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HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1938-03-31, Page 7E97,0,K+KV.K.4'IC.:O:0 1 1:? b 0 4-:b tIttl 1.4,`,0:4.:..f +74.7.47-$10 x 4.:4:0 %.4T:' Yn4 6"a+T 4:/•:.4:4:V 4 k P r''/ pi R A ■ r[ ( +, CI crib 9 ;;.:`'.4. LI /* is♦v"..r.eL:4:4A4'av4.:4:4`:<.:F.R„51',4.4:4'..,a;'/:4;1 014 414.10:dV f:6:, .4. < v: 4:a_ .a."e44 AGENTS WAN'I'l')O HAIRDRESSING SCJ300 .S AGENTS, DROP EV1.:IRa"11.11NG FOR our line. \'ir111rlwriild soder, big re - repeater, amazing profits, Crais;e Brothers, Niagara Falls, Ontario, Alt'i 1CI,i0S It SA T.14 SPEECTAOLE FRAMES, $1,50. PsiJ0- scriptions filled. Special low prices, 13y mail. Schaefer Optical, 150 Yonge, Toronto. SINGER DROPHEAD STJ\VING MACkI- inee - Reconditioned guaranteed like new, $14.00; new 'Williams Drop - heads,. $9, Shipping and creating, $2. extra. Sutherlands, 358 Gerrard Bast, Toronto. DON'T REBORE THAT ENGINE, USE Ovrhta,ul patented mineral plating, re- stores compression, stops piston slap, smoking and oil pumping, Works while driving. Saves 50 p,o. of oil. Saves gas. 500,000 satisfied .users. Highest British recommendations, Costs $3.75. Money -back guarantee. Free information. Ovrhaul Distribu- tors, 13ox 63, (Kitchener, Ontario. FANNING MILL (KLIN]!7)-FARMERS say real wonder seed grader. Kline Manufacturing, Islington, Ont. ItAItY cJ DOES t'OI'F;tits AP.t) I•srt Ifi'RY t+)t):I;Lvet l•IS'P FOR SEVEN YEARS WE HAVE USED more R.U.P. Pedigreed Males in our matings than any other breeder or hatchery in Canada and 1938 is no exception.'° Send for Tweddle Chlea.- iogue and read all about Tweddle Extra Profit and Special Mating Big Egg Chicks. These chicles are born with a head start and weigh where hatched, 2 ozs. more than the Gov- ernment required weight. Tweddle Chick Hat•'h.eries Limited, Box 10, Fergus, Ontario. BETTER BABY CHICKS FROM OUR large Leghorns. Wonderful winter layers of big, White eggs. Write for descriptive catalogue. Rhadynooit Poultry Farm, Aylmer, Ontario. WHY PAY MORE WHEN YOU CAN purehaee Gorernmeut Approved Chicks from bloodtested breeders at these pr'iees? Cockerels as tow as 231c, pullets 19c, non sexed chicks 934o. Send for circular. It tells all about Baden "Big Egg" (. kirks. Baden Electric Chick Hatchery, Box 59, Baden, Ontario, FOR 13T:TTER CHTCTRS, BETTER livenbility, larger eggs', better pro- duction, buy Pietarh'.v (government Approved Chicks at to„•est prices in years. Leghorns, Roc,cs, hlinorcas, Sexed Chielts, Pullets. Write today, Pletseh Hrtehery Stretford. Route 5, Ontario. BABY CH1t`KS, \\'HI'I.'il LI (HIOItNS, from large blood -tested etock, good layers of large eggs, ell eggs set weight 2 oz. or aver. Safe delivery guarnnt.eed Price is low. Maple Leaf Poultry F,.ttn, Beams,ille, Ontario, \,VHOT I'SA LE PRI('I.S - t)t'It RFn Seal Baby Chicks, the progeny of Registered and Pedigreed "lodes, as- sures the public of the highest qual- ity of '',irks obtainable. t'ri'es $7.50 to et 0.60 per 10e1. Goddard ['hick Rateheries, Brifannin Heights, Ont, A REAL OPPORT1'1'i'eY. GET ROE "Quality Controlled" Chic•lcs at new 1938 prices, Ask the folks who raise Roe Layers, They'll tr-11 you of big Musky birds that lire, lay lots of big eggs, make you more money. From a 10,000 bird breeding farm. Trap - nesting' and pedigreeing under R.O.P. Leghorns, Barred Rocks, New Ramp - shires Sexed or Regular run. Write today for free- catalogue. The Roe Poultry Ranch, Box. 0A, Atwood. Ont. CT7T YOT?TtsEI.i' A SHARE OI' NEXT Fall's egg profits with April -hatched Bray vhieks. Bray pullets mature early. 