HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1938-06-23, Page 7CIassiFied_A.dvertising
HAW/ CHICKS
POULTRY ANI) POULTRY
E(I.U1 PM klN'1'
Vyrll PAX MORE WHEN YOU CAN
purchase these husky chicks from
blood tested breeders at these low
prices, Standard quality Leghorns
;6.95, pullets $14.90, cockerels $1.50
Barred Rocks, New Hampshire
Reds $7.95, pullets $9.05, cocker-
els $7.95; 10 day old Leghorn pul-
lets $17,00, 2 week old $19.50.
Large Egg duality hatched from
25 ounce eggs and larger add 1 et.
loghorn pullets, 2 cts. Top Notch
Chickeries, 16 Wilson St., Guelph,
Ontario.
;WE' CAN GIVE YOU PROMPT DE
livery on day old, cockerels, pul-
lets and mixed ehieks. Also start-
ed and older pullets. Our low
prices for July will surprise you.
Tweddle Chick 'Hatcheries Limit-
• ed, Box 10, Fergus, Ontario.
J. M.'s SEVEN HUNDRED BRAY
pullets averaged 405. eggs daily
all last Fall and held that 66 per-
cent average all Winter. Order
your.•Bray chicks today for real
production next Fall and Winter.
Bray Hatchery, 130 John Street
North, Hamilton, Ontario,
DON'T WAIT UNTIL IT'S TOO
late! The hatching season is al-
most over! Order your Bray
chicks NOW. Prompt shipments
on almost all breeds. Write for
prices today. Bray Hatchery, 130
John Street North, Hamilton, On-
tario.
J. W.'s BI -:AY NEW HAMPSHIRE
pullets average 1% lbs, when 8
weeks old. Fast-growing Bray
chicks ensure Fall and Winter egg
profits -Order your Bray chicks
today. Bray Hatchery, 130 John
BAILIFFS AND COLLBCTIONS::
.WE HAVE THE FACILITIES TO
act for you in any seizure or col-
Iection problem anywhere in the
world.` Our results are immedi-
ate and satisfactory. Ross and
Company, 102 Richmond St. W.,
Toronto.
FILMS AND PRINTS
itOLLS DEVELOPED, PRINTED, 1
free enlargement, 25c. Re -prints,
10 for 25c. Photo -Craft, 183 Icing
East, Toronto.
I� rJRNITURE
LYONS
TRADE IN DEPARTMENT
478 Yonge St., Toronto
JUNE CLEARANCE SALE
Every article marked down for
quick sale. 11'e must have floor
apace regardless of cost. .A. real op-
portunity to buy good reconditioned
furniture at a fraction of its actual
value. Listed are a few of the out-
standing values picked at random
from our enormous stock.
CHESTERFIELD SPECIALS
$13.95 3 piece suite, brown repo
cover, Marshall reversible
cushions.
$4.95 Odd chesterfields, assorted
covers. Marshall spring
cushions.
$24.95 3 piece suite, good repp
cover, Marshall spring re-
versible cushions.
$29.50 8 piece suite in blue ve-
lour, reversible Marshall
'spring cushions.
$32.50 6 suites, assorted velou)•:,
and repp covers, Marshall
reversible cushions.
(37.50 Beautiful mohair suites,
�P large sizes, reversible Mar-
shall cushions, in blue, walnut and
wine shades.
$45.00 4 rebuilt suites, new cov-
1P ers, in brown, rust and
green repps, reversible Marshal
cushions.
$49.00 5 brand new suites in as-
sorted repps, Marshall
spring, reversible cushions, some.
show wood fronts.
DED R0031 FURNITURE
$39.005 pieces in rich walnut
finish, dresser, chiffonier,
full size bed, sagtess spring and
brand new felt mattress.
$1960 Dresser and bed in walnut
�R '� finish, complete with sag -
less spring and new mattress.
$49.00 Beautiful 4 piece suite,
dresser, full size bed, van-
ity and chiffonier and rich 2 tone
walnut finish.
$59et
.00 Modern suite with Veneta -
an mirror, dresser, full size
bed, chiffonier, sagtess spring and
new felt mattress.
$69.00 Srnnrt suite in dark walnut
finish, dresser, vanity,
chiffonier, bed, spring and mattress
complete.
