HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1937-03-04, Page 7n ILA rrIM(
Naa
1.. Lyons 4 Ca. (Canada) Ltd,
Toronto d Mooned
6 ado Skilled
In Many Craft,.
WINNIPEG, — Miss Prudence Hoc.
king, R.N., who for the last five years
has been in ch'ar'ge of the Anglican
mission hospital at Pangnurtung, Baf-
fin Land, speaking in this city, show.
ed models in walrus ivory, of a sled,
dogs, a boat with its thin skin sail,
and many other objects skilfully carv-
ed and decorated by the Eskimo.
She also had models of an Eskimo
man, woman and child, made by an
Eskimo girl at the mission from seal
skin, and showing remarkable skill.
Her own parka and other garments
which she wore in the North drew
expressions of admiration for the Arc-
tic needle -women who made them.
Miss Hockin told of the beginnings
of the hospital work, how the Eski-
mo at first were suspicious and they
,,brought their. sick only when they
thought they were going to die. Won-
derful success in several •apparently
hopeless cases brought confidence
and today the eight-bod hospital has
so much work to do that a second
nurse is Iieeded.
Miss Hockin will leave i,. April for
Moose Factory where she will be in
charge of a new Anglican hospital
recently built. She is giving addres-
ses before Sunday schools and mis-
sionary societies during the interven-
ing weeks.
Morning Thanks
I thank Thee, Lord, this morn that 1
In health rose from my bed;
And
for the roof, I'
as1 h
1 t went 18 by,
'That wattled above my head.
I thank Thee for the raiment fit
Thou dost to me afford;
With hunger at Thy board.
T thank Thee for some useful task—
So many, Lorca, have none!-
For love in which the soul may bask
At home when toil is done.
la thank Thee for the hopes that
A. rainbow In. the sky;
I:iir'c" ' de Thou . grace su
--Alexander Louis Fraser.
To Kalize
Acid indigestion
Anydigestion
y Fast
People Everywhere Are Adopting
This Remarkable "Phillips" Way
The way to gain almost incredibly
quick relief, from stomach condition
:arising from overacidity, is to alka-
lize the stomach quickly with Phil-
lips' Milk of Magnesia.
You take either two teaspoons of
the liquid Phillips' after meals; or
two Phillips' Milk of Magnesia Tab-
lets. Almost instantly "acid indiges-
tion" goes, gas from hyperacidity,
"acid -headaches"—from over -in-
dulgence in food or smoking — and
nausea are relieved. You feel made
over; forget you have a stomach.
Try this Phillips' way if you have
any acid stomach upsets. Get either '
the liquid "Phillips" or the remark-
able, new Philips' Milk of Magnesia
Tablets. Only 25¢ for a big box of
tablets at drug stores.
ALSO IN TABLET FORM:
Each tiny tablet is the equiv-
alent of a teaspoonful of
genuine Phillips' Milk of
Magnesia.
MADE IN
CANADA
HILLopsy
MAGNESIA
ewer
I5
RIM IN BACK
rk.
QF CAM. meat
asy masertlitsm.. FAIR QIL,•
$i.25 Alitlmggists _ leudlthe Wig Singed
Also e:coltent for Temporary Deafness
and Head Noise* due to eontrestion
caused by colds, Fla end swimming.
A. O. LEONARD, Inc.
70 Fifth Ave.. New York City
eafness
,READ215
La idmar5:li in The •
Che se aker Art
Monument to Man Who Opened
First Factory in U.S.
Rome in Italy, the Eternal City,
has been famous down through the
ages,, but comparatively little has
been heard about 17ome, N.Y. Recent-
ly, however, it gained some promin-
ence when a monument to the foun-
der of the cheese factory system in
the United States was unveiled in
that city. The monument has been
erected to Jesse Williams, a farmer
at Rome, N.Y., who in 1851 opened his
first commercial cheese factory, us-
ing the milk from herds other than
his own. As in Canada, all cheese
prior to that date had been made on
individual farms.
An interesting story is attached to
the origin of the enterprise, Like the
most of his neighbours, Jesse Wil-
liams was making cheese from milk
of his own herd and was known lo-
cally for the fine cheese he produced.
When his son married and started
farming on his own account, the fa-
ther suggested to the cheese buyer
that he should purchase the sons
cheese under the same contract as
his, the father's. The son however,
was,somewhat fearful that he would
not be able to produce as good cheese
as his father and thereby ruin his fa-
ther's reputation as a cheesemaker.
