Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1937-09-30, Page 9w0a4 O.X.X.0 wt4w44�r4A444144A4.444.� .4� rt4�.KiA!�ONK�`lIte, l: Classified .14 • 14 11 0i %i c1vertiing 4 Y 4 .vvvvvw,•.vlarv. v..vvvvvvv o v 40:4 :+7. 0:4.14: i0Oi�4M O:O:�YK `�i.s.®_0_4.♦.Od49.�4.004+4+Y0� �4.�Ov0a4.tS .O.P.,�...--.+. AGENTS WANTED IA GENTS -TO SELL MEN'S NEOE- ties 1 per p er cent. profit. Write for free samples and catalogue. Mur- gatroyd Agencies, Yonge St, Arcade, Toronto. LOCAL REPRESENTATIVES wanted, for subscription work. Re- newal list supplied. Good commission. Write Canadian Magazine, 347 Ade- laide St. West, Toronto. SEND FOR FREE KIT COBIE'S, manufacturers for their own 24 city stores across Can- ada, want agents to become exclus- ive factory representatives. Men and women, earn big money! Sell Sobie's guaranteed Lingerie and fine Hos- .ery. Get into this profitable busin- ess now. Write today for free outfit. Sobie's Silk Shops, Department S.T. Farnham, Que. $50.00 WEEKLY SELLING FELT Rugs. For full particulars write M. Shedei, Box 473, Mimico, Ont. ANALYTICAL CHEMIST CHARLES ALLDER, ANALYTICAL Chemist, established 1926. Analy- sis of poultry and stock feeds. Box 117 Ingersoll, Ontario. ARTIFICIAL LIMBS "-ANGER STANDARD LIMB CO., 126 Wellington Street West, To- ronto. Improved light metal and wil- low artificial limbs without shoulder straps. BARN ROOFING - FENCE POSTS ®UR DIRECT FACTORY PRICES save you money on Supertile gal- vanized roofing, Superior steel Fence Posts and steel granary lining. Super- ior Products Limited, Sarnia, Ont. BUILDING WRECKERS WE WILL BUY OLD OR CON- demned buildings to wreck. Green- wood House Wreckers, 440 Greenwood Ave., Toronto. BULBS NARCISSI - PRINCEPS MAXIMUS. Early Yellow Trumpet -Daffodil. Pheasants Eye (Poet's Narcissus), fragrant, white, late. Evangeline, frag- rant, white, fluted yellow chalice cup, mid-season. All field run bulbs, as dug, $1 per 1,000. Canadian Pacific Bulb Gardens, Duncan, Vancouver Island. BUSINESS BROKERS ATTENTION! ANY BUSINESS, anywhere, sold quickly, confiden- tially for cash. Consolidated Business Brokers, 24 Bloor West, Toronto. CARP) TS RE -WOVEN INTO RUGS OLD CARPETS WOVEN INTO RE- versible Rugs. Write for price list. Baker Cleaning Co., Toronto 4. CORONATION COVERS FIRST DAY ISSUE CORONATION Covers -Newfoundland 30c each. L. Hodder, Bay -de -Verde, Newfound- land. EDUCATIONAL STENOGRAPHY BY MAIL -WRITE' for free sample lesson. Miss Mac- donald, 3472 West Broadway, Mont- real, Quebec. ELECTRIC WELDER The Trindl Electric Welder WONDERFUL NEW INVENTION Operates from 6 -volt battery. Welds -Solders - Brazes. $4.50 de- livered. R. H. Anderson, Lindsay, Ont. FILMS AND PRINTS CHRISTMAS CARDS FROM YOUR favourite negatives, 12 for 75c; 3 for 25c. Complete with envelopes. Sample, 100. Brightling, 29 Richmond St. E., Toronto. SPARKLINS, HIGLOSS, DECKLE edged prints, three extra with each roll finished 25c. Twelve reprints 25e Delhanty's, Webbwood, Ont. OLLS DEVELOPED AND EIGHT prints with free enlargement, 25c. Reprints 3c each. Commercial Photo Service, Dept. B.. Outremont, Que. ZERO PRICES, EXPERT WORK. Roll with free enlargement 25c. Trevanna Studios, 93 Niagara Street, St. Catharines, Ont. ROLLS DEVELOPED; PRINTED, one free enlargement 25c. Re- prints 10 for 25c. Photo -Craft, 183. King St. ID., Toronto. 25c - ROLL DEVELOPED AND one deckle edge print of each. Reprints 3c, 10 for 25c, One Free en- largement with each order 250 or more Snap -Y Photo Service, Box 72, Station IC, Toronto. FEMALE HELP INSTRUCTION ANDREWS' ACADEMY OF HAIR - dressing. Visitors welcome. Write for prospectus. 