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Zurich Herald, 1928-08-30, Page 3yiNANCI NEWS NIplssine Make Good In a B10 Way In Chesterfield end Rankin Inlets? . W1 Nipissing make good in a big in Its prospecting enterprises in per cent., payable September 1st, to the disease progresses the twitching kin Inlet and Chesterfield Inlet shareholders of record August 17th. takes the form of spasms, in which Jackson -Manion ' I the jerking motion may be confined to Jackson -Manion Mines will open uP the face or all the limbs pay be the ore body just encountered ou the affected. Frequently the patient ie 260 -ft. level, reported in a recent bill- unable to hold anything in the hands letin, and do re -work on 'thce'125-ft. or walk steadily. In severe cases the level. The'lmanagement and all in- speech is often affected. The disease tercets in the company. are greatly is due to debility of the nerves and to shareholders of reeord 2eptemberVITUS DANCE Let, STS . United (erre& 134 per cent„ re ' peyabis Septem- ber 29tb1, to shareholder$ of record ATrouble ThatUsuallY Attacks August 81st. • I Young Children St, Vitus dence.is the name gener- ally given to a disease described by Photo' Engravers 6Qc, payable Sen., tember 1st, to shareholders o1 record August 17. Canada Permanent 3 per cent., pay- able ay • usually attacks young children, though able .October let to shareholders of re older people may be afflicted with it. • twitching o1 the face and limbs, As medical men as chorea. This trouble eaTd S ept emb er 16 Great West Saddlery Preferred 1 6/8 The most mammon symptoms, are a Eetountries to the west of Hudson's Bay land 1,200 milee north of Cobalt? The ltwo parties sunt out by the company haveereeched the ground well in ad- Vinee of parties sent by other inters lasts and should have the pick of the grol+�,d, which is reported to be rich in go ,silver and copper. elated by results so far at the 260 relief comes through an enriche For yearns this country has been horizon. The shaft is down to 276 blood supply, Dr, Williams' Pink Pills talked of as containing vast stored feet and sinking to a new level will be have been most successful in reach - of mineral wealth, but heretofore itsI ing this trouble through their specific inaccessibility had barred it as prat- undertaken before long. The com- ticable for mining. The building of parry can count on a substantial body action on the blood, which it enriches the Hudson Bay Railway, however; which will be completed in 1930; brings this territory within easy reach. That is why leading mining interests were anxious to get in on in ahead of time. In view of the very sanguine reports not only regarding actual deposits but the geology of the country, which is similar to that of Porcupine, Kirkland Lake and the Ontario copper fields, possibilities are certainly promising. Massey -Harris Making Fuller Use of Its Widespread Distributing Organ- ization—Important Potential Earnings Factor The Street is hearing rumors again regarding Massey -Harris Co, and its connection with several probable deals in the offing. The first of these is that a scheme to absorb Cockdhutt Plow Co. is on the tapis again. Another rumor links the name of Frost and Wood Co., whose shares have shown marked appreciation lately. The third report, which appears" to have substantial grounds is that Mas- sey -Harris Company will add a com- plete line of motor trucks. In this connection, it is stated, the Rockaway and Illinois Truck • Company, makers of all classes of motor trucks, may supply a complete line to Massey -Har- ris for distribution. This company is one of the largest manufacturers. Massey -Harris Co. has one of the most complete distributing organiza- tions 1 he world, extending into all 1Ee principal countries. This organ- ization can be used by Massey -Harris 'without additional expense for sale of a much wider range of products. The absorption of the J. I. Case Tractor of oro between the surface and 240 and purlfldL The following instance feet. It it is provided to continue proves the value of Dr. Williams' Pink downward, apparently, the fortunes o1 Pills in this trouble, Mrs. Thomas the company will be made. There Bowen, Bath, Ont., says:—"Dr. Wil- ls no doubt that the ore body at 250 Hams' Pink Pills have been in use in is better than at upper levels. At the 125 horizon 60 tons of ore were drawn at one time which averaged $42 to the ton. It is noteworthy that favorable indications appear in the shaft at 275. The