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HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1938-10-06, Page 7ClassFa�d Acvertsng AGI;N'I'S WAN'ri7I) ATT;NTION! AGENTS AI.L OVER Canada are making spare time money showing Yuletide Christ - Inas (lands. A dignified and profit- able occupation •which means dol- lars for you. Without obligation we send I+REIO Portfolio of sam- plea with pamphlet on :gelling. Priced from $1 to $1.50 dozen— everybody buys them. T-Ilghest commission and bonus. Yule Tide Studios, Toronto, LADY IN EVERY LOCALITY TO represent complete line of ladies' lingerie, men's shirts, soeii:e, ties. Popular prices, highest commis- Mons, Reliable firm, 15 years In business, will stand any inveatiga- tion. i)u Jour Lingerie, 1649 Am- herst, Montreal. AMATEUR ARTIST TO PAINT AND SELL TO THEIR friends Christmas Cards of .Cana- dian Scenes. 12 Sample Cards worth. f15eesent fl�ned-ooMonychulrfun ed if not satisfied. This is pleas- ant, profitable work at home. Hollywood Studio, Room 30, 310 Spadlna Ave„ Toronto, DIG SPARE TIME MONEY ANYONE—ANYbVI1'ERD—CAN SELL Canada's best value Personal Christmas Cards. Experience un- necessary. Samples Free. Exten- sive selection of forty printed -to- order cards priced one dollar per dozen, none higher. Free cards with early orders. 40 cents high- est cash commission paid on every single order. Also 50%commis- sion possible on complete line box- ed assortments, seals, calendars, etc. Economy Printers. 332 King- ston Road, Toronto. EDUCATIONAL QUALIFY FOR OFFICE POSITION by home study. Courses inexpen- sive. Easy payments. Write for booklet. Canada Business College, ' Chatham, Ont. FARM MACHINERY GENUINE PARTS AND SUPPLIES for Magnet Cream Separator. Im- mediate delivery. Two rubber rings and complete set of brushes. Postage paid, $1.00. T. S. Petrie, 13 Rambert Ave., Swansea, Tor- onto. Iril urivrtt 13 f0 STOCK REDUCTION SALE Reconditioned Furniture LYONS' TRADE-IN DEPT. 478 Yonge St., Toronto 45 DINING ROOM SUITES, OAK walnut and birch in walnut finish. Thoroughly cleaned and re- conditioned. 8 and 9 piece suites. Priced from $14.93 up. e-" 37 BED ROOM SUITES — REAL high class suites in solid wal- nut, or walnut and enamel finishes. Guaranteed clean and completely re- conditioned. Priced from $24.50. 75 CHESTERFIELD SUITES IN A wide variety of covers and styles. Mohairs, repps, tapestries and velours, 2 and 3 piece Quites. Guaranteed clean and completely re- conditioned. Priced from $14.9N. LARGE STOCK 0E' OY)D DRESSERS, chiffoniers, beds, springs, wardrobes, kitchen cabinets and stoves at rock bottom prices. Buy With Confidence EVERY ARTICLE IS THOROUGH- ly cleaned, reconditioned and sold with a positive money back guaran- tee of satisfaction. LYONS TRADE-IN DEPT. 478 Yonge St., Toronto GARDEN/STOCK DARWIN TULIPS; 'CHOICE VARIE- ties, Top Size, 4c each, $3.23 per 100, mixed $3.00. Crocus 20c doz. William Hart, Importer, Seaforth, Ontario. 1 Ns Z'ii 1' CTI OIYS Ll Y00 I.IICPI TU DRAW altrar14:13 or paint—Write for Talent Test (No P'eo). Clive: age and oceupa- i.lon Box 14. 1'tnorn 421, 73 Ade- laide St, W., Toronto, 1)I:SIf:A11C til;[,001, roIt e aeeraIING GALASSO'S PRACTICAL SCHOOL of Tleeigning and Patternmaking for ladles' and gentlemen's gar - menta, dressmaking, and fur de- signing, Correspondence courses if nereseary; Day and evening classes. Individual instruction. Write for information. 05 Avenue Road, Toronto all .:e)IGAL NO MORE STORE FEET IF YOU will use 13usson's Fix -Foot. Soft- ens callouses. Relieves all rases of Trench Feet, Athiete's Foot. Send 40c. 907 L umhermnns Bldg., Vancouver. 13.0. MUSICAL iNSTRUMENTS WE TEACH MUSIC 13Y MAIL. — Piano. Violin, Guitar. Voice cul- ture. Simple as abs. Particulars free. -Paramount Conservatory of Music, 246 F., 18th, Vancouver. ,. 