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HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1937-06-17, Page 7mafas Lek Him sufferer Fd ows Good Advice -ana Takes ruschen The writer of the following letter hada had attack of rheumatism, and was advised to take Kruscbtan.. He did so, and describes his ex eviences in the following words: -- "About two years ago I devveloped a severe attack of rheumatism in my left shoulder blade. I tried all sorts of remedies, but with no results, un- til. one day my brother-in-law, on hearing of my suffering,• exclaimed, 'There is only one thing for rheu- matism! That is—Kruschen • Salts!' I de;.;clecl to purchase a bottle, and for the first week took a teaspoon- ful in a glass of hot water each morning. The pain gradually disap- peared and 'has now gone entirely. T am still taking my early morning dose, as I feel convinced that it is helping to kap me fit."—J.G.B. Rhe:unat_c conditions are frequent- ly the result of an excess of uric acid in the'body. Two of the ingred- ients of Kruschen Salts, are notable for their wort: in dissolving uric acid. Other ingredients of these Salts as- sist Nature to expel the dissolved acid from the system. S les Up For April • 8.5 Vin:• Cent Advance Far. Canad- ian Tae Over Month in 1936 OTTAWA.—Cash registers in Ca- nadian retail stores jingled merrily in April. The dollar value of retail sales was 7.9 per cent. higher than March and 8.5 per cent. above April, 1936, the Dominion Bureau of Statis- tics reported yesterday. When corrections for differences in the number of business days and for normal seasonal variations were made,. the general index stood at 78.3 for April compared with 75.3 for March. With the single exception of December, 1936, retail trade was at a higher level during April than any month since 1931. The value of sales of the various sub -groups showed a mixed trend compared with April, 1936. The Farmer's Task The tendency to place at a dis- count the inherent ability needed for successful farming is at least deplor- able. Such work demands more of the stronger qualities of character than almost any other. Its taskmas- ter, nature, is the most adamant of them all. It is sheer casuistry to place it anywhere but in the higher scale of occupations. Ironically enough, it is the so-call- ed advantages of the cities, the things which so often surfeit us, that maintain a certain hold on the coun- try dweller of today. But it is a good thing. Modern entertainments and transportation have helped farm- ing communities everywhere. And perhaps after all there is still a deep-rooted love of the land, among the larger portion of our people, which, if not eloquent, is at least the sanest and the safest patriotism to be found.—Hamilton Spectator. UM Nature's Own Soil Food BU -MAR is the perfect, natural soil and plant food; free of harmful said Aft weed seed. Unlike most plant Soods and fertilizers HU -MAR retains Its ammonia content; its fertile quali- ties therefore far outlast all other soil conditioners. AU -MAR retains as high as 70% moisture, is an ideal insulator, and acts as a natural scavenger. These and many other reasons have proved HU -MAR the world's finest soil conditioner, HU -MAR is the trade name for a pro- duct found on the Beverley properties In Ontario. Write for our descriptive folder. TREVOR-SOREN LIMITED 73 Adelaide Street W., Toronto onsense The purchasing agent didn't want to See this particular salesman and instructed his secretary to make some excuse: Secretary (to salesman)—"I'm sor- ry, but Mr, Jones can't see you to- day, 11e has a sprained back," Salesman (a pe-'distent go-getter)— "Very well, dearie. Go back and toll. Mr. Jones that I didn't come here toa wrestle with him. I only want to talk to him." • Do you get up late mornings and have to rush your dressing, bolt your breakfast and dash to work? If so, that is a bad hab.t, and one that will tend to make you suffer through ac- cidental scidental injury . . . . Good habits of work will produce a good product, and at the same time produce very few accidents, for after all, an acci- dent is simply a mistake . ... When you hear someone else trying to ex- plain how unavoidable some accident was, say