Zurich Herald, 1937-04-15, Page 2Worried By Pimples
And Eczema
Complexion Unblemished after
Six Weeks of Kruscheri
"For the past two years," writes a
woman, "my face was covered with
hard pimples and red blotches, and I
also bad eczema on My neck and,
forearms, 1 tried lotions, dreams'
and ointments, without the slightest
effect. I was so worried. Fortunately
I decided to give Krusehen a trial,
and without any exaggeration, with-
in six weeks. my face Was without a
blemish, and I have not had a sign of
eczema since. I take Kruschen regu-
larly every morning•, and would not
be without it."— (111rs. ) 7,A.
Pimples and eczema are frequently
due to impurities in the blood—h'
ritant poisons which sluggish body
organs are failing to expel f'runl the
system. Krusehen Salts help to keep
the body organs functioning normal-
ly and healthily, thus preventing the
accumulation of impurities in the
blood.
A Famous Seip
St ys in Port
Boat lovers ,who lament the break-
ing up of a fine ship at the end of her
career will find comfort in the case
of the Fram, vessel of three famous
Arctic explorers. This stout little
craft, instead of being consigned to
the ship -breakers has been given a
waterside museum home.
This ship's name is linked with the
memory of three of the world's fore-
most Arctic venturers — Fridtjof Nan -
sen, RoaId Amundsen and Otto Sver-
drup. Arctic experiences and obser-
vations as a young man gave Nansen
many of his ideas for the unique de-
sign of the Fram, and she was built
for his polar expedition of 1893-96.
Specially intended for duty in ice, she
is the product of the well-known ship-
builder, Colin Archer.
Retired from active service, the
Frani lay for some time in, Norse wa-
ters. It was finally decided to make
the famous ship the focal point of a
special museum of Arctic curiosities.
Activities definitely- began in the
spring ofo 1933, when a general invita-
tion was issued to Norwegian archi-
tects to participate in an honorary
competition for a structure suitable
for housing the .Pram. Among the 62
architects who entered the award was
made to Mr. Bjarne Toren. Plans cal-
led for the building of a small wood
and steel affair, steeply pitched and
amply sky -lighted. A suitable site,
handsomely wooded and on the island
of Bygodoy, in the harbor of Oslo, was
donated to the committee, and Fram
House was erected at a cost of $60,-
000. The boat was drawn in place and
the building erected around it.
Pleated electrically, and well • venti-
rated, Fram House is 180 feet long, 85
feet high and 75 feet wide with a cat -
angle. As many of the Pram's instru-
ments as possible have been restored
and much of her historic equipment is
intact. — Christian Science Monitor
Magazine.
"Prudent parents will not and
should not bring children into the
world if they are to be ill -fed and
ill -housed."
—Bishop E. W. Barnes.
AIle ed
W1• T
Young Bride (looking in window
of jewelry store)—George, I'd love
to have that bracelet!
George ---I can't afford to buy it
for you, dear.
Bride*—But if you could, you
would, wouldn't you?
George—I'm afraid not.
Bride—Why?
George ---- It isn't good enough,
dear!
Bride—Oh, you darling!
A wise wife is the one who makes
her husband believe he is the head
of the house when he is really only
chairman of the ways and means com-
mittee.
—o—
The acid test of a man's Sunday
religion is his Monday's behavior.
—o—
A girl asked her father: "Dad,
don't you believe that two can live
as cheaply as one?" "I certainly
do," he answered. "What's more,
right now, your mother and I are
. living as cheaply as you."
—0—
There are plenty of men who are
willing to work until their tongues
hang out if they get what they call
fun out of it instead of looney.
—o—
Read it or not:—
In North America recent figures
showed 185,383 Sunday schools,
Teachers and officers 2,197,400, and
pupils, 20,627,652.
—o—
A parasite gets by unnoticed un -
till he beings to stick his tentacles
into our bank roll.
—0 --
That settles that:—"I don't sup-
pose you don't know of nobody who
don't want to hire nobody to do
nothin', do you?
