HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1939-06-08, Page 2This ShipWill Take The Kingand QueenHome
The "Empress of Britain," handsome C.P.R. steamship, is calling for Bing
George and Queen Elizabeth at Halifax, Tune 15, to carry them back
home to England.
Modern
Etiquette
BY ROBERTA LEE
6e011•..••••04•-• •
1.—Isn't patience a virtue that
everyone should do his best to ac-
quire, in order to get the most out
of life?
2.—If a woman's stationery is
engraved, Mrs. Arthur Davis, and
she signs a letter Ethel Davis, is
it necessary for her to write (Mrs.
Arthur) in parentheses?
3.—What would be a good toast
to give at a birthday party?
4. When people persist in
talking at the theatre, is it permis-
Bible to ask them to stop?
5.—Is there any difference be-
tween the ways one should eat
soup and bouillon?
6.—What kind of gifts does the
tenth wedding anniversary call
for?
Answers
1.—Yes. "He who has most pa-
tience best enjoys the world," says
an old proverb. 2.—No. 3.—
"May you live to be a hundred
—and, after that, make up your
own mind." 4.—Yes, but do so
as quietly and pleasantly as pos-
sible. If they resent the request
or ignore it, speak to the usher.
Only the most rude and ill-bred
people are guilty of this. 5.—Yes;
a• person eats soup, but drinks
anything in bouillon or consomme
cups. 6.—This is the tin anniver-
sary.
�-t"1e-+-�-e•a�-o�a�o-s-a-o-a-s-a-q-s- b
Farm Forum. t
amount of Calcium Sulphate from
which the plant is able to get Cal-
cium.
Naturally we could make sug-
gestions more to the point if we
had a sample of your soil, but I
presume that you practise a good
crop rotation and apparently use
considerable manure, I would
suggest that you try 200 lbs. per
acre of 0-16-6. This would cost
you approximately $3.00 per acre.
Applied at the rate I have men-
tioned, it should give you an in-
crease of approximately 15 to 20
bus, per acre of oats or barley;
about 6 bus. per acre of wheat.
Lesser quantities of course, will3
give you results.
Q,—Could you give nle any ine
formation in regard to :sowing salt
on land. I am dealing in salt this
spring and ; quite a few farmers
bought salt to put on land, Others
are inquiring about it, I have
had no experience with it what-
ever, If you can tell me how to
sow and what it is supposed to do,
I would have something to show.
—A,B., Oxford County.
A.—In answer to yours of the
19th, 1 would say that we do not
advise the use of Salt as anap-
plication to the soil. Salt doee
not supply any plant food whatso-
ever. All it does is to liberate a
certain amount of Potash, heneen;'
the continuous use of Salt simply
means the impoverishment of soil.
Some farmers have used it on
mangels with some results, but
there is no logical reason for its
use, and we do not advise it.
Ceremony With
Bread, Cheese
Started in the days of the reign
of Queen Victoria, the traditional
bread and cheese ceremony on the.
Six Nations Reservation was ob-
served May 24.
Seven hundred loaves of bread
and 700 lbs. of cheese were pur-
chased for the occasion and the
residents of the reservation were
served from long tables in the
Community Hall of Ohsweken.
Each received a slice of bread and
a liberal helping of cheese.
What Science
is
Doing
HALTS NEAR-SIGHTEDNESS
It has been discovered that my-
opia, or progressive near -sighted -
noes, which has inflicted. blindness
or thick -lensed glasses on thous-
ands, may be checked by the use-
'of
se'of adrenalin.
The treatment is simple. It in-
volves only the use of adrenalin
eye drops over a period of months,
and it may be done at home.
• INSANITY NOT INHERITED
New proof that insanity is not
inheritable was announced last
week before the American Psychi-
• atric .Association.
An intensive study of 330 in-
mates of state asylums and of their
parents, brothers and sisters, and
other relatives has failed complete-
ly to show that the diseases fol-
lowed any pattern of inheritance
such as the patterns which hold
true for physical characteristics.
TO SAVE LAND FERTILITY
The Royal Society of Canada,
was told last week at Montreal,
th;.t a large -seeded. drought -resis-
tant plant will be produced short-
ly for Western Canada, designed
to aid in maintaining fertility in
dangerous dust areas.