$67.50 Floor sample suite (new)
�P vanity, with Venetian mir-
ror, chiffonier, and full panel bed
(1 only).
$8.50Chiffoniers, 5 drawers, with
mirror backs.
$14.95 New chiffrobes. colonial
design, 5 drawers in wal-
nut shade.
$5.95 AND 'UP Large assortment
dressers.
.117 . 95 6 wash stands, assorted
sizes.
$15.50 New wardrobes, 'with large
mirror fronts and lower
drawer.
$89.00 Beautiful walnut suite,
floor sample, large chif-
fonier, full panel bed and dresser
with round Vonetian adjustable mir-
ror.
$35.00 1 Only Vanity, large round
�P plate. mirror, Oriental wal-
nut, reg. $45.00,
$59.00 New modern suite, vanity,
full size bed, and chiffon-
ier in two tone walnut finish.
DINING ROOM FTiItNITURE
24.95
Solid oak dining r room
suite, buffet, extension
table and 0 leather seat chairs.
$55.00 9 piece suite buffet, china
cabinet, extension table
and 0 leather seat chairs in rich
'walnut finish.
$67.00 Beautiful English oak
suite, buffet, china cabin-
et, extension table and 6 leather seat
chairs,
$09 00 Lat'ge solid walnut suite
i Vs7 buffet, china eahirnet, ex-
tension table and 0 chairs upholster-
ed
Easyblue
terms. Open evenings Ev-
ery piece thoroughly cleaned and re-
conditioned and sold under a posi-
tive money barb guarantee of satis-
faction,
LYONS
TRADE IN DEPARTMENT
478 Yonge St., Toronto
G1CORGIAN t3AX' SUMMER CAMI'
CAMP FRANKLIN'S PRIZE ESSAY
Contest. First prize, ono hundred
dollars; second prize, -fifty dollars,
Theme - "Camp Franklin -- the
Camp with Idents" Pull informa-
tion regarding Canada's unique
and pioneer recreational camp for
young men and ydung women,
from Camp Frenic]in's Toronto of -
ace, 83 /ergo Street.
11A1It (70111)$
WIGS, TOUPFiS, T11ANSFORMA-
tions, Braids, Curls, and all types
of finest quality Bair (foods, Write
for illustrated cataloguo. Special
attention to repair work, Toronto
Human Bair Supply Co,. 828
Rathurst,''I'uronto.
MEDICAL
ECZEIv1:A, SKIN AILMENTS, SORES,
quickly healed by Dermisoothe,'
the Olean, white, antiseptic oint-
ment. Sample mailed free direct.
35 cents at all druggists. Twenti-
eth Century Remedies, 87 'l:ngh'am
Avo., Toronto.
(R,&S.) RPIEUMATISM AND STOM-
ach Powder, "The Great Elimina-
tor," Contains ten of Nature's in-
gredients. Removing the cause
and eliminating Rheumatism,
Stomach troubles, Arthritis, Neu-
ritis, Constipation, etc. $1.50, $3.00,
mans Limi edAll uM intrealAgonts LY-
si1SCi]LLA 1iyuUS
GEM ELECTRIC FENCER, CAN-
ada's own. The unit that makes
ordinary fences too expensive to
build. A single strand of wire
and a simple portable Gem Fencer
keeps all stock whore they belong!
Ask for circular and name of the
GEM agent nearest you. Groh's
Cooler, Limited, Preston, Ont.
MOTOR BOAT FOR SALE
28 -FOOT MOTOR BOAT WITH 4
cylinder, 20 horsepower, electric
starting St. Lawrence motor. TOP
and side curtains installed. Would
make a•splendid supply boat. Spe-
cial price for immediate sale. The
Peterborough Canoe Co. 268 Water
Street. Peterborough, Ont.
PHOTOGRAPHY
ENLARGEMENT FPIeE WITH EV -
cry 25c order. Poll film develo ped
and eight prints 25c. Reprints 3c.
Established over 26 years. Bright -
ling Studio, 25 Richmond Street
East, Toronto.
PERSONAL
ARE YOU RUPTURED? RELIEF,
comfort, positive
support with our
advanced method. No elastic or
under -straps or steel. Write Smith
Manufacturing Co., Dept. 219 Pres-
ton, Ont.