'RIAOMR MAGNITI'O AND C17N1t:1'i.ATOR iti:l'Anl; SEND) CIS YOTTI4 TRACTOR MAGNE- to and Generator Repairs. We save 3tOU money. Allanson Armature Manfr., 855 Bay St, Toronto. NEWSPAPER ien01'EBar W ANTED ADVERTISER :Is INTERESTED IN purchasing Ontario Weekly News- paper. Can make reasonable down payment in cash and monthly pay- ments for balance. Must include good job business and well estab- lished newspaper in growing dis- trict. 0. Emerson, 9 Delaware Ave., Toronto. 01)411115I.Ei'C Tou,G"rS YOU CAN HAVE CITY CONVENI- ences in your village or farm home without water supply or sewers Write for free information on our modern, self -emptying, odourless Toilets from 535.00 up and leave bohind for ever the dread out- house with its flies, cold and un- healthy discomforts. Kausttne En- gineering Company, 164 Portland Street. Tnrnnr„ Ont. WAverleY 8085. t'IIO'r06IRAPRY FR16J3 ENLARGEMENT — ROLL film developed -8 prints or re- prints 25c. 8 enlarged prints 30c. Established over 25 years. Bright - ling Studio, 29 Richmond Street East, Toronto. • PHOTOGRAPHY DEVELOPING AND PRINTING BEAUTIFUL ENLARGEMENT FREE —Roll developed and eight prints 25e, Satisfaction guaranteed. Mali Order Photo Service. Box 809, Peterborough, Ont. QUILTING PATCHES FOR SALE QUILTING PATCHES, LARGE BUN- • die, enough for five quilts, $1, postage prepaid. Riegler's, 282 Armadale, Toronto. SCRAP IS GOLD BRING TOUR SCRAP IRON, RAGS, paper, mattresses and all old met- als to us and get higher prices. No amount too small. Consolidated Iron and Metal Co.. 58 Niagara St., Toron$o. STAMMERING STAMMERING CORRECTED, HELP- ful booklet giving full informa- tion. Write today. W. Dennison, 150 Carlton Street, Toronto. What Science * Is Doing * WEATHER HAS A "ROOF" A "roof" for the weather, dis- covered just under the strato- sphere, was described to the fourth International Congress for Applied Mechanics at Cambridge, Mass,' The roof is made of huge streaks of air, shaped like fish- hooks. One hook may be a third the breadth of the United States. Twenty or thirty of them may be detected on one day, roofing the United States from the Rockies to the Atlantic. On special maps they resemble a mass of snakes, partly coiled. They appear to be the controls for the mixing bowl beneath them, the ARMS USELESS ON A WET DAY Rheumatic Pains Relieved by Kruschen Here is a noteworthy instance of the manner in which damp weather can affect the joints of one who is subject to rheumatic pains.' "I had been suffering from rheumatism very badly," a man 'writes, "and had such pains in niy joints that 1 could hardly bear it, on a wet day especially. It pained me terribly to use lily arms, and I • was hardly able to work. I tried two different remedies, but 1 was still as bad after the treatment, "Then I was told to try 1Crus- chenSalts, which quickly brought relief. So of course 1 have kept on mith it, and I alai now inn Ch bat& ' ?! ;lave 11LVei' felt go fit for years. I used to feel so miserable and &..uggisl ` but now it is a pleas- ure to IN able to )v rk ,"--- .Vii, r I hd pains and stifitress of r 1eu- matisn'i are often caused lay uric acid crystals in the =Sales and joints. The numerous salts in• i~tuschen assist in stimulating the internal. organs to healthy, reeve lax- activity. and heir them to c"im- nate excess uric acid. „ . . whirls of air which are "lows" or storms, when revolving in one di- rection, and "highs" or fair, in the other. Their detection and their part in making the weather was report- ed by Dr. C. G. A. Rossby, of Massachusetts Institute of Tech- nology. They were found by air- planes and weather sounding bal- loons. "DEATH IS PEACEFUL" We "speak of the shadow of death, because we fear it as a darkness stabbed with pain, Yet there is one thing that no one ever seems to bother to point out for our comfort; and it is this: That all the medical evidence points to death, not as an agony, but as a painless passing from consciousness to the last equiva- lent of sleep. Did you ever read Dr. Alexis Carrel's "1VIan, the Unknown?" Dr. Carrel explains