Conducted by Profesor Henry G.
*Bell of the Ontario Agricultur-
al College, Guelph, with the co-
operation of the staff of the
O.A.C.
Q.—I have not been sowing
any commercial fertilizer with
grain and while I am getting crops
the equal of any of my friends
who do; I feel that could I obtain
a fertilizer that would stiffen
straw it would be of advantage.
While grain does not lodge badly,
I think a small amount of fertil-
izer of the nature to stiffen straw
would improve sample and per-
haps the yield. I recognize the
fact that 125 lbs. per acre of the
usual fertilizer would stiffen the
straw as desired but would not in-
crease yield sufficiently to offset
the cost. Twenty-five lbs, per acre
of the proper ingredient should, I
think, do the trick. I would like
your opinion and as to best avail-
able information re this matter.—
W'.M.H., Wellington County-
A.—The elements that have to
do with strength of straw appear
to be Calcium and Potash, hence it
is that we find a judicious amount
of Phosphated Potash Fertilizer
usually results in giving a strong-
er straw with an earlier and more
even crop than where no fertiliz-
er had been applied. The Super-
phosphate contains a considerable
SHE WAS A VICTIM
OF HEADACHES
K ruschen Got at the Cause
This woman's headaches were
df the gripping kind that reduce
the sufferer to something like
helplessness. She tried tablets.
She tried pills. All without avail.
Only Kruschen could help her.
I used to get very bad head-
aches," she writes. "No tablets or
pills of any kind could relieve
them. One morning, casually, I
cried K•ruschen Salts in a glass of
hot water. I continued taking it,
but I have not had one. of those
awful headaches since. Iiruschen
suits lee better than anything else.
1 find it very good,"—(Mrs,) L.
A.W.
Headaches can dearly always be
traced to sluggishliees of the kid-
neys, liver and intestines, and to
the unsuspected retention in the
system of stagnating waste ma-
terial which poisons the blood, The
numerous salts in IC.rusehen stim-
ulate the internal organs to heal-
thy, regular action so that no
clogging waste is allowed to col-
lect, lour inside is kept clean
and serene. Andthat is just how
1ruschen Salts brings quick and
lasting relief from headaches,
Scouts of Two Nations Unite In Celebration
Taking part in celebrations to commemorate the King's birthday, Canadian Boy Scouts are shown crossing the
International Bridge at Alexandria, N.Y., to plant a George Washington black walnut tree and a Canadian
maple tree on American soil. A large group of American Scouts did' the same on Canadian. soil.
Have You Heard
Having lost her husband, an old
lady gave instructions for the
'wording on the tombstone, the
ending to be "Rest in Peace."
In the meantime, her late hus-
band's will disclosed the fact that
she had been treated rather bad-
ly. She immediately hurried to
the reason and told him to omit
the words "Rest In Peace."
"I'm sorry," he replied, "but
they have already been carved."
"Very well," rejoined the old
lady. "Just add, 'Until we meet
again'."
A pet lamb belonging to the
daughter of a local farmer in-
vaded !ower beds and ruined
dozens of tulips. As a warn-
ing the animal was taken in-
to tlee vegetable garden and
shown the mint.
The quack was selling a tonic
which he declared would make
leen live to a great age.
"Look at nle," he declared.
"Hale and hearty, and Fm over
300 years. old."
"Is he really that old?" asked
a listener of the youthful assist-
ant.
"I can't say," replied the assist-
ant. "I've only worked for him
100 years."
First Cannibal—The chief
has hay fever.
Second Cannibal —Serves
him right. We warned hire
not to eat that grass widow.
Customer: "That chicken 1
bought yesterday had no wish -
bon"
i3ti�tcher (smoothly) : "It was a
happy and contented chicken,
madam, and had nothing to wish
for."
There was a slaschthuall, one
so long.
He hadn't any notion
How long it took to netifj
His tail of hia shtriotion;
And so it hapcned, while his
eyes
Were filling with woe and
sadness
His little tail went wagging on
Because of previous gladness.