EVERY MARRIED COUPLE AND
those contemplating marriage
should read -"Sex and Youth,' 104
Pages, postpaid 25c. Our 12 page
illustrated catalogue of sex books,
drug sundries, etc., free upon re-
quest. Supreme Specialty, 169
Yonge, Toronto.
ARE 1'1n: 1;Lt)N11 OR BRUNETTE?
Do yuu want to win your man?
Match your perfume to your per-
sonality. A delightful French per-
fume whose delicate, lingering
fragrance becomes part of you.
Keeps you sweet and lovely. Beau-
tiful bottle postpaid. Send 35c
Postal note. State whether blond
or brunette. Cosmetic Products,
636 Champagneur, Montreal.
QUIT TOBACCO, SNUFF, EASILY,
Inexpensively. glome remedy.
Testimonials. Guaranteed. Advice
free. Write Box 1, Winnipeg.
MARRY -WOULD YOU MARRY IF
suited? Hundreds to choose from.
Some with means. Itany farmers'
daughters and widows with pro-
perty. Particulars, 10c, Confiden-
tial. Canadian Correspondence
Club, Bos 128, Calgary, Alta.
PERSONAL PROBLEMS SOLVED
from your handivriting and signa-
ture. Write us in confidence. Send
25 cents today. la.tngsleY Docu-
ments, 221 'St. Sae:rament Street,
Montreal.
•- 1 e'1'}TMA SIJFFE'RERS"
Get quick relief from the paroxysms
caused by Asthma when you inhale
the effective fumes of "One Minute
Asthma Relief." Just a few whiffs
relaxes the bronchial tubes, relieves
the difficult breathing and that
dreadful gasping. This scientifically
made effective preparation has given
blessed relief to asthma sufferers
for over thirty-five years. Take ad-
vantage of this generous offer -
send ten cents. stamps or coin, and
receive a twenty-five cent package
prepaid. Good until July 15th, 1938,
only. MacRobie, Manufacturing
Chemist, Petrolea, Ontario.
His Pigeons Are
"Doves Of Peace
ff
Jack Miner Gives New Name to
Pure White Tumbler Pigeons
By LANCE CONNERY
For the last ten years visitors to
the Jack Miner bird sanctuary have
noticed goodly numbers of pure
white tumbler pigeons, which show
little fear of hump beings and are
c`lreeially at ease with the younger
visitors. Not ordinary birds are
these, for they are Jack Miner's
"peace doves."
Fitting symbol of the naturalist's
aversion to human and animal war-
fare, the birds cane to the sanc-
tuary after a lecture tour in which
he visited a friend, Sam Anderson,
in Hutchinson, Minnesota. There
he noticed the snowy birds,. and he
aptly called then "peace doves"
because of their size, resembling
that of a mourning dove,
and theirit
spotless white feathers.
Soon At Horne
On his return, to his delight he
found two pairs ofthe tumbler pig-
eons
ri -eons had been shipped ahead of
him by Sam Anderson. lie swiftly
had a pigeon house built at the
rear of the sanctuary pond, and
soon the feathered visitors were
quite at home in their new sur-
roundings.
They quickly multiplied, and now
there are dozens on the sanctuary.
They are so tame that they light
on the heads and shoulders of visit-
ing children for a reason that soon
becomes apparent to the observer.
Jack Miner always feeds the birds
only when children are present, so
they have come to associate the
children closely with feeding time.
A Simple Moral
The naturalist draws a simple
moral from the birds. Although Mr,
Sam Anderson has passed on, his
peace doves are still giving joy to
the thousands o'f visitors tc' the
Miner sanctuary, he points out.
