with ex- cess acid in the crude ways. Go learn —now --why this method is supreme, Be stir° to get the genuine Phillips' Milk of Magnesia prescribed by physi- cians for 50 years in correcting excess p 1 acids, Each bottle contains frill three: titinseeill dru$sto3�e, ` A .friend to Women Lydia fl ,NnAi k a N Vegetable Compound d LYDIA E. PINKHAM MnD1cxNk CO. Lynn, Mass., U.S.A. and I;obourg, Ont., Canada, isg'UE No. 32—JAS