next level will be established at 375 foot depth. Noranda Fn the Limelight. Why? In view of the developments that have taken place at Noranda and definite indications that the rich "H" ore body persists at least to 1,600 feet depth, calculations are being made as to what the company will earn when the mine is adequately developed and the second unit and concentrator are in full operation. Estimates have a glowing appearance and it is difficult to pick holes in them. The average of the mine before "H" that the same applies to grown-ups and "B" ore bodies were opened at as well can get these pills through any my family for years and always wit good results. I believe they saved the life of my only son. At ten years of ago he grew very nervous and the trouble developed into St. Vitus dance. His legs and arms would jerk and twitch, then his speech was affected, and his condition was pitiable. Just then there came to me a little book telling of- Dr. Williams' Pink Pills and I decided to give them to him. By the time two boxes were used there was an improvement in his condition, and by the time six boxes were taken till traces of the trouble had disap- peared, and he 'was well and strong. I have also given the pills to my growing girls, and I know of no better strengthening medicine. I may add depths below 300 feet averaged $23 per. ton. Below 300 feet the ore is of huge dimensions and averages $60 Taking into consideration the physical assets in sight below and above 300 feet, it is reasonable to expect that average millheads will run close to $35. Let it be supposed that the smel- ter, when running full, will treat 2,000 tons daily, and that costs would be $8 per ton. On such a basis, Noranda would earnsomething like $9 per share on the stock. • SUMMER COMPLAINTS KILL LITTLE ONES e Co. recently one new step in this • direction, and the introduction of a line of motor trucks would be another important addition. It is claimed that Massey -Harris could nearly double its profits by utilizing its selling organize- the hot_ weather give the little one tion tele full. , r. �;r:.` k ° Baby's Own Tablets or -lo a few hours '',Bullish cm ebt on I1assey-Harris he• may be beyond aid. These Tablets is heard everywhere on the street will prevent summer complaint if and when the magnates begin given occasionally to the well child, to talk this means usually something of a constructive character from a market viewpoint is approaching. Officials of Frost & Wood Co. in- clude Col. Harry Cockshutt, president;_ J. E. Ruby, 1st vice-president and gen- eral :wager; Geo. B. Frost, second vice-president; F. Whitcomb, assistant general manager; J. C. Douglas, sec - re tary-treasurer. Dividends Declared # Belgo-Canadian Paper Preferred, d °% per cent., payable October 1st, At the first sign of illness during When your Children Cry for It ve and will promptly reliethese troubles if they come on suddenly.. Baby's Own Tablets should always be kept in every home where there are young children. There is no other medicine as good and the mother has the guarantee that they are absolutely safe. They are sold by ail druggists or will be mailed on receipt of price, 25 cents per box, by The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. A little booklet, "Care of the Baby in Health and Sickness", will be sent free to any mother on request. Want Thousand • ofsHar- vesters Winnipeg, Manitoba.—By about the third week in August harvesting, of Western Canada's crop, which present prospects indicate will return nearly 600,000,000 bushels, will be general. To garner what promises to be another bumper wheat crop will require over 65,000 men, 44,000 of whom will have to come from Eastern Canada, British Columbia and the United States. To take care of the movement of those desirous of going to work in the har- vest fields the Canadian railways are offering specially reduced rates on special trains leaving the principal centres in Eastern Canada to Winni- peg at intervals between August 13th 'and 31st. Return tickets after the harvest aro also offered at a/low rate. This year Canada has about 24,000,- 000 acres sown to wheat, the record acreage, about 1,500,000 acres more than in 1927. Given a period of good weather in the next two weeks Canada expects this year to reap a record crop. Two colored men down in Southern Indiana were bewailing -the hard times being felt in the agricultural district there. "Times is tighter than I ever Castoria is a comfort when Baby is seen them