Zurich Herald, 1931-10-01, Page 7So
economica
'•5l:5%i lahlii1111f .i:•1.9ge5',���
'PI Sespiage
Piney
,
KRAFT Old -Fashioned Belled Salad Dress -
ins offers everything anyone could ask for
en exquisite, refreshing flavour, yet it's sold
set a price so low it's within the reach of
everyone.
A large 12 mune jar costs only 25 cents,
one-half the cost you're used to paying.
Get some to -day. Try it and you'll in-
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adeuvnud Boiled
Salad Dress!n!
Made in Canada by the Makers of Kraft
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RIFT TOURS
To Europe, with
hotels and sight-
seeing., back to
Montreal -24 days.
Prices are down. You can see London, Paris, Brussels,
etc. on an inclusive tour -from, Montreal—lasting
24 clays—and back. Ask for folder on how to travel so
amazingly, widely, and well, from $174.—all expenses
paid.
For $129. you can sail from. Montreal to Belfast, Glas-
gow, Liverpool, Plymouth or London and back. See
your relatives and friends, or travel at will.
Good going till Oct. 15th Third
Class—A unique opportunity
a 1•
1 with Jolly companions. Lt
CD
ANCHOR-DONALDSON
1
The Outstanding Inventions
Of the Past Eighty Years
(The N.Y. Times)
1852—Elisha Gray Otis invents the
elevator with automatic graking me-
chanism, later developed for office and
building use.
1853-Ginti, an Austrian technician,
chows how two messages can be sent
over a single telegraph wile (duplex
telegraphy).
1254—Henry D. Stone and Frederick
W. Howe perfect the turret lathe so
that a number of tools may cut metal
mechanically. The general idea of the
turret lathe goes back to Stephen
Fitch (1845),
'1855—Robert Wilhelm von Bunsen
Invents the burner now used in every
gas stove.
1856—Sir Henry Bessemer devises
the process for making Bessemer
steel,
1860—Dr. Antonio Pacinotti con-
ceives the first continuous -current dy-
namo
ynamo but does nothing with it. It is
independently re -invented by the Bel-
gian, Z. T. Gramme (1870-1872),
1861—Coleman Sellers of Philadel-
phia patents and demonstrates the
first .motion -picture machine of the
modern type.. Edison brings out the
commercial apparatus in 1893. Wil-
helm Siemens invents the regenera-
tive furnace. This, in the bands of
two Frenchmen, Pierre and Emile
Martin, is applied in making open-
hearth steel (1864).
1865 --William Bullock of Philadel-
Pith builds the first press to print 1
from a continuous roll or web of paper.'
1867—Christopher. L. Sholes invents I
the modern typewriter. Perfected in!
1873.
1868—George Westinghouse demon-
strates his airbrake.
1869—J. 11, Greathead designs the
modern shield used in tunueling•under
water.
1870—Sir William Siemens invents
the electric furnace for melting iron'
and steel.
1871—Charles Goodyear Jr. invents
the welt -shoemaking machine,
1874 -Thomas A. Edison devises the
quadruplex telegraph, which sends,
lour messages over a single wire. Sir
William Thompson (alfterward Lord
Kelvin) devises the syphon recorder,
which becomes indispensable in writ-
ing down cable messages.
1
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1876—Alexknder Graham Bell and
Elisha Gray independently invent the
telephone. Dr. N. A, Otto, of Cologne,
Germany, invents the four-cycle inter-
nal-combustion engine new generally
used in automobiles.
1877—Thomas A. Edison demon-
strates his phonograph.
1870—Thomas A. Edison produces
the first practical incandescent elec-
tric Iamp. •
1884—Sir Charles A. Parsons re-
ceives the first patent for his steam
turbine. The modern trolley car ap-
pears. Van Depoole invents the trol-
ley wheel and Frank L. Sprague -the'
multiple -unit system of control. Got-
tlieb Daimler brings out the light com-
pact gasoline engine of to -day and in
1885 drives a bicycle with it. ' Thus
the automobile begins. Carl Benz of
Karlsruhe is simultaneously working
on the automobile problem and turns
out his first gasoline vehicle.