At first, Jesse Williams planned to
go to his son's farm every day and
help him in his cheese -making, but
eventually it was decided for the son
to take his milk to his father's farm
every day and the milk from both of
'the farms simultaneously converted
into cheese. Other neighbors asked
to be allowed to send their milk, so
in 1851 the first cheese factory was
built, capable of dealing with the milk
of the neighbourhood.
In Canada, in the Province of Ont-
ario, the first record of a cheese fac-
tory is dated 1864, and from that time
both in Ontario, and Quebec the devel-
opment of the industry was rapid.
By 1901 there were 2,497 cheese fac-
tories in Canada, 55S of which made
both butter and cheese, 1,223 of the
factories operating in Quebec prov-
ince and• 1,547 in 'On,•uio. Although
production: figures are not -available
for the years immediately succeeding
1,900, the record of cheese exports for
the year ended Jane 30, 1904, as re-
ported by the Dairy Branch, Domin-
ion Department of Agriculture, shows
that 233,930,716 pounds or ch,.ese
were e sported, which is taken to in-
dicate that the production of cheese
in 1903 was the largest in the history
of the industry. Since then there has
been a decline both. in the number of
factories and protluc ieil.
Blares Jrnd of enee
For Petty Thefts
LONDON, Ont.— Indolent 'teen-
aged boys too lazy either to learn
or to work, allegedly responsible for
an outbreak of petty thieving and
house burglaries in London recently,
were criticized by Crown Attorney
Norman Newton enlarging upon re-
marks he made in., City Court.
The boys, declared Mr. Newton,
stay in school until they are 16,
hindering other pupils anxious • to
learn. When they leave school they
take up lives of idleness.
The Crown Attorney thought it
would' be a good idea to set 14 years
as the age limit for school attend-
ance. When a boy reaches that age,
his teacher should know whether he
will develop into something he con-
tended.
The Crown Attorney's early re-
marks were made during the trial of
Theodore Dale, 16, and James
Smith, 18, both accused of stealing
an electric iron from a hardware
store. They were placed on suspend-
ed sentence.
�Scratching
" REILIEVE ITCHING In A Minute
Even the most stubborn Itching of eczema, blotches.
pimples, athletes foot, rashes and other akin erup-
tions quickly yields to Dr. Dennis' cooling, madam.tlo, liquid D. D. D. PRESCRIPTION. Its gentle oIL
soothe tho irritated skin. ,Clear, greaseless and stain-
less—dries fast, Stops the most Intense Hotting In.
stonily, A 35a trial bottlo, at drug stores, proves It--
ortnoneyback. Aakfor D. D, 0,' PRESCRIPTION. 2e
COLDS
:Head Colds: Heat fvlinard'a
and inhale it. Chest Colds
and Sore Throat: Heat, then.
Si rub well into effected parte.
Real relief . . quickly 1!
The Great Crash
.Richardson Wood in Review of
,Reviews, (New York) writes:— W.e.
have been passing through the rlth
anniversary of the great stock mar-
ket collapse. That collapse was the
dramatic announcement of a depres-
sion, and the depression has been
widely described as a national em-
ergency of an importance equal to
war. Yet the anniversary called
forth no parades, no speeches from
flag -draped stands; just a few moa
est notes on the financial pages, ae-
companied by a fistful of figures.'
The stock market has been off the
front page for years: Perhaps We
are indifferent because we feel that
it cannot happen again, We know
that stock prices have recovered'
somewhat, but we know that busi-
ness has recovered too and that pres-
ent prices for stocks ate probably
reasonable. We know that the Gov.
enment has stepped in to police the
market, and that the police agency
which it has established has been
praised by everyone including those.
whom it is designed to regulate.
Here, perhaps, is the point at which
our comfort should be disturbed by
slight suspicions. It certainly never
seemed to us in the past, when we
used to . be interested in the `bar-:
atter of the wild life along Wa11
Street, that they were the sort of
people who got religion.
A "Friendly" Editor
Mr. A. R. Kennedy, formerly
editor of the Beacon -Herald and now
managing editor of the Peterborough
Examiner, has brought new distinc-
tion to his newspaper and to himself,
points out the Stratford Beacon-
Hexad. According to a compilation
of the Dominion Press Clipping
Bureau, of Toronto, the Examiner
papers in the number of quotations
by other p41b1ications throughout the
Dominion in the last quarter of 1936.