before," said -one. "I can't even get hold of a nickel! • If some "fretful. No sooner taken than the lit.thing don't turn up I'm going to start tie one at ease. If restless, a few preaching. I done that, once' and I drops. soon bring contentment. No P'r harm done, for Castoria is a baby ain't too good to do it again." remedy, meant or babies. Perfectly j safe to give the youngest infant; you France plans to introduce good have the doctors' word for that! It' mosquitoes that will, drive out the 1s a vegetable product and you could bad. For the complete success of use it every day. But it's in an +fire scheme, it is to be hoped the emergency that Castoria means most. i Some night when constipation must good mosquitoes are equipped with be relieved—or colic pains—or other large, readable license plates. (suffering. Never be without it; some others keep an extra bottle, un- opened, to make sure there will al- ways be Castoria in the house. It is effeetive for older chiidten, too; read !the book that comes. with IL You medicine dealer or by mail at 50 cents a box from The Dr. Williams', Medicine Co.; Brockville, Ont. The Padre • If you use Red Rose Orange Pekoe Tea in 1928 you ,will enjoy Canada's finest tea and materially reduce your tea bills. . Red Rose Orange Pekoe lasts longer because its additional strength and flavor make it go further. Every package guaranteed. vine: • OWL • LAFF$ (UN WITH LAUGHTER) Behind the Scenes A man may be handicapped by be- ing bora a poet, but there is ne reason why he shouldn't brace up and make something of himself, The llrst hundred biscuits are the hardest, We would rather have been Joan of Are than Mary Queen of Scots, be- cause Joan got a hot steak while Mary only got a cold chop. Justice is surely blind when avia- tors, who are rapidly conquering ,the air, are frequently killed, while saxo- phone players, who never will conquer it, go unharmed. This is a fast age; some of us are in pursuit of pleasure, some Hoeing from trouble—and the rest of us stuck in the mud. Put a go-getter out on a limb and he will start a branch factory. "Johnny, you're a sight. What have you done to your clothes—they're full o<f holes." "Aw, we was playin' grocery store, mama, and I was the piece of cheese." "Bill, what is a quarterback?" "Quarterback? Why, it's a 25 -cent refund." Some historian has discovered that Nero not only fiddled while Rome burned, but continued to fiddle while it was being rebuilt. Jobber's Salesman: "Which of the two liotels in this town would you recommend? ' Ticket Agent: "Some prefer the Railway Hotel, and some prefer the Bayside; but whichever you go to, you lay awake all flight wishing you'd gone to the other." Ralph Connor, -the popular ,Cana- dian author, otherwise known as the Rev. Dr. Charles W. Gordon, who will conduct the special service at Sun Dance Canyon at the forth- coming Highland Gathering and Scottish Musical Festival at Banff, Alberta, to be held from August 31 to September 3. Chamberlain Will Visit California Via Panama London Sir Austen Chamberlain, the Foreign Secretary , will take a sea voyage to California via the Panama Canal, it is announced. He is recovering from a mild attack of pneu- monia and will be able to travel in three weeks. Ile will be accompanied by Lady Chamberlain and is expected to bo away for several months. Lady Chamberlain, wife of Sir Aus- ten Chamberlain, said that definite arrangements had not been made for her husband's visit to California, but that the medical advisers believed that the foreign secretary will be suf- ficiently recovered from his serious illness to ,allow him to start the tour late this month. He would expect to be back in England early in Novem- ber. - Sir Austen will make no public ad- dresses either in the United States or in the Dominions. He may make a short call at the West Indies. Ile in- tends to land at San Francisco Gild travel overland into and across Can- ada. , A "Flashy" Financier Truth (London): Loewenstein was a financier and " showman of the The female who kalsomines her face and paints her lips in public doesn't care a darn how idiotic it looks. Guest: "When wits this chicken killed?" Waiter: "We don't furnish dates with chickens, sir; only bread and butter." The Orange Pekoe is something extra -a special tea In clean, bright Aluminum 1a Wild "Beasts in Africa "Shipping and tourist companies are now advertising lion and elephant shoots as mildly exciting holidays in which even ladies nay take part with- out any danger