—0—
All of us know some persons who
spend all their energy in talk.
—0—
Hard work and no play may make
a dull boy, but he usually has money
in the bank.
—0-
A travelling salesman visited a
large factory and told the boss he
could pick out all the married men
among the employees. He stationed
himself at the door, and as the men
came from dinner he pointed to
those he thought were married. En
almost every case he was right.
Boss (amazed) —How do you do
it?
Travelling man—Oh, it is cant!
men all wipe their feet on the mat,
The single men do not.
—0—
Johnny Bull—We have some very
large birds in England. Why, once,
while I was standing in a zoological
garden, I saw a man come in on an
eagle.
Yankee Tourist—Brother, that's
nothing! Once, while standing in a
ball park, I saw a player go out on
a fly!
•
Extra Values at
NIJ EXTRA C �f r
No matter how much you intend paying for tires.
drive in to your local Firestone Dealer and let him
show you he can give you most value for your
money. He has a complete stock of Firestone High
Speed, Oldfield, Sentinel and Ground Grip tires that
will give
you the longest mil
eat
the lowest est cost.
Drive in and let him serve you.
A very stout lady, walking through
a pari during' an extremely hot day,
observed that she was being followed
by a man.
Stout Lady—What do you mean.
by following me?
But the lean, without replying,
slipped away.
Then, when the stout lady resumed
her walk, she spied the man follow;
ing her again, and again she accost-
ed him:
She almost fainted when she got
this reply:
Man—For heaven's salve, lady,
don't call a cop and chase me away.
You are the only shady spot inethe
whole park,
—0—
,Mrs. Pennington—How did .yop
like the sample of my marrow jam 1
sent you? p.
Mrs. Jamieson—Was that maaa;ow
jars? Oh, dear, I'm so sorry., My
husband is using it for sticking'tb ••
stamps in his album. • '
.-0—
Customer—Give me some of that'
prepared orthocaetylsalicy a acid,
Druggist—Do you mean aspirin',?!'
Customer — Yeah! I nevem ca
think of that name.;r l'
Opportunity For
Creative W
More Important Than The 1Filiti
r-.
ed Products, SaysA,a
Cleveland
TORONTO, — Teaching p Arlo
subjects by drawing and pictuees:t
toward a more organized thinking a
is a more hatter -of -fact method `.
teaching than the textbook way,
Betty Lark-Horovitz, modern ed
tionist of the Cleveland. Museum
Art, told a large audience at the
Museum on the subject, "Towar
New Curriculum."
SPEAKING of BIG BEN,
�1 TME FLAVOUR IS BETTER
AND pNrH!!/
EPLUGLAS LASTS
THE PERFECT
Chewing Tobacco
In the subject of art, it is not near-
ly so important what the child accom-
plishes as that he is permitted to
draw. Activity is the main thing as far
• as the, child is concerned, and it is
the making and not the finished work
tlis,t counts, the speaker argued, em-
- phasizing, too, that the ;teacher will
be ,wise to keep within the interests
of ;the various age limits and the abil-
„ ity of the child to perform as far as
skill is concerned.
With lantern slides it was shown
that even in the poorest schools where
° paints and. other materials are lack-
ing much can be done with available
bits of wood, cotton and other scraps,
and dyes made from berries, bark, on-
ion skins and other things supplied
by nature which will give children a
medium for expression that needs an
outlet in their development.
n
1"M'+O PO -fid
Grass seed may be compared
good tobacco. The best seed
mixture or blend of different.
ses. A proportion of those nnoi
pensive and slower germinatin
permanent grasses will be.
with a certain quantity of: -
quick -growing seed. It is the
which form the fine-stemme
amount of the cheap, quid- ro,
kinds:are needed to shelter and nu
along the others for the'iiet -u�
mer, but sowing these alone is rX'
sufficient for a permanent law
Hence, a well-balanced, high qualm
mixture is recommended. ,^ •
SOW LAWNS EARLY
Grass makes its growth , in cook:'
weather; therefore, Bail
Y, soaTmg Is,'
advisable. IP'
The ground should be allowed te.
settle after digging or plot ng, and,.,
then levelled again. If there
time it is advisable .to repeat flus;
process several tithes. The top soil:
should then be raked foe' and the.
grass sown at a liberal rate,'ence
across and once lengthwise. This'
double sowing insures an even dis-;
tribution. For obvious reasons seed
our Gard
GORDONL SMITh
11
is:sown on a day when there is no
wind. In cop ening,. the gardener is
advised to hake one way only and
then firm the soil with a heavy rol-
ler or pounder.