that death is not instantaneous. It consists of two stages: general death, or the death of the individual, and local, death, or the death of the organs. General death takes place with the last beat of the heart. At this point, personality ceases and the man is biologically dead. But each organ dies at its own rate. The kidneys, for instance, can live on for more than an hour. MEASURES VITAMIN "A" Invention of a device which de- termines the Vitamin A content in the human system in 30 seconds is claimed by Dr. Lionel Bradley Pett, 28 -year-old University of Alberta leetur4r-scientist. Lack of the vitamin is related closely to "night blindness," colds and other diseases of the nose and throat. The device, simple in appear- n e b t ,s ctually mathematically )nvo'lved in Its Construction, out- wardly resembles a circus midway "penny peep" machine. Staring into i11e peep -tubes, a patient's eyes are dazzled by a strong. light shining on white paper. - The length of time taken for the eyes to return to normal shows any deficiency in Vitamin A. ton - ten t, i3lue Coal Appointments HENRY S. GAGE HAROLD VERMILYEA It is witis considerable interest that the coal industry received recent news of the appointment of Henry S. Gage, Sales Agent of the D. L, & W. Coal Company in Western New York and Ontario, to an executive position in the head office of that company in New York City. Harold Vermilyea, who was formerly a representative in Ontario, has been appointed Sales Manager for Western New York and Ontario in his place. Mr. Vermilyea is widely known throughout Ontario and although regretting the departure of Mr. Gage, his return will be wel- comed by coal trade throughout this territory. HAyE HEARD THE LITTLE THINGS It takes a little muscle, and it takes a little grit, A little true ambition, with a little bit of wit; It's not the biggest things that count, and make the biggest. show; It's the little things that people do, that make this old world go. A little bit of smiling, and a little sunny chat, A little bit of courage,•to a comrade slipping back; It's not the biggest things that people do, that makes this old World go. It takes a kindly action, and it takes a word of cheer, To fill a life with sunshine, and to drive away a tear, Great things are not the biggest things, that make the biggest show; It's the little things that people do, that makes this old world got The anxiously expectant father had been pacing the room, nervous - 1y, biting his nails, when the nurse appeared with the news that he had a baby daughter. "Thank God, It's a girt," said the father. "She'll never have to go through what I have!" READ IT OR NOT Piano tuning- has been found a suitable craft for the blind. New Books; (Politics and Finan- cial) "How to Skin Friends and Bamboozle People." Cora "I never knew Jones had twins," Dora — "My dear! He married a telephone girl, and, of course, she gave him the wrong number." When it comes to pass that •the town isn't overflowing with friend- ly, genial, fast -talking fellows with a fist -full of cards, an arm full of . posters, enough promises to fill a volume, it's a pretty good guess the election is over. The world has now divided itself into two classes of people; those who get jobs and those who have influential relatives. Minister — "Mr. Zeigler, I never see you at my church. Don't you ever attend a place of worship?" Zeigler — "Yes sir, I'ni on my way to her house now." By hard work and close applica- tion we may in the next few years get back to where we were ten years ago. Blondine — "Did you go to the circus?" Brunetta — "Yes, and I am cer- tainly glad of it." Blondine — Why?" Brunetta — "Because ever since I saw the hippopotamus I have been better satisfied with my own shape." Civilization has developed to the point where a trip around the world hardly gives a man tizr enough to grow a beard on the way Sue — "I'm just templrnnentat" Joe — "Yes, 