or fatigue," says Ig- lratius Phayre in an article on "Hunt- ing Big Game by Train and Auto" in the August Current History. "Indeed, so commonplace an event has the chase of the King of Beasts become, that the heavy bore gun has largely given place to the cinema camera, and thrilling photos of formidable beasts are now thought worthier trophies of African 'shikar' than a mass of skins and maned or horned heads to hang on tlie walls at home, or adorn the floors as rugs 'with a bistory.' , Bank- ers, industrial leaders end business men of many nations take to African 'safari' as a novel outing. Conducted parties with all the paraphernalia of tents, interpreters and guides now pass clear through the Dark Continent from Cape Town to Cairo, using com- fortable steamers on the great lakes, and at Rejaf changing into Nile house- boats which have sumptuous suites of rooms, private baths, electric fans, a first-class cuisine and all the comforts of a modern hotel. "Meanwhile all the great known beasts are receding before the con- struction of railways and roads with white immigration and tourist traffic, of which Stanley and Burton never dreamed. Unless this wanton orgy of slaughter can be stopped by drastic laws, the time is not far distant when the only place to see the great wild beasts of Africa will be the local zoo, or, stuffed, in the natural history museum." The reason people pass one door To patronize another store Is not because the busier place Has better silks or gloves or lace, Or cheaper prices; it largely lies In pleasant words and smiling eyes, The true trade magnet, we believe, Is just the treatment folks receive. A kiss is much like a drink. The morality of it depends on how it af- fects you. "This storm may put the lights out. Are you afraid?" he asked. "Not if you take that cigarette out of your mouth," she replied. Steep is never so sweet as on morn- ing's you have to get up early and go to work. Often it pays to make sure you are right and then keep still. Street Car Conductor: "Madam, this transfer has expired," Irate Lady: "Well, you can't expect much else with the cars so poorly ventilated." There was a young lady named Hyde, Who ate some green apples and died. The apples fermented Within the lamented And made cider inside her inside. When three boarders combine to keep the butter at their end of the table, they are what politicians call a bloc. Wives are people who are forever trying to find room for one more piece of furniture. Most everybody believes in the law of, the survival of the fittest, except the undertaker, and he doesn't believe in the survival of anybody. The old-fashioned, plain Iiving and high -thinking has been supplanted by fancy living and low thinking. The girl who Tots and runs away will live to pet another day. GREAT - CULT- URE "He's a big bride. You told me he was :a man of great culture." "So he ie—physical culture, you knoev." Sliding kale "flashy"- type. He had a genius for Minneapolis Journal: Eight of the creating a market, but, like all reek- big casualty companies have pooled less adventurers, he pitted his wits their bureaus of research to find out against unfathomable poyvers. He what a proper insurance rate is for went up like a rocket and came down those engaged in aviation. It may litre the stick. start high, but it is certain to be n --- The latese Chinese excitement Is an falling rate. outbreak of fin at Chefoe. MiiiardPesMninent*Utlrversal remedy Canadian -Amer• ican Proposed on Minnesota Border Park Classified Advertisements -14 suG wan* one amplesfx e., S tecniiil$ Yarn Mills, Dept. 1, Orlllia, Ont. ,t L1 T T L 79 UNDERWOOD 'FF134; WRITER, needed in every hottiro sent for your approval. Pay a few €i9 ' jars monthly, For partioulars writa Underwood, 136- Victoria Street f'orofltO, c' E PAY TEN TO FIFTEEN ]Da to !LARS weekly for spare tirno home. Write for particulars, The AO Knitter Hosiery Company, Tore/it-of P8-' partment 7. -_ �ILL THIS MOVER—PIONEE i D1 . , T NCE movers of Oanada. Lal' 8$11 speedy padded vans. pule Equi! nerd latest methods. Two experienced every trip. All loads insured, bel compare for skill and care. Before 1/811 move, write us or wire and reverse ijls charges. Bead offlce Hamilton. Oster% Canada. 1:1111 tha Mover. Duluth, Minn.