The firstractual gardening opera-
iohs, if tlj'e':-gfound is ready and
ree from sernius moisture, will be
.eras, ' cosmos, -lliarioItta.
d bother hardy annuals and almost
any.of the perennials. This is aho
,the time, authorities advise, to get
in grass seed. In .the vegetable line,
first sowings of lettuce, spinach,
carrots, beets,, and even potatoes,
will be, made.
At forst, one is advised to make
shall swings and so spread out the
harve4ing season.` Then, if winter
returnagain after . these first seed -
Ings eLe made, the loss will be only
trivial` Seed, after all, is the cheap-
est thing about gardening and one
of the few factors over which the
gardetker has absolute control. On
these .*counts alone, it is highly im-
portant that only the best seed from
reliable Canadian sources should be
used. Everything else is wasted;
soil; fertilizer and labor if the
foundation seed' is not right.
Nurses Approve
.>tr
e istrati n
Recommendations Made at
Annual Convention
LONDON, ONT. — The Plan of Do•,
minion registration of nurses aad the
formation of a Canadian College of
Nursing war approved by the 'Regist-
ered Nurses' Association of Ontario
at Thursday's session of their conven-
tion being held here.
The provincial organization, recons.
luends that the membership in the,
college shall be of the members, and;
fellows, that the affairs of the college.
be governed by a council that all:nvho
are members of the C.N.A. and regist-
ered in their own provinces will ,auto-
matically, on.payment of fees, beanie
members when the regulation is emit-
iated and subsequent to organizalteon
entrance will be examination and the
payment of fees. The fee would-be
$25,
"We are today, looking up to the
intellectual quality of women. I have
seen women in past years taking a
place in thinking in a way men are
not doing today," said Dr. Robert C.''
Wallace, principal of Queen's 'Univer-
sity, Kingston.
Dr. Wallace believes the middle or
upper school culture is hot sufficient
genera education for the nurse: And
there are many adjustments to be
made in the curriculum for nurse edu-
cation. "This profession is one of the
last to free itself from the apprentice-
ship system, but the tendency is in
that ,direction," the speaker said. An
eight-hour day including academie
work, for si" days a 'week and a per-
iod of community service nursing are
among the' changes recommended.
Tbe,staudards of qualification for the
teaching ,of nurses should be raised
and `much attention should be direct-
ed -to the personality of the nurse and
its' development. "The personality of
We nurse has a tremendous influence
ori; the patient," Dr. Wallace stated.
More carefully . selected students,
better qualified teachers and more ef-
fective organization of clinic teaching
and .supervision are advised by Miss
Lindeburgb who is the convenor of
the curriculum committee of the Ca-
nadian Nurses' Association.
The primary concern of the commit-
tee has been the individual nurse in
training. "Our concern is not how
'-sell she can be made to fit into the
lAKE UP YOUR
LIVER BILE
And You'll Jump Out of Bed in the
Morning Rarin' to Go
liquid liver ishould pour bowew is d daily. If this bile
Isnotflowingfreely, your food doesn't digest.
It.iuet decays in the bowels. Gas bloats up
your stomach. Yougetconstipated. Harmful
poisons go into the body, and you feel sour.
sank and tab world looks punk.
thcseYneed soentaa�se au. mthightwoget
r
on the liver as well. It takes those good,old
Captor's Little Liver Pills to get thesetwo
pounds of bile flow ng freely and make you
feel "up and up". Harmless and gentle, they
make the bile flow freely. They do the 'work
of calomel but bave no calomel or mercury inn
them. Ask for Carter's Little Liver rills by
tame! Stubbornly refuse anything else: 25e.