98 per cent, temper and 2 per cent. mental. Motorists in British Malaya now have no fuel taxes, insurance, or driver's license to care for since the introduction of the tax of $25 a year on automobiles, which cov- ers everything. Issue No, 41—'38 Scottish Farmers' Canadian Visit interested in Breeding of Cattle And Draught Horse Stock A group of Scottish farmers and their wives and families will visit Canada in November. It is not known at present how many will be in the party but they will arrive in Montreal November 12 in the Canadian Pacific liner Duchess of Atholl, and will spend a fortnight in Canada. Ten days of this period will be spent in Toron- to, from November 13 to 23. They will spend Saturday, November 12, in Montreal. The tour has been organized by the Ayrsbire Cattle Herd Book So- ciety and the Clydesdale Horse Society, two notable Scottish or- ganizations devoted to breeding of cattle and draught horse stock. Town Clerk Finds Owner of Teeth Walter Hawkins, Port Stan- ley (Ont.) municipal clerk, is called on for many unusual requests, and to give assist- ance on problems, but none has been more curious than the recent successful case of the missing false teeth. During the summer a Port Stanley resident found the teeth at the water's edge on the main bathing beach, and turned them over to Mr. Haw- kins. In turn, he watched the lost and found newspaper ad- vertisements appearing it the daily papers, and posted a no- tice on the municipal bulletin board. Now he has learned that a summer visitor had lost his plate and accordingly sent the missing item to the owner, a resident of Detroit, who dis- covered that the welfare of the tourists is considered highly important here. Today's Changes In Hospitality Modern Hostess Sets Fresh Rules—More Casual Treat- ment of Guests Is Seen Hospitality—like most things— has undergone some changes in the last few years. Once to be hospit- able meant to urge a guest to come, urge him to eat (or drink) too much, urge him to stay longer than he should, and keep flim at the door while he was urged to corse back. Today, modern hostesses realize all that is a strain—even more of a strain on the guest than on the hostess. So worsen have started treating guests more casually. Not, mind you, in the affected "Why in the world did you turn up, but now that you are here we'll make the best of it" manner of the peo- ple who mistake rudeness for so- phistication. But in the manner of real friendliness that means "If You can conte we want you. If You can't we'll understand." And then, once the guest arrives, lets him do about as he pleases. And lets him go without argument when he says he• mast ^r'. Rea; ri ndliness Showtl Today's hostess doesn't let talk turn fo gossip—or monopolize the conversation herself. Neither she nor the host outshines the guests —no matter how easy that might be, You go to her house feeling that she wants you because you are YOU. Yon never feel while you are there that she has gone to too much trouble (though she has, of course) and you leave without feel- ing apologetic for not staying long- er, Wor'ld's Finest Ski Instrrict r Second Only to Hans Schneider Is coming to Gray Rocks Inn, St. Jovite, Quebec—Will Es- tablish Famous Hans Falkner Ski School There. One of the greatest forward steps in the promotion. of ski -leg in'Can- ada and the Uoited States, both fors beginners and for those who al- ready consider themselves .experts, is the transfer.of the famous Hans Falkner Ski School from Ober- Gurgl, Austria, to Gray Rocks Inn, St. Jovite, Province of Quebec. Falkner is probably the most .out- • standing ski instructor in the world today, with the possible exception of Hans Schneider, and he brings with him to Canada several of the teachers who have been associated with him in his work at Ober-Gurgl. The establishing of the Hans Falkner Ski School in the Province of Quebec should be of great inter- est to skiers