HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1934-08-02, Page 7The Use Of
The Telegraph
Conscious of the benefits to be de-
rived from the use of the telegraph,
Canadians are more and more each
year using this service in sending so-
cial messages, greetings, congratula-
tions and business communications,
Canadian National Telegraph officials
declare. Of particular interest is the
money transfer service by which
money payments may be made at once
by wire in any town or city the money
being collected by the telegraph com-
pany at one end and paid out at the
other on the receipt of wired advice.
In this forward • stride in the field
of telegraphy, the Canadian National
Telegraphs have taken a leading part,
The carrier current system of teleg-
raphy, which has multiplied many
times the physical capacity of exist-
ing wires, is now generally in use
throughout the System. Today, in
Canada alone, the Canadian National
Telegraphs operate no Less than 164,-
'795 miles of physical wire and 2,094
offices.
Through Western Union, the Cana-
dian National Telegraphs provide a
direct exclusive domestic service to
any part of the United States or
Mexico; by virtue of an agreement
with the Anglo-American Telegraph
Company, the same service is carried
by cable to the farthest ends of the
earth. Even ships at sea may be
reached by telegraph through a work-
ing arrangement with the coastal
wireless of the continent.
Various types of messages are
available to the business community.)
Rush messages are sent immediately
on receipt and take precedence over
all others. "Day letters" for transtnis-
cion and delivery before 6 p,m.• are
• handled after all rush messages have
been dispatched and are considerably
cheaper still; these are transmitted
during the night and are delivered to
their destination on the morning of
the first working day after filing.
Cheap rates are also available for
shorter messages sent under similar
con diti ons.
••ti
Ten Minutes' Notice
South African Ladies Become
Hostesses o Prince George
It must always be an important ev-
ent to entertain certain members of
the royal family—and there are few
commoners who claim this honor. But
what if one had only tan minutes' no-
tice of the visit. Perfect indeed must
be the house where the hostess re-
mains complacent and unruffled on
such an occasion.
During his recent),,completed
South African tour Prince George
paid one such visit. Imagine the ex-
citement in a little township tucked
away amongst the hiel, and rocck
hilts, flags flying, decorations gleam-
ing in the sunlight. The weather was
hot, and the morning garden party
In the shady Botanic gs,rdens passed
off pleasantly. Among the guests
were two charming old ladies who
iittte thought as they met the pleas-
ant smile and hearty handshake of
the Prince, how soon they were to
make his closer asquaintanee,
ON A SOUTH AFRICAN FARM
At the luncheon which followed he
expressed a desire to see a real South
Airicen farm, and arrangements
&ere promptly made. At ten minutes
minutes' notice these dear old ladies,
Asters of eighty years of ago--wel-
:omed him with true colonial hospita-
Sty to their Old World home. The
feermhouse itself is the most fascin-
ating place—a long, low timbered
house with peaked gables like many
en old English home, but with the
wide verandahs or stoops, typical
)f South Africa, giving delicious
"coolth." It has belonged to the fa-
mily for over a hundred years.
The Prince was keenly interested
in everything, even the poultry and
the Jersey cows With the true
courtesy which puts others at ease,
he made himself quite at home and
joined in the family tea at the round
table. To go through with a contin-
ual round of public engagements in
spite of the heat required some fort-
itude and the little informal visit with
its friendly relaxation must have
come as a pleasant interlude in that
busy day.
In that little town now both white
and dusky, subjects idealise .their
princely visitor. All he did and said,
and even what he wore is ' eagerly re-
called. 'A light grey flannel suit with
double-breasted jacket, blue shirt and
black tie," will no doubt be all the
vogue there this summer, and the
young men will endeavor to reproduce
the style and hie smile, which so
charmed everybody.
STOPS ITCHING
In One Minute
D. D. D., Prescription Speeds Relief
1 For quick relief from the itching of '
pimples, mosquito or other insect bites.
eczema rashes and other skin eruptionse •
asp ly tit.. Dcnmis'iteire; cooling, liquid* i
antiseptic: D. D. 1D. Prescription, Forty
years' world-wide success. Penetrates the
ln, soothing and healing the inflamed
tissues. No fuss --no muss, Clear, ,grease•
kso and etnlnless---dries up almost unme. ,
ately.'try D. D. D. Prescription, Stops
e most intense itching instantly. A 35e
al bottle, at any drug store, is aran- i
ted to prove it --or money back. D. D. D. t
made by the owners of XT,ALIAN BALM.
Issue No.
NEW COMMISSIONER TO CANADA
The latest studio portrait of Sir Francis Floud, Secretary of the
Ministry of Labor and Fisheries, and chairman of the Board of Cus-
toms and Excise, who has been appointed High Commissioner in
Canada for His Majesty's Government in succession to Sir William
Henry Clark. He will come to Canada about the end of the year.