Black is Supreme
ain For Autumn
Browns Next in Importance
"Rembrandt" Greys
For Evening
PARIS—The midseason showings
Indicate that black is again su-
preme for fall. The browns are
next in importance; they are large-
ly in the reddish range, running
from very dark tones to rosy
fawns. Auburns and tawny shades
are continued. Beige looks season-
able when trimmed with beaver.
Greys are featured. Alix's new
"Rembrandt" greys are stunning
for evening. This designer's dark
bottle, myrtle or moss greens are
also interesting, Numerous Aut-
umn -leaf, grape and plum tones are
presen ted.
Pinks for Summer
Pinks are introduced by many
houses for summer afternoons and
fall evenings.' Chanel, Balenclaga,
gner
and other designers s endorse Main.
bocher's vivid yellowish aviary -
pink gamut as a welcome change
to the overworked syelamen tones.
Lelongs salmon, peach and banana
tones fall into the same color
trend. Many bright reds are shown;
they avoid the purplish cast.
BINEIEI!TTWINE
Manufacturer's
Pries
Finest Quality
600 and 650 foot grade,
Large or Small Balls.
Special Prices on Pure Manilla
Rope and Wire Cable
See your Club Secretary, Co-op-
erative Manager, or write
The UNITED FARMERS'
CO-OPERATIVE CO",
Li sited
Cor. »tike and George Sts.
TORONTO# ONTARIO
Two-year-old Dyokitza Kastrat-
ovitch of Vinitzka, Montenegro, is
believed to be the world's young-
est smoker, his father, a chain
smoker, having taught hint to puff
at a cigarette when the baby was
only 18 months old.
Another method of removing
hot dish marks from polished
tables is to make a paste of salt
and oil and coat the marks thick-
ly with this. Leave on an hour or
so, and after polishing in the usual
way it will be found that all the
stains have disappeared.
A breeding program to produce
this perennial plant through com-
bining favorable characteristics
of wheats and wheat grasses is
being carried out by the Dominion
experimental farms and the Nati-
onal Research Council.
Four -Day Tour
Of U. S. Packed
Every Minute of Royal Visit
Across the Border Is
Taken Up
Not a spare minute is left for
Britain's Ring and Queen on the
detailed program of their visit to
the United States.
And the minutes have been so
carefully allotted that, to meet
their engagements, the King and
Queen will have to keep exactly
to schedule from the time they
ones the border at 10.35 p.m., E.A.
T. June 7, until they leave Hyde
Paris, N.Y., at midnight, June 11,
to return to Canada.
The Ring and Queen arrive in
Washington at noon Thursday,
Juno 8 and into a stay of two days
and one night there will compress:
Sojourn In Washington
The greeting at Union Station
by President and. Mrs. Roosevelt
and an official reception commit-
tee; a luncheon at the White
House; sightseeing in Washington;
*a garden party at the •British, Em-
bassv; a stare diener at the` White
,diouse;'Finite 'e 1 'hp a -reception -and
musicale; a reception at the Bri-
tish Embassy for members of the
British colony; a visit to the Capi-
tol; a visit to the Washington
Navy Yard; a trip to Mt. Vernon
aboard the Presidential yacht Po-
tomao to lay a wreath at Wash-
ington's tomb; a visit to the Civ-
ilian Conservation Corps Camp at
Fort Hunt, Va.; laying a wreath
on the tomb of the Unknown Sol-
dier, Arlington, Va.; tea at the
White House; and dinner at the
British Embassy for the President
and Mrs. Roosevelt.
To President's Home
From here they will go by train
to Red Bank, N.J., then by auto-
mobile to Ft, Hancock, Sandy
Hook, where they will embark on
a destroyer and proceed with na-
val escort up the bay to the Bat-
tery, New York City, Governor
Lehman -and Mayor LaGuardia will
welcome them,
Afterwards they will drive
through New York City to the
World's Fair where they Will have
luncheon and visit the Canadian,
Irish and British Pavilions. Later
in the afternoon they are to visit
Columbia University and then drive.
to Hyde Park, arriving at 7.15 p,m.
