HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1925-09-17, Page 3TONIC BERME
FOR INDIGESTION
The Surest Way to Relieve Storm.
ach Trouble is Through Dr:,
Williams' Pink Pills.
When the stomach is feeble andfood
lies in it undigested, the poisonous
gases distend the walls cf the stomach
and cause serious interference with
the other organs, especially with. the
action .of the heart and lungs; These
poisonous gases haze other ill effects.
"'hey ere absorbed by the blood and so
•weaken and corrupt it as to cause
aches in remote parts of the body and
the formation of unhealthy tissue
everywhere. Experience chows that
these,. troubles vanish just as soon as
the stomach is made strong enough to
digest the food. In other weeds, it
needs a tonic that will"eflable it to do
the work of changing the food into
nourishment. Tlie tonic'used ought to
be one that will agree with the most
delicate stomach and this is exactly
what Dr. Williams' Pink Pills do••
Here is a bit of convincing proof
given by Mrs. Chas. Ladner, Eilersdie,
P•E.I,, .who says:—"For some years I
was a sufferer from stomach trouble.
Everything I ate eaused distress, sour
stomach, and belching; I could net, eat
meat or potatoes; and I grew weak and
very nervous. No medicine seemed to
help me until I was persuaded to take
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, and these
simply worked wonders. I took the
pills faithfully for a couple of months,
by which time every symptom of the
trouble had disappeared, and there has' f
not since been the slightest symptom °
-of stomach trouble.; • No wonder I
praise Dr. Williams' Pink Pills."
You can get these Pills from any
medicine dealer, or by mn: it at 50 cents
a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine
Co., Brockville, Ont.
Crossing the Atlantic seventy-six
bines is the record held by a retired
• American doctor, aged eighty-three.
His first trip was in 1864, in the last
wooden paddle steamer.
•
FIR" :CULTUREl THE INION
1Fiishe lee operations in Canada cited
an annual- revenue of approxi .telt'
$50,000,000 and provide employment to
about 100,00-0 people, and wbilo the im-
Pertan.co of this iudubtry . has been
eoinewha.t overshadowed by other ac-
tivities, it has always been looked upon
as ono of the 'basic industries of the
Dominion, Even before settlement be-
e in unlade, commercial fishing was
carried on by the English and French,
and from the middle of the sixteenth
century to the present day, a period
nearly four bmindred years, continuous
opere.tlons have been carried on in the
heated and coastal waters of the Do-
iulnion.
.Mthough Canada's fishing waters
are the most extensive and most
bountiful of any nation ;in the world,
it has always been realized that they
are not inexhaustible, and to perpetu-
ate the fishing industry certain pro-
tective measures were essential. To
this end the Federal Government has
in force a policy rff conservative and
controlled exploitation. This has been
of immense benefit in replenishing 1
stocks, but, not wholly satisfied, the
Dominion authorities have been active
for many years in resltocking the
streams, lakes and coastal waters by
artificial means.
First Artificial Propagation.
The first record of• artificial props
gation of fish in Canada dates bac
In that year, Newcastle, Qatari
hatchery,„,wees built by.,tlte Domini
Goveerninent. • So far a .s' is known; tb
le the first retake. hatchery in the Ne
World built and equipped at Gover
"Father of the Fleet."
P'0I sibly the best f Iib
a e es .o a oo s for
0� +casual readieg, Pepys' D1arY, was give}
on tt' t to .world one iliindred years agog
is. 122 Years after the death of its author,
yi 'l'lie first edition was entered at.. Ste-.
n-1.tienors' Hall,. on August 9th 1825 and
Ment expense. Froin then.en the as
vice rapidly expandee. • In 1876• the
were seven hatcheries in operatio
and tie total distribution of fr
emanated to 9,500,000, Last year QV
41" estabiishinents were actively e
gaged in distributing' 886,000,000 f
r-' that date enay, therefore, be taken as:
re thei,centenary.Of the Diary.
n l ,the Diary was discovered' . in the
• 7?ap*sian Library at Magedulent Col-
• lege, Ctarobr1dga. It was written in
n, eshortliand, and 'extended to six vol
-
y umes. The members of the Bray-
brpoke family, who were hereritary
visitors of Magdalene, became interest-
ed' in these mnysterious volumes, and
enowed therm to their relation, Lord
Is',Granville; • On .examining them, this
le weer, who bad made a hobby of short-
s heed,' was able to prepare a key..The
n- key.. and the'six voluines were then
m- placed in the hands of John Smith, an
✓ undergraduate.
of and odder fish of all species,
Era of Stability and Prosperity.