1886-Ottmar Mergenthaler perfects
his linotype machine. Hall produces
aluminum by an electrical process
which eventually becomes commer-
cial.
1887—Tolbert Langton patents the
monotype. The Rev. Hannibal Good-
win patents the celluloid film. George
Eastman independently works out the
same principle. The induetion sluShrir
of Nikola Tesla .appears. Owl Laff s
1888 --John Boyd Duniop reinvents .
the double•tube pneumatic tire,' tae Foolish Questions
original invention of Roble, W. TliomPe^ I3o'w near i8 soon?
son (1845) having been forgotten. R flow elm is nearly?
1890—!Dr, Carl Auer von Welsba What is most likely?
produces his Mantle burner. flaw many is a few?.
1893 -Rudolf Diesel publishes a sly,. When is by and by?
cription of bis .proposed engine. TlX How low is low flown?
first specimens are exhibited in 1$ How far is over yonder?
at Munich, I How good is pretty good?
1699--.-Guglielmo Marconi. patents How high is up?
the first high frequency system elf When I say 1 don't want any how
wireless telegraphy,many do 1 want?
1899 --Francis I+]lmora.;iirst aotu 1
uses the oil -floatation rocese fol^ '
p �� ; Casper—"Have you ever bad ales -
crating ores frmn waste. The e'er ye son by correspondence?"
of ore flotation are a15° found Tai IL Lennox—"Yes—I never write to evo.
patent granted to Carry J. Everson of mea; now."
Denver, Col, (1586), ' •
1900; Heroult devises • his ,furnace Ile sent )ii;s . precious poem to the
for producing steel electrically, editor. "Let me know at anee whelk-
1901—Frederick W. Taylor attd er you can use it," he wrote, "as I
Maunsel .White .develop the, modern have other irons in the lire.
high-speed alloy steels which have In a few days the answer came back
made the oheap production of autonio-_ ' from the editor: "Remove irons, insert
biles and other machines possible. " !poem,"
1902—Professor Arthur Korn of Ger-
many makes the first long-distau,ee.ex-1 Gladys—"Dick's clever. ]' wish dad
periment in transmitting photographs would give him a start in life."
by wire. • Brother—"The next time your fah-
1903—The Wright brothers produce er finds him staying later than retitl-
e, motor -driven airplane'and.11y it stir- night, he'll need a head start."
cessfully at Kitty -Hawk, N.C. Valde —,--
mar
_mar Poulsen and Reginald Fessenden Barry—"Whenever;I see you I think
independently devise successful ex- of Jones."
perimental radio telephones. Sam --"But I'm not a bit like Jones."
1906 --Dr. Lee .)e Forest invents the Harry --"Yes, you are. You both
vacuum tube now indispensable In all owe me e10:00..
electrical communication.
1926—J. L. Baird sends recognizable Windy Wolfe says, "One of the big•
images over a wire.
gest kicks I evergot was when the
A Riddle of the ThaThamesdoctor's assistant ` told me to look
pleasant as he proceeded to take an
X-ray o' my liver."
At windows that from Westminster
Look southward to the Lollaril's
Tower, • They tell of a Scot's wife whose
doctor She sat, my lovely friend. A bluff d or told her that sh� needed salt
Of gilded mist,—('twas morn's. first air'` She woke up next morning and
hour,)— her husband was fanning her with a
Made vague the world; and in :tihe herring,
gleam " W
Shivered the half -awakened ,streamhen , you observe the methods of
parents and see how well the kids turn
Through tinted vapor looming large,
Ambiguous shapes obscurely rode.':
She gazed where many a laden barge
Like some dim -moving saurian show-
ed.
And 'midst them, lo! two swans
appeared,
And proudly up the river steered.
Two stately swans! What did they
there?
out, how can you keep from believing
in Providence? There are open
minds so confoundedly open that they
can't even bold a single conviction.
And then there was the timid fresh-
man who preferred blondes because
he was afraid of the dark. The more
some young couples try to get ahead,
the farther they get behind in their
payments. Nothing --will ruin an in-
teresting intellectual argument quick-
Whence
uickWhence came they? Whither would er than the arrival of a pretty girl.
they go,;t; When your own plans go wrong, it's
Think of them;—things so faultless tough luck; when another man's plans
fair,— go wrong, he oughta kno-wed better.