They will spend the night and
the next day, Sunday, at IIyde
Park and leave at midnight by
train for Canada, crossing the bor-
der during the night.
Seal Of Fewer
If the Crown were to leave
Great Britain this year it would be
for the first time in history. But
the Great Seal must stay behind,
as without it the machinery of
government would, at least theor-
etically, be unable to function.
In the days when kings couldn't
read 'or write it was indeed indis-
pensable. But gradually, as the
keepers of the Great Seal became
too powerful, and the experiments
of the Privy Seal and the Sign
Manual also put too much power
into the hands of a single servant
of the Crown, the ofllee became
split up so that now there are sev-
eral Secretaries of State.
Germany's supply of free labor
is p-'actic.Elly exhausted.
RIGHT Ti -IIS VERY AilNVUrg
How GY as Fe I?
}
Tired? Irritable? No ambi-
tion? Look at your watch
—note the time. The same
time tomorrow, compare
how you feel then with the
way you do right now! In
the meantitme, stop at your drug store
and, tonight, drink a cup of Garfield
Tea.
Tonight — "Clean Up Inside"' — Feel
Different Tomorron!
Lose that let -down feeling. Let Gar-
field Tea clean away undigested wastes
—intestinal "left -overs". Acts gently,
promptly, thoroughly. Drink like or-
dinary,tea. l0c. — 25e.
Write for Free Sam.
Vple of Garfield head.
ache Ponder — also
Garfield Tea , used
0 for const ipation, acid
indigestion, and tc
keep clean inside." Write: Garfield
Tea Co., Dept. 61, 1 Close ,A_venue, To-
ronto 5, Canada.
ALTO ACCESSORIES
USED CAR AND TRUCK PARTS.
Buy with confidence. A square
deal always. ':our mail order giv-
en prompt individual attention.
Used parts for all makes. Satisfae-
tion guaranteed or money refund-
ed. Osler Avenue Auto Parts, 95
Osler Ave., Toronto,
BABY CRICKS
CHICKS FOR SALO
4 WEEKS OLD I''ULLETS 30e—
• Large Type White Leghorns, Rock
Leghorn cross Breeds and Barred
Rocks, Day old chicks 8c also. 2
weeks old chicks and cockerels.
—Lakeview Poultry harm, Wein.
Bros., Exeter, Ont.
BADEN CHICKS FOR SALE
SAV MONEY ON YOUR .TUNE
chicks, Effective June 8th Bar-
red Rooks, New Hampshire Reds,
White _Rocks, Hybrids $8.95, JO%
,Pullets $12.95; Cockerels $8.00;
j Leghorns $8.45; Pullets $17.45. Big
I Egg Quality hatched from 25 to
• 30 ounce eggs, Heavy Breeds 310.
25, Pullets $16.45, Cockerels $9.00,
I Leghorns $9.75, Pullets $19.90.
Prompt delivery.—Baden Electric
Chick Hatchery Limited, Daden,
Ontario.' ,
TWJEDOL10 MOCKS Volt SALE
GOVERNMENT APPROVED
Chicks from blood tested breed-
ers at the right price. Prompt de-
11verY. We hatch 65,000 per week.
Grade A Heavyz Breeds $10.45;
t0
y
Pullets is
316.75; . cvcte
cels $8.
c
00; Leghorns, $9.J5, Pullets $0.75;
Extra Profit Grade the kind that
weigh two pounds per hundred
more when hatched, Heavy Breeds
311.85, Pullets $18.90, Cockerels
$9.00, "Leghorns $11.48, Pullets $28.
45. Special Mating slightly high-
gPoultrr. Free
Tweddie dChickar1d Hat h.eries
Limited, Fergus, Ontario.
advertising..
IeltA) CIIICItS I+'an sALi]
BRAY CHICKS ARRIVE ALL BAL-
l'e and healthy at Trinity y,
North Shore, Quebec, in rnid-win-
ter. In hot weather you need
hardy, vigorous, chicks too. Order
Pray chicks today. Bray Hatch-
ery, 120 John' Street North, Ham-
ilton, Ontario.
i'HE 1,ARr.iER voUIZ PULLETS
lay the more money you mural to
make. NOW --you need the fast
growth for which 13ray chicks are
famotus. Order yotn' shirks today
from Pray fletchery, 130 John
;Street North, Hamilton, Ontario.