961 Bloor west, To- ronto. PUkI FARMING FINE DARK EASTERN MINK from foundation stock and high kit production; correspondence invit- ed. Maple Leaf Mink Ranch, Blen- heim, Ont. MINER MINKERY, KINGBVILLE Ont., offers for sale Queboe, 'Ab- rader, b-rador, Yukon mink of select breeding *tock. Place your order earls. FUR FARMING RAISE MINK FOR PROFIT - GET started right with Moss "Quetico" strain mink -guaranteed stock. Write for full information, Moss Fur Farms, Limited (mink breeding specialists), Sapawe, Ontario, MINK with a proven pelt record, the same strain which averaged $36.50 in 19.36 and $41.50 in 1937, and that after the best have been sold for breeders. 0. Lee, Faust, Alberta. FURNITURE LYONS' USED FURNITURE BARGAINS Great savings in our Furniture Trade-in Department. Our low prices have made this department the larg- eet-and most popular in Toronto. Just a few of the hundreds of specials aro listed here. If you don't see what you want advertised come in or write, Lyons are sure to have it and at the lowest price in town. Every piece of furniture is sanitarily treated and completely refinished to look like new. $59.00 Beautiful American walnut bedroom suite, large chiff- robe, full length triple mirror vanity and full. size 4 -poster bed with sagless spring. Completely refinished. Cost new over $200.00. $21.50 Walnut finish dresser, in perfect condition, with full size steel bed to match, sagless spring and brand new all -felt mattress.. $19.50 Solid oak dining -room suites, large buffet, exten- sion tables and 6 leather upholstered chairs, in perfect condition. Your choice of golden or fumed oak. $89.00 Beautiful solid walnut din- ing -room suite, large buf- fet, twin pedestal extension table, china cabinet and 6 chairs upholstered in genuine leather. A really fine suite and looks brand new; completely re- finished. Cost originally about $300.00. 47.00 Eight -piece, 2 -tone walnut finish dining -room suite - Queen Ann design; large buffet, ex- tension table and 6 chairs upholstered in genuine leather. Completely refin- ished. $49.00 Luxurious 3 -piece chester- field suite (unclaimed). - This suite has been rebuilt and recov- ered in a very attractive brand new brown repp; bas Marshall reversible spring cushions and is a real bargain at this price. Originally cost $175.00, is exactly like new. t1a29�50 Full length chesterfield '`VV and two roomy chairs to match, upholstered in a novelty repp with reversible Marshall cushions and show -wood walnut frame; completely re -conditioned and dry cleaned. $35.00 Large Chesterfield with •two big chairs, covered in a French Jacquard Taupe shade; completely re -built and thoroughly dry cleaned. Large assortment of Kitchen Cab- inets, Sewing Machines, Gas Stoves, Library Tables, Beds, Spring Mat- tresses, Odd Dressers, Chiffoniers, Studio Couches, etc., at amazingly low prices. TRADE-IN DEPT. LYONS' BEDDING AND UPHOLSTERING CO. Save 40%. Buy Direct from .Factory 478 YONGE ST. TORONTO GAMES FOR FALL AND WINTER PARTIES Ten entirely new and original brain-teaser games, in attractive book- let form, assorted to suit all tastes and occasions, 35 .,cents, postpaid any- where. Canadian -American Novelties, 122. Wellington Street West, Toronto. GREAT SALE USED PIANOS ORIGINALLY COSTING WHEN new up to $800., good makes, beau- tiful walnut, mahogany and golden oak cabinets, in real good condition, tuned, including piano benches; bargain prices, $39.50, $49.50, $59.50. Ideal for homes, schools, churches. Write for our bargain price list. Sovereign's Sales, 241813 Dufferin St., Toronto. HELP WANTED YOUNG MEN AND WOMEN-POSI- tions more easily secured if you train for Telegrapher or Stenographer. Become stenographer in ten weeks - notes written in English. Typewriter supplied. Self -teaching machine loan- ed with telegraphy. Inexpensive. What course interests you? Write Caesan Systems, Toronto. LILY BULBS FLANT LILIES NOW --ADD TO brightness of your garden with Lilies from home-grown bulbs of re- liable varieties. Also other perennial flowers -and fruit trees for northern