to him: "Forget the alibi, ac- cident are preventable. Kri‘ights and Daze Opinions vary as to which take us to greater heights— June's lovely days, with skies of blue, or its delightful nights. Some argus that refreshing winds combined with midday sun, Inspire adventures and cause rare ac- tions to be done. While others say, when moonlight sheds its beams on listless souls, Their lives take on new meaning and they start toward, higher goals. I don't know what your ideas are; but, friends, this is my plight: I'm living in a blissful daze, inspired by one June knight! —Lyle, Myers. Wife (preparing breakfast)—"There isn't a slice of bread in the house." Husband (absently)—"Never mind, dear; just make some toast." Don't make them say: "I spent a year in that town one Sunday." In a discussion on the type of milk which should be provided school chil- dren, the chairman of the health com- mittee in a small town, is reported to have said at a meeting held recently: "What this town needs is a supply of clean, fresh milk, and the council should take the bull by the horns and demand it." Husband—"Well, I suppose you're plenty angry because I came home with a black eye last night" Wife (sweetly)—"Not at all, dear, because when you came home you didn't have that black eye." The .on1y thing that keeps a lot of men from marrying twice is the fact that their first wives are so disgust- ingly healthy. - Jim—"Politics mean nothing to me. I'm going to vote for that fellow because I like him." Hen—"I understand you were going to vote for him because ho gave you $10." Jim—"Wouldn't you like a man who gave you $10?" Dr. Bottles met the wife of a pa- tient he had ordered to bed for a few days: Doctor—"Well, how is your husband getting on?" Wife—"Oh, doctor, I do wish you'd change his medicine!" Doctor—"Isn't it doing him any good, then?" ' Wife—"I don't know, but we have such a job getting him in and out of the bath?" Doctor—"Bath?" Wife—"Yes, sir. It says on the bot- tle of medicine you sent: 'One tea- spoonful -to be taken three times a day in water'." A lot of men wake up to appreciate great truths—after its about ten years too late. Germ z thers Are Give < <, Title BERLIN. — Every German mother, married or unmarried, was granted the right last week to the title "Frau" in a circular order from ministry of Interior. The order said unmarried mothers have only to notify the police of their home districts if they desire the des- ignation. • m To handle Beverly H1..].MAR, nature's perfect soil and plant food. o The only pure, neutral soil conditioner and rectifier known. A real, honest opportunity to handle a fine profitable pro- ` .$ ,h5acked by national advertising and unsolicited testi- Agencies allotted on a mutual approval basis. ® Small capital, from $200 to $2,000 required to carry stock. Y. The Company guarantees to refund purchase price of mer- chandise left on hand at the termination of the agreeliitiit .either party, TREV R O E LIMITED 73 Adelaide Street West:, . . . Toronto ':r>rnidra Silver Band Entry for C. N. Eo Official entry has come to the On- tario and Association, .which con. duets band tournament at the Cana- dian National Exhibition, from the Imperial Silver Band of Hamilton, Bermuda, Secretary A. L. Robertson of the association says that not in the past fifteen years have, there been as many entries at this date,. Sir H"nry Watlington, mayor of Hamilton, has arranged transporta» tion for the band from Bermuda to New York, He has also concluded arrangements for a series of concerts in the Terrace Grill of the Motel Hamilton for the purpose of raising additional funds with which to de- fray the expenses of the trip to the l+.;xhibition. The Imperial Silver Band is under the baton of S. Clayton Pye who has a wide reputation as a eon clutter and composer. Mr. Pye was at the "Ex" two years ago in the capacity of guest conductor at the band competition. The Bermufllana will enter the brass section with an ensemble of twenty-seven men. airy Chest No More Proof of a He -Man Gradually, as they are attacked by scientific study, many so-ealled sex differences are melting away. It was a shock to many persons when. the development of standardized intel- ligence tests