While the major portion of the labo
and expense involved In fish culture
carried by the Federal Government, 1
which control of coastal waters 1
vested, many of the Provincial Gover
meets also are leenly.alive to the i
portance of this work ant bear thea
shame of the cost, Whatever the, e
pense, there is no doubt but that tb
effort has been worth :while. .Man
fishing areas that had been ruthlessl
exploited have been replenished, an
as long as this work. continues, the fish
ng industry of Canada will be pro
tooted with ample scope for develop
ment and expansion.
At the opening session of the'Cana
dian Fisheries Association held re
cently at Halifax, Mr. J. A. Jaulhus, re
tiring president, summed up the situa
- tiou as follows:—" .coordtng to:statis-
k. tics, the production of fish from all
t -
f
x- Snaith took three years to tran-
s ,;Sth*e the 'Diary, and then placed the
Y cciiiplete manuscript in the hands of
y Lord Braybrooke, who made the selec-
d tion. which formed the first edition.
The quality of the Diary wes recog-
- a ized imined•iately on its publication,
- and it 'has been a source oP unfailing
delight to succeeding generations,
Pepys gives himself away so complete-
- He was a man of very ccnsiredable
- abilities, who was Secretary to the Ad-
- -miralty in the reigns of Charles II. and
James II. and James II., and who did
such valuable work in that capacity
that he has claims to be regarded as
the father of the British Navy. But he
constantly exhibits himself in the most
ledrierous positions.
Even in a diary intended for no eyes
but their own, few men would make
the admissions that he makes. He re-
ceives a present of venison, which
proves to be tainted, and at once sends
It to his mother. He acceits. a bribe
without looking at it "that I might say
that I did not know what there was in
the bag."
over seventy years, when Richard Ne
le in 1854 interested himself in the re
toration of the salmon fisheries -o
Quebec. Three years later he was ap
pointed Superintendent of Fisherie
or Lower Canada, now the Provinc
f Quebec. His first experiment wa
with trout eggs secured in the Jacque
River, and these werethe first artifici
ally fertilized eggs, successfully hatch
ed in North or South. Ainerica. No
new development along these lines
took place until 1867—the year of Con-
federation—when fish cultural opera-
tions became a .recognized part of the
work of the Federal ,Department of
Marino and Fisheries.
WE WANT CHURNING
We supply cans and pay express
charges.- We pay daily by express
money orders, which can be cashed
anywhere withbut any charge.
To obtain e the top price, Cream
imust be ..free from bad flavors and
contain not less than 30 per ,cent,
Batter Fat.
1
Bowes Company Limited,
Toronto
For'references—Head Q11ice, Toronto,
,i3ank of Montreal, or your local banker.
Established for over thirty years.
i
quarters is well maintained. The con-
sumption as a food is also on the in-
crease. There has been a general im-
-
provement both in demand and in, pro-
s duction, which augurs welh for the
e future. Tbe foreign markets have
s lately shown a better feeling, and,
s taken all round, it seems that the fish
industry is entering upon an area of
- stability and -prosperity.
"If the prospects of keeping up the
publicity'• campaign which was inaug-
urated two years ago can materialize,
I feel confident that in a very short
time the yield of the fish resources of
this country will run into $100,000,000
Yearly."
Patient Penmen.
"World's champion miniature caIli-
,graphist" is the title claimed by an
Englishman living at Vancouver, He
recently sent a postcard to London on
which he had written 12,000 words, the
equivalent of sixteen colums of news-
paper matter.