"Are our lives going to 'do as
much for succeeding generations as
Sam Anderson's wimple flet?" Jack
Manner as tft•
HARD LUMPS CAME
ON HER LEGS
Ankles and Feet Swollen
with Rheumatism
Rheumatism sent this woman to
bed with Jumps, swellings, and in-
flammation. )et
nflammation.et these symptoms
soon disappeared, as they always.
will do when the root cause is re-
moved. This letter tells you the
method she used: -
"I was taken ill with terrible
rheumatic pains in my. legs. They
were badly inflamed, swollen, and
they were partly covered with red,
hard lumps. To put my foot down
to the ground was agony. After I
had .been in bed for 16 days, suf-
fering agony all the time, any hus-
band said, 'You can't go on suffer-
ing like this, let us try Kruschen
Salts.' He got a bottle, and almost
from the first I felt benefit. 13e -
fore long, 1 was completely re-
lieved - swellings, inflammation,
and lumps all gone -and I am up
again and doing my housework."
-(Mrs.) E,L.
Do you realise what causes a
good deal of rheumatic pain?
Nothing but sharp -edged uric acid
crystals which form as the result
of sluggish eliminating organs.
Kruschen Salts can always be
counted upon to clear those pain-
ful
ainful crystals from the system.
HAVE
HEARD
of my pigeons in his pocket -and 1
don't think them birds new there
. and committed suicide.
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Brothers Under the Skin
The words of preacher or sinner
Are very much akin
When against a misplaced chair
He barks hie shin.
-0--
Girl (to her mother) -flow do
the present-day dances differ from
those in your girlhood day?
Mother -Well, in my day a girl
(Stayed home when she didn't have
anything to wear.
-0-
Read It or Not
Jacksonville, Illinois, is the only
city in the world having an inter-
section on which are located four
churches, one on each corner and
each of a different denomination.
They are Baptist, Episcopal, Meth-
odist and Presbyterian.
=0 -
Wonder why we never see a plc•
ture of a June Groom? We wonder!
-0-
You can't push yourself ahead by
patting yourself on the back.
• Far too many of us have so little
conception of the real value of time
that we waste the greater part of
today either lamenting yesterday
or day -dreaming of tomorrow. Now
is the accepted time. Remember
that yesterday is gone, and tomor-
row never comes. -
-0-
A little hillbilly watched a man
at a tourist camp making use of a
comb and brush, a tooth brush, a
nail file and a whisk broom:
Hillbilly -Gee, mister, are you al-
ways that much trouble to yourself?
-0-
Courage!
There's the courage that nerves you
in starting to climb
The mount of success rising sheer;
And when you've slipped back,
there's the courage sublime
That keeps you from shedding a
tear.
These tWo kinds 00 courage- ore•-°
strength to the word! -
Are worthy of tribute, but then
You'll not reach the summit un-
less you've the third --
The courage to try it again.
-0-
.A man was charged with shoot-
ing a number of pigeons, the pro-
perty of a farmer. Counsel for the
defense tried to frighten the farm-
er.
Lawyer -Now, are you prepared
that this man shot your pigeons.
Man -I did.l't say he did shoot
them. I said I suspected him of
doing it.
Lawyer -Ah! Now we're coming
to it! What made you suspect this
man?
Man. -Well, firstly, I caught Trim
on my land with a gun. Secondly,
I heard a gun go off, and saw some
pigeons fall. Thirdly, I found four
Doctors Explain
Causes of Fear
They Aim to Cure Unhappiness,
Morbidityrbidity by Treating Them
Like Mental Illnesses
A mental treatment for the mil-
lions who are morbid, unhappy,
fearful, unable to make decisions
and haunted byfeelings
o
f insecur-
ity was reported to the American
Psychiatric Association meeting at
San Francisco, last week.
The treatment is entirely talk.
But it is carefully selected, almost
like lectures explaining mathemati-
cal theorems. The treatment has
been used successfully on thous-
ands of persons, the authors of the
report stated.
Tension Is Relieved
Psychasthenic is the medical
term describing this borderland
state. It arises initially, the report
stated, from lack of security in
childhood and early life.
To the victim life becomes a
"minute to minute battle." He is
under constant tension and his
dream of utopia is a state in which
no tension exists. In general, the
report stated, this •victim, whether
man or woman, is equal or superior
to the average person.
The first step in the mental
treatment is to teach that the con-
flicting thoughts "are in reality
only the stored content of the
mind." Both mental, physical and
•---emotional states which are common
to all persons are -very carefully
explained. If the psychasthenic can
be made to listen attentively, he Is
likely to be cured.
Elephant's Life
EIephants show no authentic
records of having lived as long
as man, in spite of their reputation
for long life.