revealed that men are not superior mentally to their wo- menfolk. Ts it possible that harry chest and "gorilla shoulders" will suffer a similar fate as criteria of masculinity? asks a Science Service Dr. Howard Gilkinson, University of Minnesota psychologist, raises the question and provides a surprising partial answer. If sex is a biological entity — a force which man or woman can be thought of as having in greater or less degree—and if th's force finds outward expression in such items as beards or pitch of voice, then you might expect the heavily -bearded man to have also a deep masculine voice and broad shoulders, points out Dr. Gilkinson. Yet examination of more than 200 college men show- ed these "secondary sex characteris- tics" to exist quite independently of each other. And only one of the physical mea- sures, voice pitch, was found to have any significant relation to masculin- ity as revealed by test or by rat- ings of associates. Hair abundance. and hip -shoulder measurements do not correlate with the masculinity test or with voice pitch. Hip mea- sures do correlate positively with shoulder measures showing, perhaps, that the man with the gorilla shoul ders might be expected to have "feminine" hips. You Cant Be A Great Teacher if You're Not in Love Spinsterhood Is "The Burgles Pecking Out From Under The Bed" OKLAHOMA CITY. — Enforced spinsterhood was described to Lovers' Church as the "burglar peeking out from under the bed of tens of thous- ands of women teachers in the coun- try." "Love is the great law in teaching," asserted Dr. W. A. McKeever, psycho- logist and founder of the church as he described a ban which he said existed in many cities against marriage of school teachers. About 200 persons attended yester- day's session, most of them women of middle age. Dr. McKeever started the Lovers' Church to combine ro- mance and religion. "There is no great teacher but that he or she' is in love with somebody," he said, "The denial of love means anguish, bitterness and a frequent threat of nervous collapse." New Style For Bath? The Englishman's idea of bathing is largely a matter of soap and warns water, and he is apt to express sur- prise on learning that other people perform their ablutions in a different manner. The Americans have brought the art of bathing to a higher pitch than any nation since the days of Rome, and consider our methods slipshod. They regard with horror a person who enters his "-tub" without first soaping and having a shower. And the very idea of soaking in a bath filled with soap -suds, with a detective novel for company, makes thein shudder. Until 1928 almost all British gin - eine, organs were made in America. Today Inose than 95 per cent. are "made in .ingjand'P. FREE CREAM SEPARATORS Be one of the three lucky farmers to get a brand new 1937 streanilinet stainless ANIIER-HOLTH separator FREE; send postal for Entry Blank and "How to out separating costs in Half"; nothing to pay• simply express your opinion, .Address ANICER HOLTII, Room l-3:, Sarnia, Ont. M ;couTI G Here 1 There Everywhere I A brother to, every otha'r Scout, without regard to race or ev'eed The annual interchange of visits between Toronto and Buffs)lo Boy Scouts this year took a party of 150 Toronto lads across the lake over the week -end of May 22nd, and brought a return visit of young T3uffalonians on the following Saturday. A framed picture, in uniform, of Scant George Latimer, an'outstand- xngl'r , popular student of Moosornin, ,"'ask',, Collegiate Institute, who died last'' fall, was hung in the collegiate assiinbly hall, and unveiled by 'Prin- cipal> John McLeod in the presence of the,'assembled student body. ,i; m m Cine hundred and forty Scouts as- sembled. from 15 different centres of Central Ontario, added 75,000 young trees to the Angus, Ont., "Scout For - .est" during the 8th annual Scout Re- forestation Camp at that place over Victoria Day. Including this year's planting, a total of 600,000 trees have been planted by 916 Scouts. This is Canada's largest Boy Scout reforest- ation project. A living Coronation Crown com- posed of 700 Wolf Cubs was a spec - teenier feature of the Coronation Year Jamboree of the Scouts and the Cubs of Winnipeg. Another