Some years ago a Derby man Aman -
aged to write 9,000 words on a post-
card. Then an Italian appeared on the
scene :with one on which he had writ-
ten 11,000 words.
This roused to activity a University
student, who wrote 600 words on the
back of an ordinary postage stamp.
One -of the stiffest tests in miniature
penmanship was the engraving in per-
fect calligraphy of the complete his-
tory ofthe 1
discover
ryof
.Amen
Y ca on the
surface of a hen's egg. The Lord's
Prayer has been .in turn written on a
grain of wheat split lengthwise and a
Ilillossosearamommeamosasareslacmceammanam
.threepenny -piece, There is also a sig-
net ring on the inside of which the
Eame feat was accomplished, '
A man spent nearly ten years draw-:
ing 124 different heads on the surface
of a single cherry stone. Most people
would need a microscope to make out
the details of the faces.. The man re-
fused $2,500 for the stone.
Making Friends on Road.
Sharing the road withothers makes
friends, Blocking the road makes an
an unnecessary enemy. You can't af-
ford to make nemies—they may prove
expensive.
• Siee
p•
"Napoleon eon could P c i d sleepe
P acefglly. ort
the battlefield." - .
"It can't be done in our apartment
house."
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Qntan
ekeengi'liaide
71
---a feast of entertainment
every night
THERE are a score of good reasons why
The Evening Telegram has more readers
in Toronto than any other newspaper. It is
the brightest, cheeriest and newsiest of them
all.
Every evening in The Telegram you enjoy
a feast of the best features—six comic strips,
eros"sword puzzles for children and grown-ups,
serial and short story, fashions, recipes, fairy
tales, radio news and hosts of additional front
rank magazine materia]
Tbe best writers and artists of the world
contribute to it every day.
Every member of your family will enjoy
it. Buy cit to -night at your news agent's or
send in your subscription without delay.
The Evening
TELEGRAM
Toronto, Ontario '
Cleverest Comics s
Latest News, Best Feature
M414'
Andy
Gump
.
e.;
KEEP CHILDREN WELL
DURING 110T-WEIT}IER
Every mother knows how fatal the
hotsummer' months are to small child-
ren; Cholera infantum, •diarrhoea,
dysentery, colic and stomach troubles
are rife at this time and often a pre-
elousel the life is lost after only a few
-hours' illness. The mother who keeps
Baby's Own Tablets in the house feels
safe. The occasional use of the Tab-
lets prevent stomach and bowel trou-
bles, or if trouble comes auddeuly—
as; 'it generally does—the Tablets will
bring the baby safely tl.rough. They
are`. sold by all druggists or will be
mailed on receipt of price, 25 cepts per
box, by The Dr. Williams' Medicine
Co., Brockville, Ont. A little booklet,
"Care of the Baby. in Health and Sick
ness " v} •w it
1 be sent:" t fre
etoan
any mother
reeeretlueste -
A Question.
h'riend-"Well, I guess your're glad
the children • have their vacations
now?" •
Mother—"That's a question when
theirs begins, mine ends."
---'---fr •-
Making Monkeys Work.
In Pattani, a southern province of
Siam, and in Kelantan, one of the un -
federated Malay States, monkeys are
trained' by the natives to pick coco-
nuts and edible seed pods for their
masters.
The romantic notion, says a writer
in "Science," that monkeys naturally
climb• coco-nut palms and throw down
the nuts out of mischief or from a de-
sire to oblige is pure fiction. The mon-
keys must be caught young and care-
fully trained to their jobs by attaching
them to a long pole, on the top of
which is fastened a bunch of fruit. The
animals quickly.learn to •run up to the
fruit and throw it down for their own
food. Having once mastered the main
idea, as it were, they can then be per.-
fectedsin'their profession in the palm
trees.