in Eastern Canada and the Eastern section of the United States. Falkner, himself, is an in- ternational figure, who will be re-, membered by many as the man who rescued Prof. A. Picard and his stratosphere balloon from a cre- vasse in the Ober-Gurgl glacier in May, 1931. The Londonderry Cup Among the prominent people at- tending the ski school at Ober- Gurgl were Ishbel MacDonald, daughter of the former Prime Min- ister of Great Britain, and the Mar- quess and Marchioness of London- derry. The two latter guests were so pleased with the spirit and at- tractions of the school that the Marquess donated a large silver cup to be yearly given to the win- ner of an international ski race or- ganized and directed by Hans Falk- ner. These races were to be open to ski experts, amateur and profes- sional, from any portion of the world. This race was to be desig- nated as the Londonderry Race. Before Falkner's arrival in Can- ada he was promised by Lord and Lady Londonderry every co-ppera- tion possible and was also given the right to establish in Canada an in- ternational race with the London- derry Trophy as a prize. Canada. and Jamaica Flour, cornmeal, oats, wheat, ham, pickled,pork, condensed milk leaf tobaco and potatoes were the principal agricultural ex- ports from Canada to Jamaica in 1937, when the total of all Cana- dian exports amounted to consid- erably more than four and a half million dollars. As in former years, Canada was the largest in- dividual supplier to Jamaica of goods classed as food, drink, and tobacco. Ate His Shoes By eating a pair of sandals, a peasant of Demir Dree, Turkey, has won a bet of one Turkish pound (80c). He mixed butter with the sandals, which he had torn into pieces and fried for half an hour. $too F» n id Lamp or Lantern 1. your Coleman Dealer Raps TWO DOLLARS forany old lamp or lantern when you trade It In on a new Cole- man. This means you get a new Coleman Lam fdr $8,851 (Shade extra. Sig saving an Coleman Lan- terns, too! See your Cole- man Dealer, Trade today/ W:s'Ives Attack Browsing Herd Situation Becoming Serious in Bruce . County As Pack of Nine Wolves Seen Together LUCKNOW. -- David Carruthers had a 1,200 Ib. steer killed last week by wolves in Kinloss Town- ship. The animal was pastured on the McGillivray farm, near the Carruthers' farm. Hearing a com- motion, Mr. Carruthers investigat- ed but found nothing except the herd running fast, but the next morning he made the discovery. It was evident that the animal had been attacked on the throat and countless places on the body. The situation is regarded as se- rious as one report states that nine wolves were seen chasing a deer recently. Those in the Hoiyrood area who have had animals de- stroyed are Richard Elliott, three sheep, also William. Statters and William Thompson's have been at- tacked. During a storm at Brusa, Ana- tolia, millions of dead frogs rained from the sky, their bodies being found over an area .of several square miles. - RUNNING RACES AT LONG RANCH Wednesday, October 5th to the 12th, 1938 Long Branch Jockey Club, Limited DIRECTORS: C. H. Kemp, Fred S. Orpen, G. W. Hay Learn to Ty A i ' at E ome Typing is a valuable $1 Weekly asset. Only 51 weekly, Buys a buys a new Corona, world's most popular CORONA portable typewriter. in- cluding Carrying Case and Touch Typing Instructor. Write for full details. L C Smith .0 Corona Typewriters of Canada Ltd., 87 Front St. M., Toronto • ' and to csp e,t- too is /low the Ioka{price ih yerkovonderj'.riehthusiast'Afore and nd 2no 1 a re d o r< itg co .cuitine- fuors-creast me cznf-.carri.Work andWbYburrrbe,sdustless,oss H $Cq Rathe meal that j'k' sit/ Order early from Your 1Ozhco de tedeservesyourfue bunss e. 11¢.'boot �RMO DJ`Ttf::44:0eue,ficale:`,67:/et.; Aat n �OLSa,'• alib y�'i S. HAM LION SY-PRODUCT COKE OVENS, LiMlT6O HAMiLTON, CANADA YOUR LOCAL DEALER'S NAME APPEARS ELSEWHERE IN THIS ISSUE u Cir %), Y • t•.'":"#;# 1'hrr a;=•