Most Perfect Hotel in England
Costs Its Owner $70,000 a Year
Has
Capacity for Only 50 Guests — Lovely
Modern Hostelry in Town of Lincoln
Provides an Expensive Hobby
London.—In a side street of the
quiet old agricultural town of Lincoln
I have seen in the 'making one of
the most extraordinary establish-
ments in Britain,
Here, far from the main stream
of commerce, a man is building a
luxury hotel—an hotel such as only
a few capitals of Europe could par-
allel for elegance.
It goes without saying that the ho-
tel has never paid. Its owner runs
it as a hobby—a costly bobby.
It can sleep only 45 to 50 people.
But the owner has determined that
these few guests in this unlikely place
shall have perfection,
Sinclair Lewis has written a novel
of a man who strove all his life to
create The Perfect Inn.
Mr. H. H. Leven, of Lincoln, Is his
real. -life counterpart.
£70,000 In Five Years.
Mr. Leven acquired the White Hart
of Lincoln in 1919. He bad never
had anything to do with hotels be-
fore,
The White Hart was then a com-
fortable, old-fashioned typical county
town hotel in the shadow of Lincoln.
Cathedral.
Five years ago he determined that
he could create in the middle of
the Fens an hotel which should be
the equal of the palatial establish-
ments of his fellow -members of the
executivfi,,pE the, Hotels and Restaur-
ants , Association of Great Britain.
There was no question of him see-
ing his money come back.
In those, five years he has lavish-
ed on this small 50 -guest hotel a total
of £70,000,
He has worked day and night but
never once has the hotel shown a
profit.
Some years the running losses have
been as much as £1,000.
But still he went on planning, pro-
gressing.
He completed the new dining room
a few days ago.
To say that this room cost £7,000
—as it did—is only to give a vague
idea bf its magnificence.
Mooing Cows.
The beautiful gold -and -floral car-
pet was designed by Mr. Leven him-
self. It cost £400, It was woven
to his orders.
The windows are hung with rich
velvet. Above is a great recessed cell-
ing• panel lined with pure silver leaf,
from which concealed lighting pours.
The richly tapestried chairs are of
woods enamelled in four bright col-
ors --red, blue, yellow and green.
The effect is breathtaking as you
walk in from a quiet back street.
At night, with the chromium and
green table lamps lighting up the
heavy silver, it is a glittering spec-
tA.cle''euch• as fou might see in Lon-
don, Paris' or ,New 'stork.
And amid these metropolitan splen-
dors of the Lincoln White Hart you
can hear the cows mooing in the
market below.
When Mr, Leven started he tore
the place inside out to put in con -
tial heating, and spent thotieands on
linproving'the `drains:
fie motored Hundreds of miiee ever
England visiting safes at old man-
sions to secure pieces of furniture.
He spent thousands in this way, put-
ting the spoils, not in his home, but
in the sumptuous rooms of his hotel.
He determined to have a fitting en-
trance. He designed and had spe-
cially cast a massive door canopy
in solid lead.
It is embellished with representa-
tions of the cathedral.
Over it is a leaden figure of a hart.
That canopy cost £500.
He remodelled the bedrooms, de-
signing every one himself. He made
every one different.
When he has completed his altera-
tions each will have a bathroom —
and each bathroom will be a different
color.
A single bathroom attached to a
bedroom has cost £30. The bath
has cost £80, the pedestal washstand
basin with its bevelled mirror £30,
Some existing suites have valuable
period furniture, grand pianos, and
ancient silk brocade curtains.
Recently Mr. Leven replaced all the
linen. The cost was about a thous-
and pounds.
Wine Cellars.
It is all finest ,•Irish linen. A rep-
resentatives of the firm came from
Ireland to discuss the arrangements.
Mr. Leven has built a laundry in
the hotel so that the linen could be
better washed.
• He even designed a special kind
of mustard -pot for the table, and
special wrappers of the soap tablets
supplied to guests.
He laid down in this quiet pro-
vincial town one of the finest wine
cellars in the country, It is worth
about £15,000.,
The greatest triumph of all is the
ladies' dressing room, This is be-
ing fitted now. It is only fourteen
feet square—the size of a typical room
in an ordinary home, On fitting up
by an artist with water colors tend
white of an egg.
He labored two months on it. Hie
fee was 300 guineas.
In compiling menus, Mr. Leven de-
termined to have nothing but the very!
best of what was in season, This bas
often been very costly.
Ile has bought grouse for the usual
fixed-price dinner when they were
15s, each, or Scotch salmon when it
was 6s a pound.
The dinner price Is 7s 80. Some
times it has cost double that,
So today the magnificent White
Hart of Lincoln is still losing money,
And today, Mr. Leven, faithful to
his ideal of The Perfect Inn, goes
on rebuilding, improving.
H W Do You Live
in a Small Town?