Of course, readers of the Beacon-
Herald can uderstand why he
Peterborough paper is so widely
quoted. During the ten years of
Mr. Kennedy's association with the
Beacon -Herald his friendly person-
ality was written all •over the ,edi-
torial page. IIe became known to
the paper's readers as one of thein -
selves. That is an elusive goal to-
wards which all sensible editors
strive, but the portals are not clut-
tered with arrivals.
Our readers know that Concession
Ten and the little red hen have not
been forgotten, for they see fre
quently on this page articles from
the much punished typewriter of the
Peterborough editor. And the, evi-
dence is�that few editorial pagesin
the Dominion are considered com-
plete without some bit of relirine
from the Examiner.
Latest /n Wishes
elf.; Wipe Dishes
Chain -Letter Writes Graduate
From Dimes to Dish Towels
In Brooklyn
NEW YORK — The fugitives from
a chain -letter gang are at it again,
this time not with dimes, but with
dishcloths.
Brooklyn, it developed last week, is
the seat of the new chain letter ini-
quity, and it is strictly for women.
No men are wanted unless they 11111 -
pert to have a yen for tea towels.
The system is the same as it u;;
two years ago when everyone was
writing everyone else, urging them to
send dimes to perfect strangers and
not to "break the chain." The Only
difference is that the reeiiiielts are
*asked. to send towels instead of the
coins. It works in threes. Recipients
of a towel ietter are asked to send a
tea towel to the person whose name
heads a list of three names. The
three recipients of a towel letter car-
ry on the chain to nine, and finally
the chain goes to 27, so that the ori-
ginal sender of three letters gets 27
tea towels — if all goes well.
The good women of Brooklyn, re-
port the idea is working well and that
dishcloths are arriving in abundance.
SHE WAS AFRAID
TO SHAKE HANDS
Rheumatism in Joints Caused
Her Intense Pain
Read this letter from a woman des-
cribing the manner in which she was
affected by rheumatism.
"For several years," she writes, 1?I
suffered with rheumatism of the joints
especially in my hands, and this caus-
ed me intense pain. I was even
afraid to shake hands with anyone,
for it made me suffer terribly. I began
taking ICruschen Salts regularly, and
after a little while my pains disap-
Peered completely. 3 tut naturally de-
lighted with liruschen." -- (Miss) X.
The pains and stiffness of rheuma-
tism are frequently caused by deposi-
its of ugIe acid in the muscles and
joints.
lee,1•
D,Ume 0
us salts inrte --
chen assist in stimulating your River
end kidneys to healthy, regular ac -
tip,, and so help them to get rid of
tie exoess uric acid.
Issue No. 10 '37
D---1
Stuff and
Nonsense
The Worst of Jutland
The real tea drinker cannot go very
long without his teal Alfred Noyes
tells a 'delightful story about one of
them, During the war he wag writing
up important lncidents and was as.
Signed to interview sailors right af-
ter: the battle of Jutland.
He found a sailor who had been
.stint .aloft, and had to stay there dur-
ing the whole engagement with half.
ton shells hurtling past his head.
Thinking to got an exciting "story"
iron= him, Mr, Noyes asked him to
describe his sensations during those
terrifying hours.
K,lll.the man said was: "Well, of
Course, I had to mist, my tea!"
Two professors were having an argu.
inept in an inn.
i One called out, "Waiter, bring me an
encyclopedia."
Waiter, (returning without it); "I
am sorry sir, we haven't got one in
this 'hotel, But what is it you gents
would like to know."
Sotto Voce
Mrs. Brown lied occasion to repri-
aand her colored cook rather sharp-
ly. The victim looked daggers but
,Said nothing until she reached the
kitehen, where her voice could be
hear in shrill vituperation. So loud
became the clamor that her mistress
hiiried . downstairs.
"Why, Liza," she began 'n amaze-
ment. "Who - earth are you talking
j "Ah ain't talkin' to nobcdy," was
the reply, abut ah don't ]ceer who in
t Is' house heah's me."
Puzzled
„Motorist (to friend) •: "How much
trol is in the tank, Bill?"
ill: "The indicator says "half" but
on't know i hether it means half
I or half -empty.
Psychology
tNlegistrate: "How can you be so
aa' as to swindle people who put
i lence, in, you?"
o r:. t,
saner: Well your worship,
1,
try are the only ones that you can
»,.srinitle."