gardens. all of the hardiest strains. Send for Autumn Catalogue with in- structions for Lilies, etc. Arrival of all plants in good condition guaran- teed. The Manitoba Hardy Plant Nursery, F. L, Skinner Prop. Drop - more, Manitoba. MACHINERY GET OUR NEW PRICES ON THE Goold, Shapley & Muir gas, gaso- line, and fuel oil engines and grinders. Also repairs for Brantford engines, .pumps, windmills. J. A. Fellows & Co, Brantford, Ont. ',*ANNING MILL (KLINE) SEED Grader, guaranteed increase crop Write, Kline Mfr., "121 Empress Cres„ Toronto. Issue No. 40--'37 MACHINERY EBUIL'P FARM 7,i'SAOIIiNI+ R) AND trueks eonnpoeed of. Grain G110P' Pere 8" to 15"; Gas engines 11/4 to 14 h.p.; Tractors 8 x 16 to 25 x 40 b.p.; Power units 26 h.p. up; Ensilage cut- ters; 21 Trucks from 1/4 -ton up, We pay spot cash for old tractors. Write or see us. Hanna's International Sale's & Service, MacDonnell St., Guelph, Ontario. MEDICAL 6;T0P SUFFERING: HAVE YOU itching, burning, scalding, .. wet or dry skin trouble, 1f so, use the guar- anteed Inch Eczema Remedy. Write Inch Drug Company, 1130 Weston Rd., Toronto. Sold from coast to coast- One Dollar prepaid. MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS 14EARN TO PLAY A SAXOPHONE Trumpet, Trombone. Become a Musician, Send for Form for six days' Free Trial. Ten months' terms -no in terest. Literature free. Greene Music. Company, 57 Queen St., East, Toronto, STAMPS WANTED, CANADIAN STAMPS IN quantity. Best prices for accumu- lations and collections. Queen Stamp Co.. Toronto, MISCELJ-ANEOWS LEAF BURLEY, FOUR POUNDS $1.00, fourteen pounds $3.00. Five pounds Virginia Leaf Cigarette Tobac- co $2.00. Postpaid with flavoring, Nat- ural Leaf Tobacco Co.,, Lean`ington,' Ont. 15 JEWEL WATCHES ONLY $5;95. Send us picture of any man's' lady's wrist watch, sold anywhere up to $15.00. We will closely duplicate it for $5.95 with written guarantee. Wilson's Watch Company, 357 St. Catherine West, Montreal. Sensational New Discovery RECHARGES RADIO B's, FLASH - lights, dry cells, guaranteed like new. Stamped envelope brings full particulars. A. E. Lueck, Box 152, Lockwood, Sask. WE GUARANTEE YOUR FIT WITH best quality, latest style suit or winter overcoat (slightly used), regu- lar to $60.00 for $6 to $12. Fall coats, regular to $35.00 for $4 to $8. Suit coats, $2, $2.50, $3. New trousers, in tweeds, serges and worsteds, $1:25, $1.75, $2.25, $2.95. Postpaid. State measurements, colours, style, age. Sat- isfaction guaranteed or money refund- ed. Send money order -Ruskin & Co., Peterboro, Ont. POST OFFICE BOXES DOST OFFICE BOXES IN GOOD condition. For particulars apply F. D. Ghent, Postmaster, Burlington, Ontario. RADIO FARM -CITY RADIOS $7.95 'COM- plete. Save half. Agents free offer. Amazing prices windchargers, power plants, accessories. Marco 1243X Mc- Gee. Kansas City. Mo. REMNANTS FREE! -70 QUILTING PATTERNS! Giant_ washfast remnants! "Makes five quilts" Cottons!' Prints; $1.00' "Collect". Sample bundle, 25c. Re- fund guarantee! Maritime Textiles, 8049 Degaspe, Montreal. TIRES MENZIE'S USED TIRES $2.95 UP for Ford. Chevrolet, Plymouth Dodge, Buick, Oldsmobile. Packard, , Cadillac and all other cars and trucks. ;Every tire. guaranteed. 190 King West, Toronto: - . , .. 'TRAPPING I CAUGHT .16 PDXES' IN 3 DAYS "en can do it. Particulars free. ' ee Hadley, Stanstead, Que. WINTER PLANTS PERENNIAL PHLOX, BLEEDING / Hearts, etc., 10c plant; tulips 4c; Postpaid winter flowering House Plants, etc. Write for list, Joseph Aiken, Shannon, Que. WATCH REPAIRS 30 YEARS' EXPERIENCE $1.00 replaces mainspring, jewel; cleaning, hands, crystals, dial repaired. Providing no parts missing. 