12 pure breeds •ilsn ernss- breds. Terre catalogue. Bray Hnteh- ery, 189 John St. North, Belem tem Ontario, POT'LTRYMFA REPORT BRAY NEW Hampshire pullets heting under fire months and laying up to 80.1" at 7 months, 00,brorris dressing 7 lbs, at 5 monthe. See our eatnita:Sle, Betty Hntehery, 13[1 lehn. Se Nestle Hamil- ton, Onts rite D1'Rr\e; (lteronene. NOV'EdMl l Tt AND Deeember lest, C.W.S. sold 1 110 dozen eggs, from 460 Bray \Vhit.. Leghorns, at 34 r•ente dozen. [lemma 378 dol- lars. Far•d rust.', 201 dol 1ays. Profits for 3 months, 371 amines. Send for 'a.talogue. llrny- Hate•} cry, 130 John St. North, Hamilton, Onterio, tet'[ US. (..tROI:ti wt•:1•:uw, PL.t,\'E'S MAIDEN FI AI]:,. ELFIN, Inc FI.ANT, postpaid. hardy perennials, bulbs, house pinniv, ,_et,Write for list-- Joseph Aiken. Take View I -rouse. Que. IlA'I•C.1I1N(: EGGS NEW HAMPSIITRES AND RElODi) IS - land Reds. Heavy inyers, exhibition winners. Fifteen eggs, $1.00; TftTty, ;3.00, 11. Fisher, Enterprise, Ontario. D15VELOPING AND PRINTING ROLLS DEVELOPISD, PRINTED, 1 free enlargement 25c. Re -prints 10 for 25o, Pho1.Crnft. 18310 Ring E., Toronto. ZERO PRICES. EXPERT WORK. ROLL with free enlargement 25e. Trevanna Studios, 93 Niagara Street, St. Cath- arines, (int. FREE! -TWO BEAUTIFUL ENLARGE- ments (one eolored) with roll de- veloped, eight glossy. fade -proof Prints, 28e; highest qurtlity. 1Tnehrny Films, Winnipeg. ROLLS DEVELOPED AND TIGHT Prints with free enlargement, 25c. Reprints 3c each. Commercial Photo Service, Dept. Tl Outn'emnnt, Que. I'TIOTO(:R.tvI%.Y SEM YOUR FILMS TO THE HOUSE OF QUALITY Nigher grade prints guaranteede by latest developingrocess. THIS MONTH'S ,SPECIAL OFFER -Any sizerolidevelopecl. Everyprintenlarged; orif you prefer, 16 prints. All for '25c. Free Film and Camera Coupon. FREE WITH EVERY ORDER e- ati: a beautiful portrait *fa motion picture star l•'4 g ° GOMSOLIDATED dtle Q I PHOTO SERVICE , IS t 5 (1 5 t3 Catharine S}. HAMILTON, ONT. ip_ "11 AVMAR, Canada's Foremost Adviser on human problems, will send o Chiraetcr end Personality Cha hes to anyone who writes him. This oouiing (eet offer )s made merely to odvertist MASON'S 49 COLD REMEDY end h ava;table for a limited time oniy. Wrist today, teaming a self.eddrsssed, stamped envelope and your birth -date, Address -[[soma', MASON r1EMLDltt LAMMT[ ) 4 M,CAut Sr, « TOSOaTo, 2ANA0A ANDRIe1v5' ACADEMY OF 1.3A1II- dressing Seeing classes forming on April 3rd, Free literature. 901 I31oor West, Toronto. FREE ENLARGEMENT W1TII EVERY 25o order, ;toll film developed and 8 prints, 25e, Reprints 3c each. 1'iright- line' Studio, 2 ltlehmond St, 30., To- ronto. DARTY MANDARIN (RIEUiSTLR.IOD) Soya Beaus, 75;31060; grade 1; germ- ination, 100%; yield, 92 bus.; grand championship awards Gordon Fin- lay, Northwood, Ontario Emil'1.Z)1'IVI!TNT 'WANT Et) YOUNG, EDUCATED MAN WANTS work, any hind of risk. Write Box 42, Sheho, Sask. PO ft SALE`, FOR SALE -150 ACRES IN LAMHTON County. Apply N Leach, R.R. No. 3, Wyoming, Ontario. tr ti It N E'E' [I It ill O $99.00 3 Rom Outfit $99.00 )Furnishes 3 rooms complete with good, well constructed furniture. ]Every trade-in piece has been thoroughly re- conditioned and is sold tinder a definite money -back guarantee if not satisfied. You do not have to take complete out- fit as we will gladly substitute or omit any pieces you do not need, hollowing 15 an itemized list of the 3 -room com- plete outfit. Beautiful chesterfield suite, 3 pieces, upholstered in a fine mohair with re- versible Marshall cushions, brnnd new solid walnut chesterfield table, new table lamp and shade, new end table, new modern smoking stnnd, new bridge lamp and shade, full size steel walnut bed, sunless spring, new all -felt mat- tress, new pair feather pillows, large dresser in rich walnut