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Zurich Herald, 1938-10-20, Page 7SHE WAS A VICTIM.. OF HEADACHES Kruschen Got at the Cause This woman's headaches were of the gripping kind that reduce the sufferer to something like helplessness. She tried tablets. She tried pills, All without avail. Only Kruschen could help her. "I used to get very bad head- aches," she writes. "No tablets or pill's of any kind could relieve thein. One morning, casually, I tried Kruschen Salts in a glass of hot water. I continued taking it, but A have not had one of those awful headaches since. Kruschen suits me better than anything else. I find it very good." — (Mrs,) L.A.W. Headaches can nearly always be traced to sluggishness of the kidneys, liver and intestines, and to the unsuspected retention in the system of stagnating waste material which poisons the blood. The numerous salts in Kruschen stimulate the internal organs to healthy, regular action so that no dogging waste is allowed to col- lect. Tour inside is kept clean and serene. And that is just how Kruschen Salts brings quick and lasting relief from headaches. Caught a Doe In His Arms There's a new game in Algoma district—home of the famous Al- goma wolf --'- catching deer by hand. Robert Agnew, cottaging at Harmony Bay on the Batcha- wana road, near Sault Ste. Marie, saw a two-year-old doe in a bay 75 feet off shore. About that time the department of highways road grader came along with Ed. Labelle and Max Wannamaker. • LabeIle took off his shoes and socks, rolled up his pants and waded into the water. When he went to touch the doe, the animal ran to shore and into Wannamaker's arms. Nearly 30 vessels are Under con- struction in Norway. The BOOK SHELF @y ELIZABETH EEDY By ELIZABETH EEDY 'WITH MALICE TOWARD SOME' By Margaret Hulsey It's on the "Best Seller" list, and everybody's reading this book that bites the hand across the sea (if we may be allowed to mix our me- taphors). A great many things that we knew vaguely to be wrong or funny about the 4nglish have been caught and bottled by the author so they can't get away. And there we have them! Margaret Halsey is the wife of a young Ph,D, who went to England on an exchange professorship. And while her husband taught, the au- thor saw life as it was being lived in a small English Wllege. A nice, sweet little book of essays about the English countryside should therefore have been the result. In- stead this demure lady, possessed ()IA superlative sense of humor and leaking acid at every pore, care- fully worked at an etching of Eng- land that will cause a war between the two English-speaking nations if it gets into the right hands. "With Malice Toward Some." By Margaret Halsey. Illustrated by Peggy Bason, 278 pp. Toronto: Mis- sion Book Co. $2.25. Record Puffballs One of the largest puff balls on record in the Caledonia (Ont.) district, was found by John Will- iamson in a field on the outskirts of the town. It measured 43 in- ches in circumference and weighed eight pounds. That puff ball is just an infant compared with the one found by Lorne Harett, south of Summer's Corner on the Fourth Concession of Malahide. It was found in his orchard and weighed fifteen pounds. Egypt has increased its excise duty on alcohol. Classified Advertising l AGENTS WANTED LADY IN EVERY LOCALITY TO represent complete line of ladles' lingerie, men's shirts, socks, ties. Popular prices, highest commis- sions. Reliable firm, 15 years 1n business, will stand any investiga- tion. Du Jour Lingerie;'1649 Am- herst. Montreal. WORLD'S LARGEST PUBLISHING company can use full or part-time agents to solicit orders for Pictor- ial Review, Good Housekeeping and Cosmopolitan, which are Just a few. Highest commissions paid! For complete list and information write: D. E. Wilson. 331 Bay Street. Toronto. NEW INVENTION ENDS DRIVING risk at night. New, ingenious atop the glare spectacles, n. sensa- tional contribution to night safety. Dangerous headlight glare effect- ively filtered out without impair- ing view. Relieve eye strain—in- sure comfort and protection. Well built, attractive. No lenses to break. W111 last a lifetime. Can be worn with or without eye glas- ses. Only 31.75 postpaid. E. M. Penfold & Company, Richmond, Que. Dealers and agents wanted. AMATIMP. ARTIST TO PAINT AND SELT,. TO THEIR friends Christmas Cards of Cana- dian Scenes. 12 Sample Cards worth $1.00 when painted sent on receipt of 15c. Money cheerfully refund- ed if not satisfied. This is pleas- ant, profitable work at home. Hollywood Studio, Room 30, 310 11padina Ave., Toronto. AUTOMOfl1LI; LU:1'AIRS Shock Absorbers SALES AND SERVICE. ALL MAKES. We specialize. Fred Stratford, Limited. :15 Gerrard West, Tor- onto. IIIG SPARE 4131E1 AiONEY ANYONE—ANY WHERE—CAN SEUL 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, 322 King- ston Road, Toronto. DO(,!i POE. SALE HOUNDS -7 ATOS. FEMALE, $8.00; 13 Mos. 325.00 pair: 7 Mos., 3h hounds, 35.00 pair. Clarence Hunt- er, Hawkesbury, Ont. 11111W IATIONAL QUALTFY F011 OFFICE POSITION bdy. Courses Iexen- sive home Easyttpayments. Writepfor booklet. Canada Business College, cha them. Ont. 