2 -years guarantee. Re- turn postage paid. Formerly with EIamilton Watch Factory, American Swiss Watch Specialist Reg'dr Dept. W.. 4813 Brebeuf' Montreal. Clothes Should Suit Person ..Iity There are no Rules in Fashion World, but Women Should .Dress to Suit Figure and Type Monsieur Lucien Lelong, whose Paris dress creations are copied the world over and who prefers to be cal=; led just plain "Mister" bluntly told in- terviewers today there are, no rules .. p for fashion. And then the designer elaborated: "What is right for one may not be right for another. Clothes should be chosen to enhance the beauty of the individual. Women should dress to suit their figure and type." EVERY WOMAN, PERFECTION There is no Venus, or ideally propeee tioned figure as far as fashions are concerned, he said, but with a chal'ac- teristio note of Chivalry added, "EVery woman is perfection at one time in her life" some at 16, some at 30, others at 50." Mention of a short -skirted dingier dress, "which is being talked about consistently," made his eyes sparkle. di see no reason why women should go trailing around in long skirts for restaurant dinging and other informal affairll," he said. %et them jlave.these. for forms! pcesItons;" 4m R �. s c_ License Conscious Distinct Increase Seem in Number of Radio Licenses Taken Out Canada le either becoming radio - minded or developing a license eon - science, .judging by the increase in ra die permits which have been taken out. By the endof the year it is ex- peeted there will be 1,125,000 licensed sets in thecountry, compared with 038,000 last year. Quebec is showing the greatest erompitude in taking out licenses with 90 per cent of last year's total already Paid- Ontario has paid up 80 per cent. October will .be the time of reckon- ing. The department will then start to clean up all arrears for licenses, bring- ing before the courts those who are in default, Generally, but on increased lines, the ratio of licenses by provinces is being maintained. Last year Ontario topped the list with 424,000; Quebec being second with 240,000 and British Columbia third with 91,000. The revenue from radio licenses is $2 per set and thus the total will run around $2,250,000. !( f Alleged WIT Teadher - "How old is your fa- ther?" Tommy - "Thirty-eight, sir." Teacher "Well, I must set you homework more suited to his age." A very small boy was waiting to cross a busy road. A kindly stranger spoke to him. "You must be very careful with all this traffic about," he said. "Oh, I'm all right," replied the child cheerily. "I always wait for the emp- ty space to come by." The tailor was selling his best. friend a new suit. He was raving all about the garment. "I'm telling you, Harry," he said, "that even your best friend won't re- ' cognize you in that suit. Just take a walk outside for a minute and get the feel of the garment." Harry went out and returned a mo- ment later. The proprietor rushed up to him with a happy smile. "Good morninng, stranger," he. beamed. "What can I do for you?" "Have you told Mr. Smith that he !s the father of triplets." "Not yet, doctor, he's shaving." First Firemen - "There were six- teen firemen at my wedding." Second Firemen - "Yes, but no es- cape." A woman 'we""n Into a bank to cash a cheque. The cashier asked her to endorse it, but she did not know what he meant. "That's all right," said the cashier. "Just sign your, name exactly as you would on your letters and I'll give you the money." So she carefully wrote on the back of the cheque, "Your loving Mary." A young actor applied for .wore to the casting director of the Big Noise Film Company. "Nothing doing at present," said the big man. "See me in two months' time." "If you really want me you'd better sign me on now," replied the actor, "there are lots of other companies af- ter me." "Oh?" queried the director doubtful- ly. "And what companies are they?" "The gas company, the water com- pany and the electric light company." She "Don't you think that love is absurd?' He "Yes. Just two