finish, kitchen table and 4 ehn.ir:e enamelled in Ivory, new 0' x 9' floor rug, 3 -burner gas stove and a beautiful 882 -piece dinner set. :3 HOOns 1•'[ ni b E'P[ til' - 5: (1).04 LYONS' TRADE-IN DEPT. 478 Yonge St. - Toronto (1 (11t GOODS \VI(iS, Toleines, TRANSFORMATIONS, Braids, [earls, and all types of finest qualify Hair Goods. Write for Illus- treterl 'etaIngne. Toronto Idumen Heir S"ppI' ' +e ta,rhnrst, Toron- to, MATTRESSES FOR S L1,l ITA CTRiEssES- SPRING 1 rtL\1 S- Ne„ I•'elt Mattresses, 93.50, New' Spring Mattresses, 98.50, 1i'runt 0:,,'tary to user. \ eterms"Tledding, 893 Queen St, West, Toronto. 111a1DICAI, 5000 EDMONTON ('ITiZPNS TESTIFY for (R. and S.) Powder, herbal remes dy-rheumatism, arthritis, neuritis, stomach troubles, etc. Two weeks, 91,50: one month 93: two months, $5. Druggists, or .3. C. McIntyre, Herbal- ist, Edmonton. Alberto Agents. Ly- me 0 . Montreal. BETISLEY's 1119"PEd2S (HERBAL TON- ic). Removes the eansc of stoatutch-, troubles ley building' up and purify- ing ehe blood. Mr. Thomas McGill, of 111 b:nrlseourt Ave., Toronto, suffer- ed with stomach ulcer for seven yen,rs, had lost forty petunds, has re- gained his normal weight, and enjoys his food, eats whatever he desires. Your blood will heal your body if it is in good eondttion. Send for testi- monials. Price 91.50 and $3.00 includ- ing HidneY Powders, 93.00 size lasts five weeks. Postpaid. Manufactur- ers, Mrs. T. VanCamp 8: Sons, 197 Langley Ave., Toronto, Ont„ Dept. 3. 11FPATOLA RELIEVES STOMACH, Iiver, kidney and bladder trobules. Symptoms: Pains in rig -ht side, under shoulder blades and arross hips, in- digeetio1l. gas, constipation, voile. Fo1(01111 of Germendo:i0 . 1'riee 95. Mrs. (leo. S. Alntrrs 1.1uX 1.1178X, Sas- katonn. Sash, AN Ol''1'15I1 TO Evisnv INVI,NTOT1. List of inventions and full informa- tion sent free. The Tln,nsay Company, Registered Patent _attorneys, 278 Rnnl: 51-.. (1111 Wu ('nn PERSONA 1, QUIT TOBACCO, SNUFF, DRINKING, easily. Inexpensively. home reme- dies, Testimonials, Guaranteed. Ad - vier free. Bos 1. Winnipeg. SAVE MONEY, INTAKE FACE CRP1A118, Lotions, chest rubs, cleaners in your kitchen, fifty finest formulas 50c. Woodhead. Box 90, Stratford, Ont. Si'11111.111. i9 E•:SOlt'l'S Nv:.A"rfr) HAVI, YOU SUMMER ACCOTIIODA- tion-Hotels, cottages, rooms, cab- ins, picnic [;rounds, ramping, etc, We can help you rent. Write now. 'Phe Canadian Vacation Guide, Canndian Building, 84 Victoria St., Toronto. I'51•11) (.'ARS FOR 54015 S \YE MONEY! DRIVE WITH SAFETY and pleasure, in one of our carefully reeentlitiouctl ears. Fully guaranteed under lrorcl Company plan. 05ei, buy from us ttgnin. Mann Motors, Limit- ed, ;'sed Car Lot, 840 St. Clair Ave. West, Toronto. India. Has S ecial Home, Por BOMBAY. - Active in health re- search of all kinds is the Haffkine Institute of this city, which in recent years has performed such useful work as investigating the causes, incidence and remedies of bubonic plague. One of its departments is a "nursing home" for snakes, where at present . there are about 40 specimens, including cob - rile, vipers, kraits and echis. There is a considerable export from India of snake venom. Cobra venom is used in relieving acute pain from t :oris and that cancer ane, al Bina peel , 1 of the viper has been found effective in checking excessive hemorrhage. One problem the institute has to bat- tle is the habit tete cobra has devel- oped of going on hunger strikes. When tIle proposed "mike farm" In the in- stitute is established, the reptiles, 1.111 - der natural conditions, should have better appetites, and thrive and 1nn1- tiply. This would relieve the trans- portation companies . of the anxiety