'LR 3111FILMING' $TOCK. F'Olt M1N..K, SI INFIR PDXES AND !flue T+oaes or high grade breeding stork reasonably priced, write L. A. Jones, 58 Arthur Avenue, St. Thomas, Ontario, (':AIII)17N S'i'OCI DARWIN TULIPS; CHOICE VAltlE- ties, Top Sire, 4c each, 33.25 per 100, mixed 33.00, Crocus 20c doz. Willlain Mart., Trnporter, Seaforth, Ontario. INSTRUCTION LI A1tN SHORTHAND AT HOME IN one week!-- Complete course, 31.00! e Money -back guarantee, Ivtod,,oerh method. Sight/land Systems, 19'fs Kirby, Timmins, Ont. X1Tii. V51'AI'luii 1 itori tt..t's %VANP1D%) ADVERTISER 15 [N'r]7RTiISTED Ili purehltsing Ontario WeeklY NeWs- paper, (Ian make reasonable down payment in cash and monthly pay- meets for balance. Must include good Job business and well estab- lished newspaper In growing dis- trict. 11. Emerson, 11 Delaware Ave., Toronto, 1011N11'URiO 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 $14.95 up. 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 suites. Guaranteed clean and completely re- conditioned. Priced from $14.95. LARGE STOCK OF ODD DRESSERS, chiffoniers, beds, springs, wardrobes, kitchen cabinets and stoves at rock bottom prices. Buy With Confidence EVERY ARTICLE IS THOROUGH- ly cleaned, reconditioned and sold with a positive money back guaran- tee of satisfaction. LYONS TRADE-IN DEPT. 478 Yonge St., Toronto l►DO1l R 1, KS$ Tomeri'S YOU CAN (.AVE CITY CONVGNI- ences in Your village or farm home without water supply or sewers Write for free Information on our modern, self -emptying. odourless Toilets from $40.00 up and leave behind for ever the dread out- house with its flies, cold and un- healthy discomforts. Kaustine En- gineering Company, 164 Portland Street, Torentn, Ont. ivAverley 8935. PATENTS AN OFFER TO EVERY INVENTOR. List of inventions and full infor- mation sent free. The Ramsay Company, Registered, Patent At- torneys, 273sIkinlc St., Ottawa, Can. I'EIISONAL QUIT 'i'Ol',A000, tiNUFF, EASTUr, inexpensively. ]Tome remedy. Tes- timonials. Guaranteed. .Advice free. Bartlett's, L.ox 1, Winnipeg. 1'iIOTOG11APITY F.R.EE ENLARGEMENT — 1;, U L L film developed -8 prints or re- prints 25c. 8 enlarged prints Ole. Established over 25 years. Bright - ling Studio, 29 1tirhmond Street East, Toronto. rilo'rOGItAP11'1 DEVELOPING AND PRINTING BEAUTIFUL ENLARGEMENT FREE — 11o11 Developed and eight per- fect prints 25e. Satisfaction guar- anteed. Mail Order 'Photo Ser- vir.e, fax S99, Peterborough, Out. QUILT REMNANTS leRldll! "QUILTING l 1T1T" 72-90 inehes. With six pounds. Wash - fast remnants! T tints. Broad- cloths, Sills, Flannelettes. "Col- lect $1.25 Guaranteed! Samples — Pic, Royal Textiles. 101..125. Outremout, Montreal, SCRAP IS GOLD 13111;0 YOUR SCRAP IRON, .RAGS,. Paper, mattresses and all old met- als to us and get higher prices. No amount too small. Consolidated Iron and Metal a'..•, 58 Niagara St., Tor onto.... 5'i'A111;11191tiN/.: STAMMERING CORRECTED, HELP tu•1 booklet giving full informa- tion. 'Write today, W, Dennison, 150 Carlton Street, Toronto. TRACTOR MAGNETO AND (4ENERAI'Olt Rhit'AiRtS SEND US YOUR TRACTOR MAGNE- to and Generator Repairs. We save yotl money, ._ Allensen Armature Dfanfr.. 855 BAY St., Toronto. Plenty of Trouble In the Holy Land The long -smoldering Arab revolt against the British control under League mandate of Palestine has broken out and fighting has reached a scale unprecedented since British and Turks fought there during the Great War. Four additional battalions of British troops have been despatched to the Holy Land. Machine guns .set . up in city streets, ABOVE, are now common, as the British move to put down the up- risings, while Arab agitators, INSET, exhort their °countrymen to rise against British rule. HAKE HEARD NOT ALL ROSY MEMORIES A bunch of lovely roses graced the `table in my hall, And oh, the memories they brought to those who came to call. An older woman sighed as she, re- called the days of yore; When in her own small garden, she grew roses by the score. A maiden saw a lover, who has sent her flowers bright - An old man viewed the graveof his adored one, passed from his sight. 