silly." Tourist - "Don't you ever get lone- some up here?" Mountaineer - "Oh, yes, but I have a couple of good jokes to tell myself." Shares. Many Millions The International Harvester Com- pany of Chicago, has announced its 65,000 employees in the United States and Canada would receive $4,- 400,000 4;400,000 , extra compensation at the end of the fiscal year ending Oct. 31, Sydney G. McAllister, president of the company, said the directors in declaring a final 1937 dividend of $1.50 a share on common stock last week voted also to appro- priate $2,500,000 to the company's pension fund out of 1987, earnings. Last year $2,300,000 extra pay was distributed to the corepany's em- pibyees. IN UP-TO-DATE STABLES k' 1 --Old Reliable Minard's When horse§ come in to stable with wire• cats or saddle boils, or cows have caked ladder, the thing to do is get the Minard's ,bottle at once, as Mr. Dowd of Glenboro, Manitoba, knows. Re writes: "I like your Minard's Liniment. Like to have it in the house. I have found rout Minard's Liniment especially good for barbed 'wire cuts on horses." A femme doctor prepared Minard's Liniment over 60 ;'ears ago. Still invaluable In , every btabii and every home 80 Indians To Type In Own Language The Cree Indians of Alberta will soon bo able to learn typewriting. Through the co-operation of the Ob- late Fathers and several Edmonton- ians, an eastern typewriter concern recently built a machine with 88 .char- ac'ters . The Cree language was put into characters by Father Lacombe and James Evans of Edmonton many years ago and through efforts of Father Langois and Athol 13eattie, Edmonton manager of the typewriter company, standard 42_unit key- board was fitted to meet require- ments of the language. The machines are to be used by the Oblate Fathers in Northern Al- berta mission fields and on Alberta reserves. The language is adapt- able to both northern Cree and Chip- ewyan Indians. Dreamer He trod the path that hundreds of his kind And humble calling trod. And yet a sense Of /worthiness surrounded him as ,;,fence Of blooms may hide a lovely soul and mind. His face held radiance, which the wholly blind Could feel and see, as he drew hear a door. Young head and shoulders lifted, which before Had slumped beneath a weight of daily grind. Blue jeans may house a heart of rarest joys, Small matter if Life's grime and soot has stained. For men who practise living honour - wise, Swinging a shining pail midst clang and noise Becomes a game . . . and broader vision gained, For men who walk with dreaming in their eyes. -Irene Archer. Air-conditioning Aids Growth of Mushrooms Mushrooms grown in air-condition- ed houses will shoe tly grace milady's dinner table in New York and points East. Thirty growing houses near West Chester, Pa., have been fitted with apparatus to control the temperature and humidity and by that means to increase the mushroom yield from two crops to three. Previously the houses were shut down during the summer months because hot weather produced inferior mushrooms. Control of temperature and hu_ naidity marks another chapter in the art of mushroom growing, one of the world's most specialized crafts. Par- isian mushroom growers long ago found a partial solution to the prob- lem of variable temperature and hu- midity by placing their growing beds in galleries and cellars from 60 to 160 feet below the surface of the ground. Suicide Used Clock To Start Gas Going Carl Bell Yeargin, 44 -year-old South Carolina machinist with an in- genious mind, executed himself with lethal gas in what was believed to be the first "trailer suicide" on record. The key of an alarm clock unwind- ing as the bell sounded lowered po- tassium cyanide tablets into a solu- tion of sulphuric acid producing dead- ly fumes which overpowered him as he lay stretched out on the floor of his trailer. On