involved in bringing snakes from the jungle to the institute. Ilafflcine Institute got its name from Waldemar Mordev.ai Ilaffkine, distinguished bacteriologist, 'under the Indian Government, who died a felt' yCar1, ego. CW ems Prior ,fight To British Crown "King Anthony" Hall Says He Is Descended from Both Tudors And Plantagenets "Yes, 1 a1a King Anthony, of Eng- land, Colne in, sit down and I'll light 111e tire," This was the greeting given to a journalist who event to a subul•I)an home in London, England, to inter- view a bald-browed, tall man named Ant1Aoey William hall, who spends his time addressing public meetings to prove that he, and not George VI, should be King of England, Hall, who says he Is descended both front the Tudors and Plantagenets, and, incidentally, claims the crown of Ireland because his mother's name was "]wire," banes his claims on the following contentions: James I a Changeling 1. Be believes the tradition that James I, King of England, was a changeling and was actually the sone of the Earl of Mar. So the Act of Set- tlement, establishing William of Or- ange on the throne of England, was invalid, for his claim was derived through his Stuart wife, Mary, and if Mary was a Mar, the claim collapses. 2. He claims that Henry VIII had a child by Anne Boleyn before he had divorced IKatharine of Aragon, This child, a son, he believes, was brought up by a farmer named Hall, in Sussex, and he can trace his ancestry directly to this son, known as John Hall The son, he claims, did not dare claim the throne from ]Elizabeth when be rime to manhood. He adduces the fact that Edward '4I was Dever created Prince of Wales, No Barrier to Inheritance 3. Be claims that illegitimacy 1s no barrier to iuheritauce, as William. the Conqueror and Edward VII both had illegitimacy in the blood, and Henry's claim as a L0i1('astriall, was admit- tedly through illegitimacy. IIa]I makes frequent public speeches to keep this claim to the throne alive. lei tae Fi a. Smiles and Fra bpi 844 • � 1:4 huc les .4 roe *1.4i C*i April fool comes but once a year, the other kind come every day. ' Young Son -"Say, Dad!" Dad -"Now what, young fellow " Young Son -"Nothing much. I was just fighting these pesky flies and wondering if Noah had two flies in the ark." Dad -"Why, I guess so. They say he had two of every kind of living creature on that old boat." Young Son -"Then, what I can't figure out is why he didn't swat both of them when he had the opportunity. Read It Or Not April Fool's Day is called: TI'ick Day 111 Portugal. Cuckoo Day in Scotland. Fop Day in holland. Fish Day in Prance. Doll Day in Japan. Joke Day in Russia. Boob Day in Spain. The word "April" is derived from the Latin aperire, to open, as the buds begin to open at this time of the year. In Nero's 011110 the month was called peroneus. Woman (to new acquaintance) - "Now you aren't the kind of a woman who lets the dishes pile tip in the sink, are you?" Friend -"I should say not, I make my husband do them." The same follow who can run a newspaper with all ease and please all the people, is having a heck of a time. to keep people pleased in his own Iine of business. Ilelen-"\What is an octoroon?" Jacob -"An eight -sided enspidor." We want the hest and it is only fair that we should try also to fur- nish the best. The proof of the pudding is the eat- ing -not the malting: Two men were hotly discussing the merits of a book, Finally, one of them said to the other: First -"No, Friend, you won't ap- preciate it. Yon 110701' wrote a book yourself," Second ----"No. and I ;lever laid alt egg,' but I'better judge of an i, b,' n1 a omelet than tiny hell in the (•otlniry," Mtuidy - "Rastus; why. don't