'Bach mind saw something differ- ent, smiles, tears and sighs, yes, all Were found in those same roses, on the table in my hall! Teacher — Now, Jimmy, what happened when the cow jumped over the moon?" Jimmy — "Somebody got an idea for vanishing cream." Tony — "She said 1 could kiss her on the cheek." Jack — "Did you do It?" Tony — "Not exactly. ! did not know which cheek she meant, and so I kissed her in between the two." Today — Don't believe this thing of life beginning at 40 — or at 20, or 30, or 50. Life begins each morn- ing. The dawn of the new day is the open door to a new world, one that challenges us to make the best of it. So forget yesterday; live only in and for to -day. Collector — "I've called to collect some back payments on what antique furniture you have." Head of the House — ",You are crazy. I never bought any antique furniture on the instal- ment plan." Collector — "Well, maybe it was not antique when you bought it." 'Young Mac — "Father,. I have to have an atlas for school," Old Mac — °Ah, weel, ye'd bet- ter wait till the wor'rld's ]pair set- tled." Anybody can break a good habit, but it takes a he-man to break a bad one. READ IT 011, NOT! United States is the home of very neaerly twice as many people cal- ling themselves Irish as there are in the Emerald Isle itself. A storekeeper kept a black- board in his store and as dif- ferent people passed he ask- ed them to write what they did, A lawyer came along and he wrote, "1 plead for all!" Next came a preacher who piously wrote, "1 pray for alt!" A doc- tor passed next and wrote, "I prescribe for all!" Then came along a red -neck farther, who scribbled, "1 pay for ali!n -- There are some things that should be always i Y:nt,'nthei'ed, for instance: At a dinner party 111e ab- senbminded prof:';;sor was seated next to a charming woman. She (smiling) — "Don't you re- member me, professor? Why, some years ago you asked me to marry you." Professor — "Ah, yes, and did you?" Collector Seeks Old Typewriters Is Up In Canada Looking For Rare Specimens—Has Small- est Typewriter in World WINNIPEG. — "Any of type- writers?" Carl P. Dietz of Milwaukee, Wis., collector of ancient and strange typewriters, was in Winnipeg re- cently to see what the town had to offer. It took him just two hours to lo- cate two early -type machines. He will add these to the 315 different models he already had given the Milwaukee museum. "The typewriter was invented in Milwaukee," Dietz said. °There, Sholes and Glidden made a machine using piano keys, 65 years ago. When I decided in 1934 to collect machines I thought 15 or 20 would be a good collection. I have since found there are more than 300 kinds manufactured under 647 dif- ferent names." Would Go In Your Pocket Detz, a Milwaukee alderman, claims his collection is the only one in America and believes it is three times as large as either . pf two collections in Europe. The collector carried with hint probably the smallest typewriter in the world. It would fit an overcoat pocket easily. He has three of these in his collection. With 12,500 officers at present, the British Army wants only 600 new ones in the next year to keep it up to strength. -Q6 MOM ROS. HOTEL Your luxurious Lilts carries you swiftly and smoothly over modern highways to \iontreul. Greyhound Lines connect with Champlain, Colo- nial and .Provincial Transport Bus Lines to give you easy, speedy and convenient road transportation to Canada's metropolis. Arrived in Montreal anter a com- fortable and scenic Journey, you na- turally stop at YOUR hotel — The MOUNT 1t0 YAL, ). Aldertc 3tO)•mond President errtan G. Card)• Vice-T'rc.sluent &. Managing Director What Science * Is Doing * UNIVERSE MAY BE STATIONARY Dr, Edwin Hubble, noted astron- omer who has been reaching stag- gering distances into space with the world's largest telescope, try- ing to learn the secret of the uni- verse, Deports! "The results, at the moment, do seem to favour the concept of a stationary universe, but they do not definitely rule out the possibil- ities of an expanding universe. The judgment is probably reserved until further information becomes avail- able!' TO CURE PNEUMONIA Pneumonia, "king of diseases," may be conquered through a new laboratory product developed by experiments with sulphanilamide, Sir Edward. Mellanby, secretary of the Medical Research Council of Great Britain said at Ottawa, last week. The new product is called M and B 693. "All work on it has indicat- ed a specific curative effect in the case of pneumonia," he said. "It will not cure all cases because the most patients come to the doctor only when near death." Experi- ments showed that in 100 cases studied 27 untreated patients died. Only eight treated ones died, and of these six died in the first week be- fore the drug could demonstrate its curative power. FROZEN FISH REVIVED Fish and frogs, both cold. blooded animals, can be frozen solid and re- vived repeatedly without apparent ill effects if electrical currents are used in the reviving process, Dr. L. C. Barail, of New York, reported at the recent annual meeting of the