Elephants have been given
credit for lives of several hun-
dred years, but cold facts fail to
prove this. Seldom has an ele-
phont been known to reach the
century mark, and 70 would be a
much more accurate expectation
of life for the great beasts.
New Zealand is enjoying pros-
perity in spite of the decreasing
world wool demand.
Health In Secondary Schools
How Are Canadian Teen Age Boys And Girls To Keep Fit?
II -THE VALUE OF SCHOOL
NURSING IN SECONDARY
SCHOOLS AND TEACHING
OF HEALTH
Miss H. M. Carley, B.A.
(Windsor-Walkerville Voc. School)
No doubt, by this date, parents of
adolescent children are aware that
the Department of Education in To,
ronto, through the course initiated
this year, is stressing the need of
an extensive and intensive health
programme. The general public
may not be familiar with this de-
velopment. The general public
t as their
should be made aware of it
taxes are providing the newer type
of education.
Let us, at eight -thirty in the mor-
ning, find ourselves in the office of.
the nurse at the \Vindsor-Walker-
ville Vocational School, the only
school in Ontario with a fullktinne
nurse -teacher on the staff.
Prevent Spread of Epidemic
In a student body of nearly 2,000
boys and girls of adolescent age
there are always some pupils who
need attention such as examination
of throats or noses fol' colds; need
temperatures taken to detect seri-
ous illness; need dressings changed
on cuts and wounds. A.11 students
who have been absent because of
illness have to present a note from
home and have to be questioned,
and examined if necessary, before
they are admitted to their classes.
Because of this examination a con-
tagious disease is noted at once and
a epidemic avoided. There is never
a widespread disease in this school
-thanks to the worse.
The care of the 111 is not confined
l
to the half-hour before nine o'clock;
but all day long patients may be
sent to the infirmary, students who
are ill, or who have had an accident
in sport. In any emergency, first
aid is rendered. Sometimes a life
is saved by First Aid.
If the illness or accident needs
the attention of a doctor the nurse
makes the appointment with the
doctor. If the doctor finds upon
examination that the teeth need at-
tention, males the con-
tact
the nurse t
tact with the dentist for the pupil. •
A Confidential Friend
The nurse needs to be a kindly,
sympathetic, athetic, friendly as
.frequently a pupil wishes to discuss
his or her mental or physical health
with some one. The tactful nurse
becomes the confidante and friend
of the puzzled boy or girl.
Part of the Job
Taking care of the sick pupils is
only part of the school nurse's job.
Every pupil must be examined by
the school doctor and an accurate
and detailed record kept by the
nurse.
A school nurse not only has to hp
a graduate nurse, but also one qua-
lified to teach, to do social service
work and to have a wide knowledge
of humanity, personality and safe
living standards.
By the time the pupils leave the
school they have had a thorough
knowledge of the construction of
their bodies and how to keep them
healthy, Any defeats which they
had when they came into the
school, and which could be Correct-
ed have been .attended to, and they
are ready tostart life with a clean,
1' -"tiny body.
Thin, strong papers -
'every one perfectly gixmmed-
.The,t's Chantecler
1
A STRAWBERRY PLOT
Few products of the home garden
give the family more enjoyment
than a patch of strawberries.
Picked fresh each day, they may
be used in a variety of desserts,
with the surplus being canned or
preserved for winter. A space
twenty to twenty-five feet wide and
fifty feet long will provide berries
for the average family.
Plants may be set twelve to fif-
teen inches apart in rows three
feet apart. Four hundred plants,
using a hundred each of four varie-
ties, will make for a practical gar-
den. A hundred of an early varie-
ty, like Fairfax or Premier, a hun-
dred of a medium early, like Dor-
sett or Catskill, a hundred of a late
variety, like Chesapeake, and a hun-
dred of an overbearing variety, like
Mastodon, will make a well bal-
anced planting.
The Plants Multiply
The 400 plants, if planted in the
spring, will multiply to about 2,000
by fall, through runners setting
their roots. If the patch is to be
grown free from runners they may
be planted much closer. TMs meth-
od of growing, while not producing
quite as much fruit, results in larg-
er berries and confines the patch to
a smaller area.