I;.
ac One Way of Thinking
lThe president of a firm of tuners
renovators beld up a garment for
foreman's inspection.
ou see what I mean, \Viffle," he
"and look the other dresses bear
at: Look" — he turned over a
ad brought several articles of
', wear. into view —. "notice how
resses;that were re -colored .by
er men are streaked and spot -
tile these here" — he indicated
pile on the left — "which were
by the yornger 1 aps are per -
it
Ali, yes," said the foreman. "The
d fellows have lost their eyesight
, :such work. I'd get rid of them,
but it's a hard thing for me to do. For
'0me of them have been with us forty
ears or snore."
fI know," remarked the president,
bet 'they must go. Rememhee,
flow, that ons :PS.; young dye go'!"
Value •r+f . n Opinion
ttcxr,41-.Duly is entitled to his own
anion.,,
"Of course," answered Miss Coy-
ne. "But you don't always know
at to do with a perfectly good opin-
> unless you can enjoy the lonely
satisfaction of writing it on a post-
.,
bard and mailing it to a radio station."
•
Anywhere But —
The golfer who has paid his club
dues, settled for some lessons and
bought an entire outfit finds it hard
to believe that the game s`ertect in
Scotland.
Shaky '
Betty' Gust engaged) : "Doris, n
youimagine what it is lik• to be in
Leet, to sit next to the man you adoI•e
and feel your very innermost soul
vibrate?"
•Doris: "Of course, my dear. I feel
like that every time Joe takes me out
in his old car."
"Until the hearts of men are
changed', the League of Nations
cinnoa be the guarantee of peace
wlneh its founders tried to provide
ler the world."
-Sir Austen Chamberlain.
Need Bu ldln 4 ?
`X,JHEN you feel
t out - of sorts,
when you've no
appetite, or stom-
ach gives trouble,
with gas or dys-
pepsia, try Dr.
Pierce's G o l d e n
Medical Discovery.
For coughs du to
g e,
colas try this tome.
Read what Robert Wurr, Jr., of S6 Water
St,, Galt, Ont,, said: "Dr. Pierce's Golden
Medical Discovery has proved itself to be
a fine system builder and for coughs due
to cold it is tete best. It clears up the
cough and makes a person feel 5t as a
fiddle," Buy now of your nearby druggist
New size, tablets 50c, liquid $1,00 & 51,35.
Write for free metrical advice to Dr,
tetras Clinic, Buffalo, N. Y.
o.
DOUBLE Automatic Booklet
911
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lo
nada afig` w
�,'.—iW--m--uo--w�-nu—uu—int—no•—m—un—�u—.in--un—int—wi—mi-.«un—uo—.K..-.m..-eu--.m—m._ —ro-�
Mining properties from Coast co
Coast known either as producers of
base metals or to contain base metal
ores received marked stimulation dur-
ing the past week by price advances
in copper, lead and zinc to new high
records for many years.
Mining Corporation's important sub-
sidiary, NormetaIs, formerly Abana,
announced financing rights to share-
holders at 75 cents a share. With the
further announcement that the prop-
erty would be placed on production in
July on a 250 -ton daily basis, the
shares attained a market price of over
$3 per share. Mining Corporation
will own close to three million Nor -
metal shares on the completion of the
financing. Mining Corporation is
further interested in Base Metals
through its Targe shareholding in
Hudson Bay Mining and Smelting
and its control of Base Meta. Mining
Corporation, with properties In British
Columbia. The Company's holdings
of gold equities are also substantial.
Mining Corporation Is condeded to
have most able and efficient manager
went.
Th' inapt cant development in oil
was the Iisting of the shares of
United Oils on the Toronto Stock
Exchange. In addition to holdings in
Turner Vale: y, including a holding
immediately adjoining the Foundation
well, the Company has extensive hold-
ings in other Alberta oil fields.
Queer World!
Not Such Sport! :— The Criminal
Court in Moscow has sentenced to a
year's hard labor one of the Soviet
sports judges for inaccurately meas-
uring the course for the All -Moscow
Marathon held la
race October.
a 1 st
Dr. Duck:—A doctorate of divin-
ity was recently conferred on a talk-
ing duck named Goo Goo in Ameri-
ca. The degree was conferred by
post.
Font Fun: Mr. and Mrs. Emsy
Jackson, U.S.A., have named their
latest child, a girl, Appendicitis. She
has two brothers named Tonsilitis,
Meningitis.
Widowed by Stamps:—Frau Maria
Schmidt is asking Vienna courts for
a divorce because she says she is "a
stamp. album widow." She says
that she had been happily married
for 15 years. Then her husband took
up stamp collecting. Now he is so
absorbed in his hobby that he
neglects her.
Feathered Scot:— A Mynah from
Nepal is claimed to be the finest
bird in the world. Its cheery laugh
suggests that it finds life a great
joke. Its owner claims that it has
.vocabulary of about 200 words.