American Society for Biophysics and Cosmobiology. One of the fish had been frozen mare than one hundred times, in some of the ex- periments staying in the liquid air for three hours.. The requisites for keeping fish alive in repeated tests are quick freezing and thawing out under the influence of a high frequency elec- tric current. SAYS FEVER HELPS In speaking of fever in Urology and Cutaneous Review, Dr. F. H. Redeweli says: "Fever is a process which aids in the removal or destruction of in- jurious substances which get into the body. It results in an increase in leucocytes (the white corpuscles or disease fighters in the body), an increase in the rate at which all the body processes work, and a great increase in clasmatoctes (the large blood cells) the increase re- sistance to infection, in the blood, in the lymph (the other portion of the circulation) and all tissues of the body. To -day, instead of reducing the temperature, it is not unusual for physicians to use methods — elec- tricity or others — to increase the temperature of the body thus act- ually increasing its fighting or dis- ease resisting forces. Air Services Are Stressed Windsor M.P. Tells League of Nations of the Progress Made In Canada—Important Inter- national Link With establishment of the Trans- Canada Airways and preparations for the regular trans-Atlantic air services, Canada is rapidly becom- ing an important link in interna- tional and inter -continental air com- muiticatiens, Paul Martin, M.P., of Canada, informed the League of Nations committee on communica- tions and transit. Canada's View A member of the committee, Mr. Martin said that as a widespread system of communications and transport has been of sari). decisive importance in the formation and de- velopment of his country, it is only natural that Itis government should appreciate the significance of the organization for communications and transit, and should wish the greatest possible effect to he given to its activity. It has, however, been felt that, although of importance 10 Europe, where questions of transit and com- munication are complicated by the great number of national frontiers in a comparatively small area, the work does not so greatly concern Canada, whose only land boundary is the United States. said Mr. Mar- tin. Spend thrift t October is a spendthrift All agree. The birch tree scatters coppers Recklessly; The maple wears a crimson gown, And they are saying up and down That bittersweet bought out the town Fahulow 1y! -.,. Margaret I l es flay 138118 No. 43--)::.8 You'll bean with de- light at the friendly flavour of this grand -tasting ciga- tette tobacco! Ogden's Fine Cut has lighted the way to more enjoyable smoking For roll-your-ownersevery- where. Why not learn for yourself how Ogden's stands high above them all when it comes to giving satisfaction? Get a package today —choose the best papers—"Vogue" or " Chantecler"—and Tight up for extra smoking pleasure! Pipe- Smokers!— .lak For Ogden's Cat Plug Will Mark Grave Of 'Be..el utiful Joe' Meaford Women's Institute Plan to Immortalize Dog Made Famous Through Writ- ings of Marshall Saunders Monuments and plaques have been erected around the world to great statesmen, famous cows and important historical events. Now the Meaford Women's Institute plans to mark the grave of "Beau- tiful Joe," a dog. To Erect A Fountain Many years ago a mongrel dog lived his span and died in Meaford. During puppyhood his ears were clipped. He was "just plain dog." Finally he found love and care so . abundant that to cover ftp his mis- fortune and the tragedy of his ap- pearance his mistress named him "Beautiful Joe." Miss Saunders wrote about him in the book "Beautiful Joe," and now the Women's Institute will im- mortalize him further. A stone will mark the resting place and a foun- tain will be erected where all the dusty, weary dogs will be sure of a refreshing drink. Canned oysters are proving valuable to Mrs. I. R. Daly of Munson, Alta. In the space of a week she found two pearls in cans of oysters, the second being about the size of a green pea. That Everyone Who Takes "Aspirin" Should Study Drop an "Aspirin" Tablet in water—it starts to disintegr ate in 2 seconds—hence is ready to "go to work" rapidly. This Quick Dissolving Property of "Aspirin" Tahleis Explains Fast Relief If you suffer with headaches or the pains of rheumatism or xeuritis, keep the above picture about "Aspirin" in your mind. Especially if quick relief is what you want. For the way an "Aspirin" Tab- let works in the glass is the way it works when you take it. It starts. to dissolve almost at once—hence is ready to "take hold" of the, rheumatic pain or headache with. astonishing speed. Relief often. comes in a few minutes. Demand and Get rRARE-HARK REG.