'Mid the black shipping down .below!
In through the rose and gold` they Lord, suffer me to catch a, fish
passed, . So large that even i
And melted in the morn at Jest.. talking of it afterward
JJJ Shall have no need to lie.
Ah, can it be, that they had come, ist
t -•
Where Thames in sullied glory flow Mother—"NowJohnnie, I know
Fugitive rebels, tired of some thousands af-liitIe boys,and girls who
Secluded lake's ornate repose, jwould be glad to eat that spinach."
Eager to taste the life that pours t Johnnie --Name three of them!"
Its muddier wave 'twixt mightse tr
shores? 1 Catherine—"I don't believe that gas -
We neer shall „know: our wonder-
ment •-
No barren certitude shall mar.
They left behind them, as they went,
A dream than. knowledge ampler ,far;
And from our Wvorld they sailed away
Into some visionary day.
William W,atso'n, in "Collected
„Poems."
'Ise) about Doris, Nor what little I've
heard."
Margaret ---"Oh, Gee, I hoped you
'might have heard more about it."
Able—"Papa, vat is science?"
I Papa="My, how could your be so
stupid? Science is dose tings vat
says "no smoking."
The Answer
Canada is now the second largest What are the wild waves saying
gold -producing country in the world. As they lap the shores of our land?
Homesickness Cured
There's a long grind between entering c allege and the graduation exercises. The
tit'-cphone helps bridge many as the following incident shows:
"However do you get along without •Horauw "" of ed , rs Sparkles who had call-
ed to console Mrs, Rathburn following the departure o - er young son to boarding
"John and I were certainly very anxious and woul�
out had we not arranged for Horace to call us on it e t
fact 'Principal Chapman explained to us what an avant
rn131their' to ost casesarents the resaid td he car h rinterval9es of these cans are
7:
hometelephone.
He said, too, th" t it made the s
!r
.,
students more emit
practically disappeared,"
Just another • (otitis* out' the impotent part played 14
in family life.
Lave just worried our lives
hone twice a week, In
e ' it, was to have students
eversed to be paid . at the
jd ,longi homesickness has
the long distance telephone
1334,1/4
ED 110
re o
247
ReAOICt ' 4E °4l%t1Laiie1 tOttacgalA,Ine
Just this; "Your bathing suit, dearie
Is shrinking to beat the band."
Golf was invented by somebody who
was looking for something else to won
ry about.
' j Classified Advertising
N OFFIil TO EVERY INVENT() v
- List of wanted inventions and full
information sent free, Tb"e namsay isoz �ti
pany, World Patent Attorneys; 273 Janie
Street, Ottawa. Canada.
Modern Family Has
Wide Interests
'
Chicago.—It is not only the lawn
dry that the modern family sends
out of the home in its trend away
from self-sufficiency, a University of
Chicago statistican has found, ac-
cording to a recent report.
By comparing figures for 1900 and
for 1930, Dr. John Dollard offers per-
centages to show that almost every
economic activity of the family, from
tending the furnace to planning the
interior decoration, is gradually be-
ing put into the hands of specialists
outside the home, as well as educa-
tion, religious training and recreee
tional and other functions. His con-
clusion, however, is that this trend
does not necessarily mean the decline
of the family, but results in an ex-
tension of its interests.
Some of the contrasts sketched by
Dr. Dollard the university reports as
follows:
"Where formerly women remained
at home, doing house and family
work, with only one woman out of
every seven employed outside the
home, one woman in every four was
a breadwinner in 1920, and out of
every three working women in 1929
one was married.
"Between 1900 and 1923 the aver-
age attendance of children in public
schools increased 100 per cent. and
expenditures for public schools in-
creased 4.1 times as feet as did the
number of families. Teachers are
taking childr,en away from their par-
ents
ar
ents for longer periods and at ten-
derer ages.
"Between 1922 and 1927 the num-
ber of trained workers in urban .re-
creation
re-creation programs increased from
11,000 to 20,000. The weekly attend-
ance at moving picture theatres.
tripled between 1922 and 1930.