feature was a great "Scout Friendship Wheel," - the living Scout spokes of which, representing the different .Scouting countries of the world, re- volved, singing about a figure repre- senting the Scouts' patron saint, St, George. On a giant checker board small Wolf Cub checker men hopped about as they were moved in an actu- al game, m * * Between 300 and 400 Scouts, Sea Scouts, Rovers and leaders repre- senting Scout groups -from, Toronto, Mimico, Weston, Acton, Clarkson, New Toronto, Hamilton, Milton, Galt, Port Credit and Oakville par- ticipated in the annual three-day Scout Jamboree held at the latter place. The camp was opened by His Worship Mayor George B. Jacobs, and began its sessions with a big camp fire. Teams from the various troops competed in a day -long pro- gram of Scouting tests. First place was taken by the 3rd Mimico Troop, with the lst Acton and 7th Toronto as runners-up. -School Principal Pleads For More Men Teachers WINNIPEG. — Plea for greater masculine influence in public schools to'gide growing boys was made here 1334: J'. .Wilkinson, Winnipeg school principal. He told a service club that women teachers outnumbered men 40 to 1 in junior high schools and 160 to 1 in elementary schools of Winnipeg. Cane Molasses For Pigs test carried on at the Minne- sota Experimental Station showed that -pigs weighing 165 pounds in weight, fed on ground corn alone, did`;not make as economical gains as when feel oats with 25 per cent. cane molasses was used, thus while you cannot get sugar -cured pork by feed- ing molasses to swine you can get feeding profits by using the cane mo- lasses in place of part of the corn. Molasses is fed to all classes of live stock and besides being an excellent feed_ is also an appetizer and aids in conditioning the animals. " 'Pan Fights; Drought LA FLECHE, Sask.—T. H. Bour- assa has decided to handle his own drought problem. He planted 1,000 trees and arranged an ingenious pumping systefrx to distribute river water over his land. Dangerous Habits Aaboy who is old enough to ride a' bicycle is quite old enough to accept some responsibility for his actions. He should be made to understand, by his parents or by the police, that traffic laws are made to cover bicyc- lists as well as drivers of motor ve- hicles, Boys on bicycles take dreadful risks, and when the inevitable acci- dent happens it is the motorist who has to do the explaining. We see youngsters ride against red lights, and quite:.as a matter of course they ignore the stop signs. They ride two or three abreast, pass vehicles on the wrong side, ride without holding the handlebars, swerve and wobble and speed and dash about with the ir- responsibility of puppies. And in suburban areas bicyclists who break the Iaws by their failure to carry lights after dusk are a posi- tive menace to public safety. It is almost impossible for the motorist to pick them out with his lamps, and even the most cautious driver goes in fear of running down a cyclist who refuses to do his part. IT/ der.. the new speed laws the police will need to be more severe with law -breaking bicyclists. They make of themselves public nuisances, and they must be protected against their own childishness. Drug Store Defined It is well to have the matter set- tled by, a high court, once andfor all: "What is a drug store?" It is all to t`ye credit of the learned jurist of the :Indiana Supreme Court that he went into the matter thoroughly, delving into Burns' annotated stat- utes, Webster's new international ciictionsry, ` apothecary definitions, the EltcyeIopedia • Britannica and even Shakespeare. For there have been sharp differences of opinion as to justiwhat a drug store is. And That dad' the learned judge find? at a drug store, of all things, "is a store inwhich drugs are sold," :Money array not buy happiness, but with it you can be unhappy in coni- lort,— Datiro Breaitfast Club. Lack iii, f R, a :. ney id T Ni True Smartness If Extravagant Let It Be In Ac- cessories HOLLYWOOD, Cal.