you work? hard work never killed any- body." Rastus - ''Dat shows what you knows about it. I've already lost two wives dat way." Another approach to world amity: Never 'write a peace treaty lurtil 10 years atter the Armistice." He (throwing stones into the water). •--"I'm just a little pebble in your life." She --"Then 17113' not try being a lit - tie boulder?" GARDENING PRUNIr' C From March until June is consid- ered the best season for pruning, but there are a few specific exceptions, Most of these are the early blooming shrubs. These should be left until after blooming. Grapes must be pruned early in March to avoid ex- aessive -bleeding. Raspberries are pruned after the crop has been pro- duced and then all the year old canes are removed, The main object of pruning is to open up the centre of the growth so that sunshine and air may penetrate freely and also, of course, to produce a symmetrical plant. Naturally any dead or weak growth should be re- moved and also branches that rub against each other, A HOT BED Where a fairly large quantity of tower 01' vegetable plants are to be started early indoors, a hot bed is indispensable, but where only a few of each variety are wanted, the job may be carried out successfully in a sunny window. The hot bed is usu- ally,' prepared in March and simply consists of a bed of fresh horse man- ure, which supplies the heat, about 18 inches deep. On this, two or three inches of fine soil are placed and after the bed has heated up and then cooled down again -a matter of three or four days -the seed is sown in rows a few inches apart. The bed is protected by rough boarding along the side or heaped up earth and on top, aboat 10 to 18 inches above the bed, is placed a window sash well glassed and sloping towards the south. When the plants have devel- oped their second set of leaves they are thinned out and before being transplanted outside they are hard- ened in a coke frame which is simply a hot becI without any heating ma- terial. The window hot bed is simp- ly a shallow box two or three inches deep filled with fine soil, kept well moist01Ied. Into The Twilight Outworn heart, in a time outworn, Come clear of the nets of wrong and right; Laugh, heart, again in the grey twi- light, Sigh, heart, again in the dew of the morn. Your mother Eire is ahvay-s young, Dew ever shining and twilight grey; Though hope fall from you and love decay, Burning in fires of a slanderous tongue, --Rome, heart, where hill is heaped up- on hill; For there the mystical brotherhood Of sun and m0021 and hollow and wood And river ancI stream work out their will; • And God stands winding His lonely horn, And time and the world are ever in • flight; And love is less kind than the grey twilight, And hope is less dear than the dew of the morn. ---W. B. Yeats. ce Sulphur Acquires New Importance In Tho Story of Industrial Minerals In Canada It is not just of gold that mining hien talk these days. Talk two min- utes to John .McLeish, Director of Mines and Geology, Ottawa, and you will find that the big advance 01 110\v- adays is in sulphur and nepheline syenite, says the Globe end Maii. Nepheline syenite is being sbippecl from Ontario for use in ceramics in the 'United States. Anhydrite is being shipped as fertilizer to 19ngland, The Algona Steel Corporation is opening up the old Helen Inline for iron, and the big copper and silver alines are going after the production of sulphur for use in the ,paper -malting industry. "Great things have been clone in these fields in ('anada today and there are great things yet to be done," says John McLeish. Had Been Importing it He used sulphur as an illmstration. Canada for