It speaks with a Scottish accent.
Happy Marriage
Aid Auttnorny
MONTREAL, — The ideal marriage
rests on the complete autonomy of
the parties concerned, each however,
keeping in mincl the responsibilities of
their relationships, Dr. Cr. Paterson -
Smyth told an open meeting here.
Love, tho speaker suggested, is nei-
ther a purely primitive urge nor a
form of idealism, but a combination
which must be balanced in a happy
mnarriage.
Dominant factor in determining the
success of marriage, Dr. Paterson -
Smyth, saw as emotional maturity,
that position enjoyed by the individ-
ual who can make his own decisions
and stand by them. This factor, he
said, should be the main considera-
tion in determining the time of mar-
riage. Age does not always bring this
maturity, IIe said, but assuming that
maturity is present, marriage should
be early,
Dealing with the psychological side
of marriage, the speaker listed num-
FOR BACKACHE
KIDNEY AND
B : i, DDR TROUBLE
Stop Getting Un Nights and Fed
Younger
Here's one good way to flush harm-
ful waste from kidneys and stop blad-
der irritation that often causes
scanty, burning and smarting pas-
sage.
Ask your druggist for a 40 -cent box
of Gold Medal Haarlem Oil Capsules
- a splendidleIdid safe 'and harmless d
iur-
etre and stimulant for weak kidneys
and irritated bladder.
Besides getting up nights, some
symptoms of kidney trouble are back-
aches, puffy eyes, leg cramps, and
moist palms, but he sure to got COLD
MEDAI, -- it's tho genuine medicine
for weak kidneys right from Ila.ar.
Lem in holland.
Brous causes for discord in the mari-
tal relationship. Domination, jealousy
and lack of outside interests for wo-
men were outlined as primary causes
of family rifts.
In conclusion, Dr. Paterson -Smyth
urged recognition of the fact that
physical adjustment is necessary in
marriage, that there is nothing static
inarria e i isthe same life on a
m g t
different basis, that tale is a search
for completeness and that honesty
must be practised.
Canadian
God Production
has consistently improved
with the new gold -produc-
ing areas developing in
importan ,
Authe I io "statistics re
garifiilr `Italia
Gold Miri
individual opera n qr-
panics, may be obtained
upon request and without
obligation, from our Sta.
tisticai Department.
BRIDGER. f
<<tenz6err irEVENOR&C'
TOROIUTO STOCK EXCHANGE
60 King St. W. Toronto
o onkr, - . e a:. e+ ,tea u.: ,* r,ix er r;,
Classified Advertising
INVESTORS
A N OFFER TO EVERY I14VENTOII.- List
4-1 of wanted inventions and full Information
sent free. THE RAIMMSAY Company, world
Patent Attorneys, 278 Bank Street, Ottawa,,
Canada,
BEAUTY CULTURE SQ1 OOL
ROBERTSON'S HAIRDRESSING AcAnnurr
Toronto, Dominion Chartered. Write for
free booklet,
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11IICDICAL
P YOU ARE TROUBLED WITH GALT,,
A Bladder and Liver Ailments, write: Mar-
latt's, Two Eleven Gerrard Street, Toronto.
PLANTS
CANADA'S LARGEST LIST tlOVERN-
ment Certified Raspberries, Including
Starlight, the earliest, Newburgh, the larg'.
est; also the earliest Tomat,es and Potatoes.
Edward Lowden, Hamilton.
WHEELING YARN — GUARANTEED.
puro Canadian wool—Grey, white, mot-
tled No; colored yarns -790 Ib, ping postage,{
Bancroft Woollen Mills, Bancroft, Ontario.
•
}E UPY
t'°ER BILE—
And You'll Jump Out of Bets in the
Morning Rarity' to Go
The liver should pour cut two ponnd< of
liquid bile into your bowels dai14+. If this bile
isnotflowingfreely. your food doesn't digest.
It Just decays in the bowels. Gas bloats up
your stomach. ach. You get constipated, Harmful
supoisons into the body,and on feel rout
nk and the world lookpunk..
A mere bowel movement doosn'talways get
at the cause. You need something that works
on the liver as well, It takes those good, old
Carter's Little Liver Pills to get,,these two
pounds of bile Sowing freely and make you
feel "up and np". Harmless and gentle, they
make the bile flow freely. They do the work
of calomel but have no calomel or mercury in
them. Ask for Carter's Little Liver Pins by
darnel Stubbornly refuse anything eke. 25e.