A good garden loam to which has
been added some well rotted man-
ure or compost helps the growth.
Two or three light applications of
complete plant food during the
summer and early fall also stimu-
late the plants. Plant food should
not be spread on the growths but
at the sides of the rows and then
worked in with a cultivator.
While the season for planting is
about over, many firms offer pet -
grown plants that will eonrpete with
those planted earlier. These usu-
ally cost more
than n the earlier
plants, but if planting has been de-
layed they are well worth the dif-
ference.
Strawberries are not deep rooting
plants. They should be watered
during dry spells if growth is to be
maintained. A good growth during
the year generally means lots of
berries the following spring and a
plentiful supply of young plants
which may be used to start a new
planting.
Straw, salt hay or leaves provide
a protective winter covering.
CLEMATIS NEEDS MOISTURE
Clematis develops best in a soil
rich in lime and well -rotted man-
ure. Drainage must be good and
sand should be added liberally to
open up the soil and let excess wa-
ter percolate through rapidly. The
plants must have a place where the
roots will be kept cool and moist.
Sun should reach the top growth
but the lower part of the plant and
the soil surface should be well
shaded by smaller plants.
Those that flower from late May
until July bloom 011 the old wood.
Pruning them consists of removing
the weak shoots after flowering.
Those that flower late bloom on the
new growth and the pruning is done
early in spring when they are cut
back severely before new shoots
have developed.
The
BOOK SHELF
By ELIZABETH E,EDY
"HEREDITY AND POLITICS"
J. B. S. Haldane
Written in a clear, simple style,
this work by the noted British biol-
ogist, Prof. J. B. S. Haldane, sets
forth for the general public the
author's views on various eugenic
(breeding better humans) proposals
now under wide discussion in the
civilized world. He declares that
drastic social changes, supposed to
be based on biological facts, are
not justified by our present slim
knowledge of the science of hered-
ity. The time is not yet ripe.
The author brings his knowledge
to bear on such social problems of
science as the nature of racial dif-
ferences and the sterilization of
the unfit - problems around which
controversy rages today, in conse-
quence of the stringent controls ex-
ercised recently in Germany. He
presents in no uncertain terms his
own findings that the premature
applications of the laws of heredity
to men, wonne • and nations results
in untold confusion. He also criti-
cizes the wide powers given to of-
ficials in the United States and
elsewhere, for the sterilization of
the unfit - an e"ort which will
yield 1'tle result, he says, ,
and
lead
to grave abuses.
Prof. Haldane concludes his book
significantly with these words: "we
must remember that the investiga-
tor,
a -
tor,
whether a biologist, an econ-
omist, or a sociologist, is himself a
part of history, and that if he ever
forgets that he is a part of history
he will deceive his audience and de-
ceive himself."
NO MESSY WAX TO
MEET FOR YOUR
JAMS JEILIES-ETC.
"Heredity and Politics," by J. B.
S. Haldane, 202 pp, Toronto, George
J. McLeod, Limited -$2.75.
Moths Different
From Butterflies
Most people call moths "butter-
flies," yet there are about nine
times as many moth families as
butterfly families. Because but-
terflies fly by day, while moths
are night -flyers, the former are
common sights to the most casual
observer. There are, however,
numerous ways of telling them
apart. Butterflies fold their wings
high over their backs when at
rest, while moths fold their down
flat. Butterflies have club -shaped
antenna, while those of moths are
feathered.
Make and Burn Own Gas,
, Give city -like gas cooking service C
anywhere. Light instantly. Regu- %}�
late at finger -touch. No pipes, 1'I
connections or greasy wicks. One
rf
1 andtwo-burnermodels. See dealer
or write. ��
THE COLEMAN LAMP AND
1 STOVE COMPANY. LTD.
Dopt.. W5eb Toronto, 0nt.
I IiIliII00,..............,.....„0:ilow,
IItivte' '
t4,
insect, snake, or animal •the best treament isD
f Mitierd's at once.o soothes, heals and cleanses.
Draws cad the poison!
Use MEMBA.SEALS
Blear as glass, Beautify your Jams
and Je(lios. Packetof 25Sealscom-
pioto 1Qc,atall grocers, druggists and
100 stores.,,,
IE
Issue No. 26-'38
A-0