Only the larger monkeys are success-
ful with the woo -nuts. The smaller
monkeys can manage the pods• which
grow in Small clusters on the ends of
the branches of the sataw tree, and
Which 'p`rovide the natives with an ins
portant-- food nein. Theeeds re-
semble a broad bean and are eaten as
a vegetable,' both raw and cooked, It
Is said that a well-trained monkey can
piclr as many pods in a day as a man,
thus enabling his fortunate owner to
earn a full day's wages with a �r mini- Sav baa �9 -- Insist!
ennui n amount of effort. J
Order from your grocer his best tea and
hell usually send lied Rose."
s good ea
,
The same good tea for' 30 G�`/� !
years. Try it!
With the Flying Mail.
In a recent article in McClure's
Magazine Mr. Howard Mingos has re-
lated some of the deeds and dangers
of the flying maii service from coast
to coast of the 'Gaited States. Some-
thing of the varle'ty of perilous• adven-
ture these men are likely to encounter
after they have crashed or made a
forced landing and escaped with life
and limb from immediate disaster is
indicated by the odd addition to their
flying equipment that experience has
prompted. Flying over the snow coun-
try, they now carry snowshoes lashed
to the side of the plane; army canteens
are carried in. crossingthe waterless
Nevada desert, rix -shooters and rifles
to protect them where wolf packs.
range. In the air their worst enemy is
fog or blinding snow, especially in the
neighborhood of mountains.
One flyer, Clair Vance, came down in
a snowstorm in the Sierra Nevadas a
few weeks ago, and, though his brother
pilots aided by men from the army
sought him for days, they had given
him up for lost by the time he made
his way back to civilization, half-
starved and with his clothes in rags
and his shoes worn through;
Another, Jack Knight, started one
day in bad weather for Rock Springs,,
and on reaching the first mountain
range found the peaks covered with
mist and senow. At that Moment his
engine began coughing. With most of
his power lost Knight looked over the
ide for a possible landing. He was
nable to see the earth through the
murk. Glancing ahead at that instant,
e was startled to find a cliff looming
p in front of him. His plane was al-
nost on the rocks.
Knight worked swiftly at the con-
reive but he was helpless, for a ter -
fin downgust swirling over the moun
ain peak beat upon the wings of his
machine. It kept on out of control
he next moment it had crashed
gainst the ledge high up on the side
f Telephone Canon. The impact tore
ff the nose of the plane and knocked
Knight unconscious. The engine and
e pjropeller lay there in the ice and
now. The rest of the machine, with
night in it, was whirled out into
mac again,
1 where it fluttered utters, about
bo
ut
ke a falling leaf, still in the grip of
at downward blast.
Hours later Knight recovered con
-
iousness and dug himself out of the
now and- splinters at the bottom of
e canon. His nose was broken, and
was almost frozen. From his path
the sky he had observed a ranch
Ouse some ten milers back, and with
at as his objective he staggered pain-
lly and by slow degrees through the
lits.
He reached the house. The people
ere carried him into Laramie, where
was put to bed. Three days in the
spital and Knight was flying again.
Bob Ellis, caught in a downdraft,
shed against the side of a precipice,
ere the plane clung to the snow like
y on the wall. Ellis could do noth-
but sit there and wait for help..An-
er pilot found him a few hours later
an
spread the alarm. A rescue party
rked its way to the top of the moun-
n and lowered ropes. Ellis tied one
them round his waist, and they
steel him a hundred feet or more up
over the top. It was many weeks
ore the plane could be salvaged,
ard's Liniment for Distemper.
He Was "Moon Struck."
s
u
h
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c.
0
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8
K
s
th
se
th
he
in
h'
th
fu
dr
th
he
lio
ora
wh
afi
Ing
oth
a
wo
tal
of
hoi
and
bef
Min
A
one
goo
ly,
reco
sun -
test
fter he slept under the full noon
night, the face of a miner in ICae-
rie, Australia, was twisted curious-
and it was several days before he
vexed. Persons who, have been
struck often will shiver in the hot -
sun, doctors here say.
.;.