"The number of Sunday school
soholars increased 46 per cent. dur-
ing the last 30 years and the average
contributions of church members in-
dicated that at least 50 per cent. in-
erease was made in purchasing pow-
er, while such practices as saying
grace at meals declined.
"The ksss of certain fuuctiane by
the family need not mean its de-'
cline, however. It will rather offer 1
the opportunity for a more effective
integration," Dr. Dollard declares.
"The disintegration of .camily tune.:
tions," he observes, "is undoubtedly '
accompanied by widened interests."
Food For Thought
The professor was lecturing on na-
tural history.
"Yes," he said, "when I get close to
Nature it makes me feel like a little
grub."
Smart Aleck shook his head.
"What, only a little, sir?" he spoke
up. "It makes me feel like a lot.
Anyway, when I'm in the country I
eat like a horse"
Send for our
Special Circular
covering this
Interesting Speculation
•
F. W. Macdonald & Co.
Members
Standard Stock & Mining Exchange
Mantreat Curb Market
38 King St. W. 159 Craig St. W.
'TORONTO MONTREAL
ELgin 6255.8 MA. 77115-4121
Wire connections to all
principal markets . .
`O KEEP THE
Children Healthy
When there "of colour" give
theca Dr. Cattalos all vegetable
Little Liver Pills. Safe, acting
gently on the bowels and liver,
they soon bring back smiles and
highs spirits that healthy young,
stere should chow.
25e til 75c red packages'
Ask your druggist for
TEItSIIIVIPILLS
POITZ n'r AND ,7iGGffii wsttxnn
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eggs. Eighest market prices pais,:
Immediate settlement by certified oheque
Empty crates returned, crates loaned.
Give us a trial. Rosenfeld Poultry and
Egg Co„ Limited, Montreal.
OSTRICH FEATHERS COME BACK
Fashion is reviving the ostrich:
feather, but the supplies are very,
restricted. - There were 750,004
ostriches in South Africa in 1913, but
less than half that number in 1923.
Persons reported missing last year,
in New York City numbered 25,004
including 3,500 boys and 2,450 girls.
Don't suffer any longer from thesi
unsightly blemishes, Overcome them at
home. Get 2 oz, Peroxine Powder frond
you. druggist. Sprinkle a little on the
face cloth, apply with a circular rnotio!l<
and the blackheads will be all WASBF,n•
AWA`i'. Satisfaction or money refunded,a
Pour Minard's into a warm
dish. Rub liniment gently in;,
then apply it according to,
directions . . and soon
19you'll get relief!
ACIDITY DSR 10 YEARS,
Before he Found the Remedy.
Many people endure . suffering un-
necessarily. This man did. If he had
known ten years ago what he knows
to -day, he would have been spared a
great deal of suffering.
"I feel I must write n few lines ha
appreciation of your Kruschen Salts.
I have suffered for 1.0 years from
chronic acidity of the stomach. I tried
nearly everything, until I was advield
by a friend to try Kruschen, which 1
have taken for the last two months,
rind I am pleased to say I have had
no return of the acidity."—W. B.
Kruschen Salts swiftly neutralises
acid, takes all the torment out of it,
and gently expels it from the system.
And by stimulating your organs of
elimination to perfect regular action.
Kruschen will prevent this harmfld
acid from ever accumulating again,
After that you'Il experience no more
misery after meals. ,Kruschen will
keep your inside clean and serene. •
Pure and invigorated blood will. be
sent coursing to every part of your
body. You 11 feel wonderfully ener-
getic and well, As healthy and hearty
asit is humanly possible to feel,
" BEN I was first married 1
hada miscarriage and felt
perfectly miserable;
"I took three bottles of Lydia
E: Pinkham's Vegetable Coat•
pound and later gave birth to a
fine baby boy.
"/ now have five children. I
always take the Vegetable Corn•
pound daring pregnancy and it
helps sue: It benefits my sisters-
in-law too." Urs. J. 'Z' instOri,
R. R. No, 2, Lakefreld, Ontarioo
VEGETABLE CDMPQUNI
ISSUE No. 39-- y$i44