years, he pointed out, im- ported sulphur for palter n1a1111faetur- ing from Texas and Louisiana. And at the same tine sulphur belching from the smokestamks of smelters blighted the countryside of mining towns in Northern ()Mario and Brit - 151) Columbia, Researchists wept after the prob- lem. At Orsi' they captured the sul- phur from the smokestacks in the form of sulphuric acid, Now they Have captured it I11 its elemental form both from the smoke and front pyrites. The Aldei'mac Mines, Noranda, was now a t STOPPED IN A MINUTE ° a etre you tormented with the Itching tortures of eczema rashes, athlete's foot, erupti0na, or other akin atihiclions? For quick and happy relief, rise cooling, antiseptic, liquid D. P. P. Prescrlptfon. Its gentle oils soothe the Irri- tated akin, Clear, greaseless end stainless - dries fast. Steps the most intense itching estates).- A 35e trial bottle, at drug storem, eteecs 1t' -or money back, 20 "A,bigger ./ - and Sweet as a Nut!" opening up for the mining of sulphur from pyrites, said Mr. McLeish, Nepheline syenite, another of the new discoveries. Is a form of feldspar, which is cheaper than the feldspar now being used in china and glass making, he said. 'It is being mined in the Peterborough district and now is being exported. It was the discovery of new methods of processing the rock, to get rid of its iron content, that opened up this new field in Can- ada, he pointed out. R yal Winter Fair Continues To Grow Optimistic Outlook For 1938 Show -Ever -Widening Import- arnc.e In National Agricultural Scheme. At the annual meeting of the Royal Wittier Fair on March 23 when the Hon, G. Howard Ferguson was guest speaker, the directors, reviewing the past year, found ample cause for can - gratulation, they stated, that the Fair, now in its 17tI1 year, gives abundant proof of a freshness and vigor to as- sure its permanence, and that public recognition of the annual service it performs w1311111 the national agricul- tural scheme contiuu+s to grow in ever -widening importance. The last Fair was notable for exten- sion in several departments and for consolidation of established lines of work in other departments. One of the most significant developments was the expansion to twice tIleir previous size of exhibits of Seed and Grain. There is no doubt, the report adds, that with more suitable grain -growing seasons the Show at the Royal Winter Fair will attain truly national import- ance, Signs of Healthy Growth ,, k r,u.hcros also were made in the Women's Exhibits and in the Dog Show, as also in the local and historic exhibits of rural activities, and a new activity was the revival of the Silver Fox and Mink Show. In fact, the steady improvement noted for several years past was carried forward with- out abatement in every department in Ifl37. The growing number of Amerit•an live stock owners who exhibit proves the confidence it has established, notably in the Royal Morse Show and in the cattle divisions. The directors look upon this feature as one of the best signs for the healthy growth in their institution in the coating decade. The financial statement shows a small but Satisfactory surplus for the past year. Want Orthopedic Service Started About 400 Infantile Paralysis Vic- tims In Ontario Still Need Supervision Establishment. of a generalized or- thopedic 50)'vic0 throughout Ontario for the prevention of child deformi- ties was advocated last 11`e:01( by Hiss Greita Ross, supervisor of 11111'SPS for the Society for Crippled Children, in addressing the amnia' meeting at To- ronto. Miss Ross pointed ont that 111)0911 4011 infantile, pm•nlyeie ear's still needed sul,r(',islon and it was in this Connection that. She expressed the hope than some day orthopedic son. vice would he, created 10 serve the whole of the Province. DI'. Fred ll, Logan, retiring presi- dent, otttlluod 1.114' work of the soc icty during the last e i icint calling ng Un- tario's hardest hit areas Toronto, Lon- don, Port. Colborne, Barrie, Brace - bridge and Ottawa. The society had bulit. 