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY
START YOUR OWN BUSINESS.
Every dollar sale brings you sev-
enty-five cents profit. Write Ec-
onomy Distributing Company, Cur-
tis Avenue, Leamington, Ontario.
FILMS DEVELOPED
FREE ENLARGEMENT WITH EV-
ery roll film developed and eight
high gloss prints 25c. 8 enlarged
prints 25e. Reprints sanio prices.
Brightling Studio, 295. Richmond
' St. East, Toronto.
ENTERTAINERS
GARDEN PARTIES, CONCERTS,
Dances. Assured success. Try Can-
ada's most Musical Famous Pam -
Versatile Juvenile Radio Art-
fists. Write Thompson Trio, Lis-
towel.
emihLty HELI' WANTED
SPARE TIME INCOME.
IS OFFERED TO RESPONSIBLE
WOSian with good local OOntacts.
•Leading magazine publisher seeks
neighborhood subscription work-
er. Experience unnecessary, com-
missions liberal, generous bonus.
ea State age. Give . references.
Box 20, Room 421, 73 Adelaide St.
W. Toronto.
dAlft GOODS
WCGS. TOUPE8, 'i'RANSJ?Oli?IA-
[lone, Switches. Curls. and all types
et finest duality Hair tloode. Write
for illustrated eatalontte. llontldea-
tial terms arranged, Poronto BUM -
an Hair snugly Co.. 628 Bathurst,
Toronto..
MAcrinvnnit
BANDY GREASE CONTAiNER AND
rivat'auteed. Clean
one minute Joh, "Write (1. 11. A.
ltialchow, Stavely, Alberta,
Issue No. 23 '39
MEDICAL
HAY FEVER, 80.5E FEVEi2 SUP•-
ferers. Money Back Remedy- $1.00.
Canada Herb Co:, 'Windsor, On-
tario.
NEW Theis Fon siAL)
RESIDENTS OP ONTARIO BUY
Tires aIx the Budget Plan. Lowv
woekly payments. For particulars
write Entrap Tire Corepany, 3113
Royce Avenue, Toronto.
lirI&1416 DEVELOPEII
PTLMS DEVELOPED, TW4) PRINTS
of each' and FREE ENLARGE-
MENT coupon 25c.—Offset Photo-
graphy Dep, "A", 2 Ytussell St.,
Toronto.
i'EI8S6,3AL
MARRY—HUNDREDS 9'i) CI100S1a
Manyfrom. with means, ra.
rn
er' daughters. Widows with
Property. Particulars lilt. Con-
fidential. Boa 128 Calgary, A1-
berta,
QUIT TOBACCO, SNUFF, EASiLY,
inexpensively. „Home remedy,
timonials. Guaranteed. Advice
free. 13artlett's, Box 1, Winnipeg,
SI.IIVING mAtliiIN1:S dt lit e$PL1ES
FOR SEWING MACI31NES, 1113 -
pairs, supplles—ell meltes, new
or. trade -hi, reconditioned
rnneh-
ares in stockWrite A, .i5ert
& Son, 350 Yonr,e St;, "rutorrio_..
STAif!"S
NEW VOL] NI)LANIT SPAM' 1'8, 40 „lit-
tetent 60c, catalogue voile 3.1,4;
Pileo lista furnished. Eli, Sehand*
men, llotrvood, Nelvfoundiand.
\V1911' GO GIt1E1
THOSE GREY, STREAKS IN YOUR •
hair are dead against you. U1l
cloubtedly the finest remedy fOt
grey hair is Morgan's Pomade..
This is not a dye, but scicnlifical-
ly prepared treatment which re.'l
vitaltees the Bair. :.' ounce 'keel
large fon„ ounce ti.SU, postage
Prepaid. Order frons ---1t, A. 1"nihil! .
'lt:anadtan Agent) 011 Blom, St.
West, pronto. Iltade Lind sold In ,
England for 00 your„.
Areerieall cosriietics may he in
trothiced into Litbirarsia.
1