the door a warning sign was posted: "Danger! Poison. Only the law shall enter here." The hour indicator on the alarm clock had been set at 2 o'clock, indi- cating he had been dead nearly 12 hours when police broke into the trailer early in the afternoon and found him; his face turned a pasty white. Officers were forced to leave the doo3 open several minutes so the gas would escape. Yeargin . was embittered toward life in general, notes showed. Movie Actress Shoots Rival YVith Blank; LILLE, France. --Germaine Fey.," rier, 23 -year-old movie .extra, dre herself up histrionically this wee, and pointed a pistol at Jeanne Ca , lime, 27, her love rival. "Miserable woman" she shrieked, "Prepare to die !" Then she fired point blank.--bang.i bang! bang! Jeanne crumbled to the ground and, spectators rushed' forward. They stepped back, amazed, when; Jeanne got up and brushed herself off, It then became known that a Lille gunsmith had become suspicious when Germaine asked for "a loaded gun" -and had filled the pistol with blanks. Tho police tools Germaine away, Had t s. k 307900 - Miles Edmonton Meter Reader Says Dogs Get to Know Him John Woodruffe, an Edmonton met- er reader, estimates he has walked almost 30,000 miles during his duties in the past ten years. "People have the funniest places for hiding their gas meters," said Wood-., ruffe when he remarked it wasn't so much walking 10 to 15 miles day. He checks and notes in a book about 150 meters every day. Ile finds meters tucked away in basement corners, in' dining rooms and in almost every room possible. Woodruffe has encountered every type of housewife from pugnacious to sweet, He has explored nearly every home in the city. And he knows a lot of dogs, too. Terror of every door-to- door worker, dogs get to know the regular meter reader with his uniform and don't snarl or bark, Woodruffe noted. A stout pair of shoe soles is worn through in six weeks on the beat but in his walking clear around the globe in actual mileage, Woodruffe has found health and a good job, he says. Papal Official's Smite In Vatican Robbed The Papal Major-domo, Archbish- op Mella di Sant'Elia, reported this week that burglars had rifled his ap- artment, next to Pope Pius' suite, while the Archbishop was away on holidays. The Major-domo has not yet com- piled a list of the things missing nor estimated the value of the burglars' loot. Nor was it known when the apartment was entered. Vatican po- lice were working with Italian au- thorities on the case. The Archbishop is that member of the Papal staff who approves the ap- plications of thousands of pilgrims who come each year to see the Holy Father. Some Lottery Numbers Considered Unlucky Sellers of French State Lottery tic- kets have recently made some curious discoveries about likes and dislikes in figures. Even when, as is sometimes the case, there is a run on tickets just before a draw, there are many which remain unsold, and they consist of tickets numbered 5,555,555„ 1,888,- 888, 0,113,333, and so on. For some strange reason these re- peated numbers are reckoned to have far less chance than tickets with a good mixed number. Despite the assurances of mathe- maticians that 1,111,111 is every bit as likely to turn up as 7,418,962, that 1,111,111 remains unsaleable and numbers like 0,123,456 are cold - shouldered, too, because they are con-. secutive. A lucky number, in the, Frenchman's opinion, is a thoroughly well -mixed number. Lily - "Do you remember, Willie, how you used to catch me in your arms every night?" Willie - "Yes, dear, and now catch you in my pockets every morn Inge' General u_ "S. " rnllt!) "A" Batteries 13" A`7 � The best and most economical battery equipment for your radio. • THEY LAST LONGER Write for Pamphlet on "SUPERI 1 L.1 " "A" Battery Canada GeneralBatteries of General Dry aha Ltd®