—An unlimited clothes budget has nothing to do with being smartly attired, according to Adrian, famous M -G -M designer. As a matter of tact, he believes lack of money is a boon to those women who seek true smartness. "With just so much money to spend,' Adrian says, "most women will get the simple frock suitable to many occasions. A woman who can spend as much as she desires will often buy too much jewelry, too many furs, and spoil the simplicity of the costume. "Proper carriage nf the head and body can give an inexpensive frock of good line the appearance of the smartest creation. Line of a gar- ment should be the first considera- tion, and then fabric. Fabric is in1- portant to line. Inferior fabric stretches and loses shape. It is poor economy to conserve in this Way. In John D.'s Day To trace John D. Rockefeller's business life one must realize that he was born in the days when Martin Van Buren was President. He saw the United States go through four wars. He saw the telegraph, tele- phone, and radio invented and per- fected. The electric street car, auto- mobile and airplane all calve into be- ing during his span. Gold was dis- covered in California but the one thing that truly interested him was the discovery and development of oil- fields, in this and foreign countries. It was this essential commodity, oil, that attracted his great business genius and he soon set himself up as dictator of this commercial realm. Strange to say, however, the pass- ing of this extraordinary man will not rock the markets of the world fox' long ago he handed the reins to his able son and namesake. There are other great fortunes, but there never can be another John D. Rocke- feller—America is different now — but as long as the old system did al- Iow an individual the opportunity to accumulate such wealth it was for- tunate that it fell into the hands of a man who developed high humani- tarian ideals as he reached his zenith, Saskatoon, — Alfred Wells' Barred Rock -White Leghorn hen here produc- ed double -yolk egg every third day regularly. One egg was seven inches in circumference, two and three nal.. ter incher long and two inches wide. In Switzerland, melting glaciers form the chief means of water pow- er which furnishes the country with electricity. $✓ and Falling Hair, use ridin- ard's exactlyes you would any hair -otic. Do this 4 2C tunes a tack end the result will be a Clean Read and Glossy Hair Issue No. 25—'37 1-•-.-1 Read It Or Not In the state of Alabama it In against the law to buy or sell a gar t• of peanuts after sundown or befog sunrise of the next day. It is ct.'n- trary to law to work for nothing in California, In Kansas no reptiles .::'e permitted to be eaten in public. •xl,is includes centipedes, snakes, lizards, etc. Only about one part in 1,9C17,000, - 000 ,9C1,000,_000 of the energy given off by the sun ever reaches the: earth, Classified AcI en tis ig AGENTS WANTED v7'E STILL HAVE A raw VACANCIES v left. You can make gond nim too, selling motor oils, tractor oils, machine ,41s, greases and roofing cement in your locality. Write Warco Grease and on Ltd., Toronto, BANISH FRECKLES MiRECxLEs MUST GO WHERE "rRECK-' leen" is used. See that rough or freckl- ed shin change to lovely, clear smoothness. Or- der now. Money back guarantee. 51.00 per bottle, Elinor Toiletiers, 1003 Burnaby St.. Vancouver, B.C. COLLECTION SERVICE f 9 NTARIO COLLECTION AGENCIES, EX perisnced Collection Service. Bailiffs. — Stair Bldg., Tcrontn. :MACHINERY AND SUPPLIES OILERS, VERTICAL AND HORIZONTAL Pumps all kinds. Write for stock list. 11, W. Petrie Co., Limited, Toronto, PHOTOGRAPHY { NLARGEMENT FREE WITIi EVERY 25 cent order. Roll films developed and eight prints. 25 cents reprints, 3 cents each. Bright - ling, 29 Richmcad Street East, Toronto. COMPLETE PERSONAL hzDeep : e st Mead r hips The (a:radian Service vessel's ®f' these great SaeamshEp Colla'.ralesr offer cane.; t2oti and a complete to Kusa:Toll ser'viee to all passers pose Seasoned travellers also appreciate their marry add.. 'Nona! gine qualities: Food of choke s u !ice:y served In accordance t-iith the best standards. A Complete shiinircacd Esollday�—vrillieag Ihapfftci'- riess elimirnates all care, FrldaysatlIngs from Montreal to Belfast, Glasgow, Liver- pool, Plymouth, Havre and London at rates which repro.. sent substantial savings hi travel costs. Apply to Je sir.217 Bay Street (Elgin 1471) Toronto but the mon to see is your Idol a-,,, at.