Issue No. 16 — 37
scheme of hospital nursing service,
and the maximum load sire is able to
carry over a three-year period, in
contrast it is what are the potentiali-
ties of the student, and to what extent
can they be developed," Miss Linde -
burgh stated.
Private Duty
Only five Ontario cities have eight-
hour days in certain hospitals for the
private duty nurses, the Private Duty
Section of the Registered Nurses As-
sociation of Ontario, was told. The
cities are London, St. Thomas, Sault
Ste. Marie, Simcoe and Toronto. Five
other cities, Hamilton, Peterborough,
Belleville, St. Catharines and Kingston
have hospital staffs which have voted
in favour of the new hours. Ottawa,
Windsor and Sarnia are expected to
vote in this connection soon. The
eight-hour day was turned down , in
only one city, Stratford.
The Hick Town Is Gone
The Hici: Town is gone and the
small city has everything the big
town has including vice, in lesser
proportions only. That's just one cf
the statements made • by Stephen
Bollese, editor of the Janesville Dai-
ly Gazetre. In e talk ne made in
Chicago, he said the small town po-
pulation percentage of literacy is
higher than that to be found in any
metropolis. There are no odorous
slums, the people read the stock
market and savings bank reports
and are the bulwark of the nation.
"Most of them still believe the
ten commandments have not been
repealed," he said, "Their fathers
were pioneers. They went into this
country without. anything but: a few
household-.goccty,;:r,, gvoat faii`h,- and -
enr unswerving determination." .The
story is the sane whether starting,
on the shores of Plymouth Bay or
ending at the G,udcr Gate. These
small towns and the country round
about in the no. v expansion from
wilderness to cultivated fields, were
built by those who believe that il-
literacy is the greatest enemy of
democracy or representative govern-
ment. So there is something tremen-
dously fundamental in a nation of
small towns where the newspaper is
the unquestioned necessity for the
stable and sound and homogeneous
republic; a pressing, implacable force
against ignorance and despotism.
Water First Need
On Th e Farm
When young men set out to pur-
chase farms, or whop anyone, for that
matter, is purchasing farm property,
there are many things to remember,
but there is nothing so all important
and so vital as an adequate water sup-
ply. The character of the soil and fer-
tility, buildings, location and the
character of the neighborhood are all
serious matters to consider, but if
there is a scarcity of good water at
any season of the year, the farm live
stock and the farm family are expos-
' ed to discomfort, suffering and finan-
cial loss. The texture and fertility of
the soil may be improved, buildings
may be improved, and repaired, dis-
tance may be almost eliminated by
motor travel, but if there is an inade-
quate supply of water on the farm the
owner is handcuffed from the start
A running stream on a live stock
farm is a real asset. A flowing well
at or near the buildings is invaluable,
The suring well or the drilled well is
usually dependable, but one cannot
trust very much in a surface well, par-
ticularly in a .dry season.
Quantity or volume of water is not
the only consideration. riven under-
ground streaems are sometimes con-
taminated and polluted water is.dan•
POISONED KIDNEYS
Stop Getting Up Nights
To so
harmlesslyflush poisons ns and.
p
acid from kidneys and correct irri-
tation of bladder so that you can
stop "getting up nights" get a 40=
cent package of Gold Medal Haar-
lem Oil Capsules and take as direct-
ed. Other symptoms of kidney and
bladder weaknesses are scant, burn-
ing or smarting passage—backache
leg cramps—puffy eyes.
gerous. Plenty of good water 1 i. 690en-
tial to the well-being of man, Ai'kimals
and plants. Anyone purchasing a 01e0e
of land on which to make a home first
of all should consider first OA. left-
most that great essential of ; llitfe
water.
"We rearm on sea, in the sky and
on land because it is our imperious
duty in face of the armainehle o$
others."
— Benito Mtesenlini.