400 bed -reading tables for crip- pled children, distributing most t)t them free of charge, asserted lh•. T.n- gan. Delegates approved the motion Of Dr, E. 0. Jane::, Chairman of the Pre- vention Committee, lo urge universal pasteurization o1' 9111114 throughout On- tario 30 a me1(ms of disease prevention thus re0lilrnling their r 51)111liou made in 1931. l)lm'itrg 1.937, 4,492 children were ettl'od for by 105 Ontario sr, 1 v 1 t T,el 8 reporting to the', *4(01(13, it was am flounced. Gadgets Prove Drivers Drunk Can't Be Fooled -Show Amount Of Alcohol In Breath, Blood The defendant who stands in court and pleads that he had "just two beers, judge," may in the not too dis- tant future find a couple of cold- blooded little gadgets stacked against him to prove that he_ was lucky to miss the pink elephants that go with the One is a combination of 91 ,:tics pump anti test tubes fe • "assaying" the subject's breath. The other is a hypodermic needle with which to ex- tract a specimen of the 8Il:;ject's blood, Blood Tests Taken The journal of the Ann.:St'ein Medi- cal Association discuseeI the situa- tion at Iength Iast week and f+ n ld: 1. That even one gla 5 of hoer in- creased the incidence of •' :•.' r io sim- ple experiments: 2. Tltat two or three whiskies caused "definite variations" from the normal acts of tIle ordinary driver. 3. That slight intoxicat?on started when the patient showed alcoholic content of one-tenth of one per cent. in the blood, Dr. Sidney Selesniek of Boston, found that blood drawn directly from the body offered the most positive proof of intoxication and the best medium because it was "[always - able" and required 120 effort on the part of the subject. Auto Radio Wems Of Nearing Train New Invention Causes I: To Blare A Warning of Approaching Danger A red light ,will flash ('r. the 11,1111 - hoard and the auto radio wi:1 blare a warning of train; apprc.a_11In grade erossillgq with a hne\w radii) 057 :,tion described Iast week at 0;;:3-, I..ti:ama. Designed to work in (retie, that are within tli' danger none wilan a train al)proaehes a. crossing, the [levier sig- nals the auto dashboard at the same 11111e that it starts the usual c'rossiuc lights and bells. The device. (lensing. one of its in- ventors, explained, consists of a s= -mill radio transmitter placed at grade crossings and actuated by approaching trains as are warning bells and gates. A wire is [strong from the transmitter to a (listanee of about cine -quarter mile along the road on both side's of the ernssinet Picks Up Waves Waves emanating fromthe wire within at 1011 -foot radius are picked up by •1 mechanism installed in ante radio receiving, sets. The pieltup 111 the auto radio eau he sot to operate of varying distaeees front „ crossing. It operates. only when a train is ap- proaching. Even if the auto radio is playing 111ns11', the warning signal wilt drown out the h arnloey, said its in - velri.ol's, Installation of the red warn- ing 1i±;llt on the dashboard roll ire: op- t lolhal, The pickup, ii was saeid, c.,' i rl he built into radio Seto for from "1 to $4. a.Ild the (Toss11ng's, trane1)lit81 rr:, ceche he it181:died for small cost. rake half a teaspoonful et Min'd's in molarse , Hem Minard's, inhale it. Also tub it well into, your ahe,L 32 You'd get relief " Issue No. 14- -'3 n