Procrastinating Man,
It is curious that during the half-
million'
alfmillion' or more years that man has In-
•hablted the earth, lie has learned to
cultivate only about 300 siiecies of
plants ;out of more than 100,000 that
are known to exist.
A vast new forest is being laid out
in East Anglin. Whet completed it
will stretch for sixteen lilies in twat
unbroken line through *Norfolk awl
Suffolk over what was formerly dere-
lict
Ask for Minerd's andtake in other',
Unless you see the "Bayer
Cross" on tablets you are not
getting the genuine 13aye1• prod-
uct proved safe by millions and
prescribed by physicians for 25
years.
Accept only a
Bayer package
,which contains proven directions
Candy "Bayer" boxes of 12 tablets
.Also bottles of 24 and 100 --Druggists
Aspirin Is tmio trade illtek (registered to
Canaan) of eater ]vialtarreture of elotee
ttteticacidestor of Sallcyla-acid.
Wavelets of Wisdom.
Never trust the man who won't trust
others.
Every man has his price, but they
are not all worth it.
Good-bye is quite the longest word in
any language.
It doesn't need a large compliment
to swell a small head.
A little kissing's lots of fun 1f you
kiss the proper one.
Anyone can talk, but it takes a real-
ly clever person' to understand.
Some people are so mean that
grudges are the only things they ever
pay.
The hardest things in the world to
keep are your money and your temper.
Some men are so absent-minded
that they are constantly forgetting
tl},emseIves .
Weighing,only thr.x pounds, a baby
in a Bath hospital was n•aced at once
in an incubator and fed each hour
with a teaspoonful oi. whey.
Use
NIGHT to'
MORNING &
,(E,EP YOUR EYES
:LEAN CLEAR AND i•5EALTri
!hl'Fd FOi'. r)'Et ETR CAFit' EOOS• ntrittNR CO.CI)CAUo,VSIi
HUNTERS
Take a bottle of Minard's to
the woods with you. Splendid
for sprains, cuts, bruises,
"KING OF PAM" M•
Qthural
Mum I
is cooling
and
r freshinq
after
shay ng
Men who have ten-
der, sensitive skins,
easily irritated by
shaving,will find Cu-
ticura Preparations ideal.
The new freely -lathering
Cuticura Soap Shaving Stick permits
shaving twice daily without irrita-
tion of the skin. Cuticura Talcum,
an antiseptic powder, is soothing
and cooling to the most tender skin.
Sample Each Fns by DML Address Canadian
Depot: • "Statham, Ltd, Montreal," Price, Soap
26e. Omtitmcnt 26 and bee. Talcum 25c.
" Cuticura Shaving Stick 25c,
COULD NOT
SLEEP NIGHTS
Pains and Headaches Rea
lieved by Taking L 7Aia E
Pinkharn's Vegetable
Compound
Dublin, Ontario, -9 was weak and
;tregular, with pains and headaches
and could not sleep nights. 1 learned
about Lydia E. Pmkham's Vegetable
Compound by reading the letters in the
newspapers and tried it because I
wanted to get better. I have got good
results from it as I feel a lot stronger
and ain not troubled with such bad
headaches as 1 used to be and am more
regular. 1 am gaining in weight all
the time and 1 tell my friends what
kind of medicine I am taking. You may
use my letter as a helpto others."-*
Mrs. JAMES R.ACE°, ox 12, Dublin,
Ontario.
Halifax Nurse Recommends
Halifax, N. S. •--• "I am a maternity
nurse and have recommended Lydia 11.
leis kham's Vegetable Compound to•
many women who were childless, also,
to women who need a good tonic. 1 am.
English and my husband is American,'
and he told me of Lydia E. Pinkhatn.
while in England. I would appreciate,
copy or two of your little books on
women's ailments. I have one which 1
teep to lend. 1 will willingly answer
etters from any womman 'asking about
he Vegetable Compound. "—Mrs. S. XI
0I,EMAN, 24 thiiackze Street, ialifa
Nova Scotia.
a
1
t
•
Issue No. 3i --'^a5.
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