Classified Adverth ang
fOUSEISOLD ARTICLES
200 cen s sup. OSend for price LD ARTICLElist to f1ma11-
wares Co., 170 Craig St., West, MonttihAj.
7V2c Andy Anderson's Chicks a y2c
I WILL SNIP YOU MY VERY BEST . 1l40PD
Tested big Barred Rocks for S?fc or alrge
English White Leghorns for 7?{c, l5eilitu old
pullets 35c. Day old white Lel;lag2n repliers'
52.75 per 100. 100 per cent litre dell very., 10
per cent with order. Balance C.O`. frig An-
derson, Box WP, Essen, Ontario.
STAMPS
Tho !lobby of Ninos
35 AUSTRALIAN LYRE, IiOillaK4IARRA,
Birds, Victoria, McArthur, y` Mico, Air,'
Commemoratives. 25c. Bedworth, gni Daven-
port, Toronto, Ontario.
AGENTS WANTED
eTEADY WORK — EVERY DAY A VAN'',
J Day supplying thousand families, 200 ,
guaranteed necessities. Make up to $MWeek-
ly. Nu risk. Experience unneCeReary. "Free
Catalogue and Details. I-amlleX-Obiiiluuy, 570
St. Clement, Montreal. "
PLAY MUSIC 6Y COLOR
('tfIGINAL, SENSATIONAL, Yi p
ll!! practical way or playing Manu, Ohl
and ukulele, by matching colors. Canada's'
own, but the world's latest musical eensa-
tYliio+',nu . caNno RttCtaych- etrodaoyr itnhsetru.cStuiosnico- 1poereesreyya.
rite free.3ooktet now, $eaxestit
wanted, with itrst-class references. Write • -
Simptay instruments, Limited, 60 Prdat St.
West, T+ir, ntu. •
REMEDIES
i rPi. r:cn AnEY'S LEG ITCII REMEDY
8811. One application stops itching, damping
biting, $2.00. licmptville, Ontario.
POULTRY
nt'FF ORPINGTON COCKS, PEKIN'S AND
Rnwen drakes, 250. William Waterbury,
Piston Ontario.
BARRED PLYMOUTH ROCIi BREEDERS
pIPROVE YOUR STOCK BY ADDING
x northern blood from heavy layers and
registered sires. Buy six to ten weeks old
enckerels at fifty to seventy five 'cents. Also
started pullets at attractive prices. Mont-
mogoy Hatchery (Certified) 228, Iilontmagny,
Que.
OPPORTUNITIES
— Diesel Engineering —
A,lAT1ONAL SCHOOLS OFFER As. P)tOVEN
11\\ course to Theory and Practical training. We
fiat e trained men for the past, 32 xxsaru and
aro equtuped to enable our students to' actual-
ly put their knowledge to wok to get better
jobs.
7f
you are mechanically inclined anal' your be-
lieve you can qualify then write to
4. SWANSTON, ll?anager
NATIONAL SCHOOLS
323 13loor i3uilding
Dept. M. TORONTO
Investigation and Enuutries Invlfed
THE FAMOUS
RUBBING
LINIMENT
Rub on — pain" 'gone.
Get the new large econ-
omy size—Also avail-
able in smaller, regular
size, =A
(MINARD'.S
"KING OF PAIN"
INIMENT,
HOW'S YOUR STOMACH?
Y O t) lose vital
nerve force if
you allow your stom-
ach to distress ,you.
Add stomach, Indi-
gestion, gas or bit-
iousness and "cos-
tiveness" cause the
blood to be poisolied
and will eventually
destroy health and
nerve forco. 1'1iis is what 1". 3, Fisher of ,
4 Sanford Ave., N., Hamilton, Ont., said;
'I suffered with my stomach, could at but
very little and that would 05055 distress, I
grew weaker daily and suffered from head-
aches. My weight went from 176 to 134
Dounds. .1 took Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical
iscovery and tvae sdon able to eat nor-
mally, I gained in welgltt and The
and
could resume my wok. The 'Discovery'
made a well person of me," Buy howl'