—A vast virgin wilder- ness, much of it inaccessible except by canoe and some of it unknown to man, is being investigated by Con- gress with a view to making it part of an international park. The region of 3,000,000 acres lies in northeast Minnesota, bordering a string of lakes that mark the boun- dary at that point between the United States and Canada. Two Congression- al parties, one from the I-Iouse and one from the Senate, will visit the region this summer to inspect the sug- gested park area and report on the proposed legislation now befd' a Con- gress. The House sub -committee of twelve members, headed by Representative Addison T. Smith, of Idaho, will look over the region first. A three-day in- spection tour is planned in August. Senator Henrik Shipstead, of Minne- sota, is to lead the Senatorial party of five, which leaves Duluth August 23 for six days in the rugged district. The proposed park site lies ,north of the famous Mesaba iron range and 'includes the Superior National Forest in the United States and the Quetico Park in Ontario. It is known as the north woods 'canoe country" and only occasionally have hunters and trap- l pars visited its timbered hills. It is a lacework of lakes and swift little streams tumbling through rug- ged hills, pine crested and spread over with entangled underbrush. Only three state highways traverse the re- gion and there are but two small rail- roads within its borders. Vermilion Lake Indian reservation is included. How much of the region will be tra- veled by the legislators will depend upon their stamina. Although canoes are teh chief conveyances, power launches wil carry the inspectors. When trappers and hunters' cabins are not available for overnight stops! the lawmakers will be sheltered in tents. State foresters will conduct the parties over the region. BELTING BARGAINS All sizes of Threshes Melts, Motion nose, Laze reeathor at kegs titan half price. owes Whipped angjeetb to inspection. YORK BELTING CO., 88 YORK 8T., TORONTO. • S5P�ORTSMEIPS SUP Cheaper or Beller Write forCatalogsse • T. W. l OYD to SO34' i1 Mrs Dome St. W., soma British Museum Gets Carlyle Manuscript New York—The manuscript of th@ first draft of Thomas Carlyie's "Past and Present," has been presented to the British Museum, by Gabriel Wells, New York rare book dealer, accord - in to Mitchell Kennerly, president of the Anderson, Galleriea. Mr. Kens• nerly has just returned here tram England. Mr. , Kenneriy said he had bought two Carlyle manuscripts at an auc- tion sale at Sotheby's in London, pay- ing aying £ 2100 for them. He then resold them to Mr. Wells, and Mr. Wells of- fered the British Museum their choice between the complete first draft and the incomplete revised manuscript. According to Mr. Ken- nerly, ennerly, Mr. Wells gave the manuscript to the British institution, "in com- pensation for the recent passing of the Carroll manuscript of 'Alice 1x2 Wonderland.' into American hands." Good and Well New Orleans Times -Picayune: Hoo- ver may lose some of the language purists of his following. He announces that he has chosen Good as his Weste ern manager. Any Bostonian would, have told him he should have choserk well. • FOR FIFT1 YEARS Cntlicura Soap and Ointment have afforded the purest, sweetest and most Qatar, factory method of caring for the .kha and hats„ Blistered Feet If walking has blistered your feet, bathe them with Min- ard's. Sure relief. The main objection to the designa- tion of the land as an ^"international park has been raised by power in -1 terests, which contend that the rush- ing waters of the "canoe country" teem with potential millions of horse- ; power. The Izaak Walton League is a leader of the conservation organize -1 tion sponsoring the bilis which would set the land aside. Senator Shipstead and Representa- tive Walter Newton, of Minnesota, in - traduced the bills in Congress. t.et Minard's Liniment Relieve Pain. Their Excellencies, the Governor - the Viscountess Willingdon, recently toured the Peace River country in Alberta, one of the most fertile agri- cultural areas in North America. heat and oats from the Peaee, River district won the chcnlpiousbips at the International Grain and Ilay Show in 1926 rind scored High in the prize list ATTENTION, WO E OF MIDLE CE! Mrs. Goodkey Tells Fier Expert/ epee with Pinkham's Compound Byemoor, Alberta, --"The Chan; of Life was the trouble with me aim ,, wasrun de eersn ancj not sleep, 4. co° d '4 'G`•'J'e .. ,_." �Worl . 1 am to Lydia 4. I'1 pant's ' egeta Comp ou d nil and . eel l e well woman. pa'�i�$s atl tr) ,, and Lydia E. e ham's Sanative Wash. T have -r. •• mended it to a lot of women friends::! :n,tlxs. tV �l. Goornuty, 13yernoor, berta. iA 1927. t� + ,suE No. 34--"2i