The other evening a visitor to Ann..
hertsburg asked the question, "How
do you people live in a small town?"
Whether he was looking for informa-
tion or just being a smartie, it was
herd to tell, but we suspected the lat-
ter motive. He might have been ens_
wered by another question, "How do
people live in a city?" How do they
live without neighborliness; how do
they live in their cramped apartments
where one has to step out into the
hall to change bis shirt or his mind;
where every one is hurrying to get
some place and they can't because
they have to jostle their way through
crowded streets. Where every one
wears a harried look as though a bill
collector was following on their heels
trying to collect the instalment on
the folding bathtub or the chiffon-
ier-kitcben cabinet. Where you have
to wait minutes before you can make
a mad rush across an intersection.
Where pavements get so hot and tena-
Pers get hotter, Where wails are so
thin that you can hear your apart-
ment neighbor and his wife bickering
over which small town they will visit
next Sunday. Where people dash into
a lunch room at noon, wolf a sand-
wich and a cup of coffee, and then
bustle back to a two by four office
to swelter for the rest of the after-
noon. Where the poor working girls
have to spend their hard-earned shek-
els for make-up to make them look
like rosy-cheeked small town girls.
Is it any wonder we looked ask-
ance at the city slicker when he
asked "How do people live in a small
town?" Humph] Why wouldn't we
live in a small town? Where the
merchants know at a glance wheth-
er the cheque Is rubber or not. Where
the way of the transgressor is hard
and the cop calls you "Bill" instead
of "Hey, you." Where the editor
gets results if he announces that he
is out of potatoes. Where the wild
life that stays out all night belongs
to the cat family. Where everybody
isn't three months behind on the in-
stalments. Where you can breathe
air that isn't tainted with gasoline,
Where a strange girl arouses the In-
terest of all the eligible males. Where
you can ride bicycles on the side-
walk. Where no two girls have the
same dress. Where one passes the
time 0' day with everyone they meet.
And where the leaders of the city
world are groomed for leadership.
How do we live in a small town?"
Well, I reckon we get by alright.—
Amherstburg Echo.
Pithy Anecdotes
of the Famous
THE REVIVED INTEREST: in
the so-called Indian "magic rope.
trick" recalls an occasion on which
Field Marshall Earl Haig better
known as Sir Douglas Haig fell a.
victim to it during his stay in In-
dia. The idea is to make an ordinary
piece of rope stand up on its end
while a boy climbs up it.
Haig was particularly keen on see-
ing it performed, so when one day
a noted fakir turned up at a station
where the famous soldier was visit-
ing, a performance was aranged.
* * *
WHAT HAPPENED is described by
Sergeant T. Secrett, Haig's soldier -
servant, in his book "25 Years With
Earl Haig." Haig and three brother
officers were seated on cushions in a
this room he is spending £700.circle round the fakir. Secrett
The walls are silver, the carpet is watched from a near -by window.
to be silver, "I saw the old fakir make the
The dressing -tables will be silver round of the circle several tinges,"
with jade green toilet accessories. The he says, "then I saw him uneoll his
chairs are to be silk covered,
Another amazing department is one
of the principal private sitting rooms
on the ground door. The walls are
covered with wood veneer panels ar-
ranged checquervelse.
On this, all round the room, Is
painted a marvellous imitation of an
Italian garden,
This fragile work of art was done
•
Jumpy Nerves
Yield to the soothing actiota
I of this medicine. You will eat
better : s :sleep better : ; s feel:
better : e : look better: Life
will scent worth living againa
Don't delay any longer. Begin
taking it today:
LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S
VEGETABLE COMPOUND
rope. He moved on more round
the circle and then, pointing upward
with one hand, shot the. rope'in the
air with the other. Haig and the
others sat with their eyes turned up•
ward.
* *
"THEN THE boy was brought for-
ward and the old fakir mumbled
something. His audience now !tinned
their eyes on the boy, who stood on
the ground. The fakir slowly and
gently moved his hand upward and
the audience followed his hand with
their eyes, He seemed to be giving
instructions to the boy and address-
ing the spot where his eyes rested —
ever upward. ]Then the whole thing
dawned on me. He had mesmerized
his audience, I went out at once!
"The boy is still on the ground,
sir,' I called, 'and the rope fell the
moment he threw it up i'"
The spell was broken (adds se-
crett) but it was a long time before
Haig would really believe that his
eyes had deceived rim.
When. you smoke plug tobacco,
you can cut each pipeful fresh
when you want it—and you can
cut it any way you like, coarse or
flaky, Plug tobacco is economical,
too, for it fasts longer in your pipe.
IXIE
PLUG SMOKING TOBACCO
MIDGETS
IT HAS BEEN reliably estimated
that there are about 2,000 midgets
in existence—one child 4n every mil-
lion born is destined for znidgethood,
say the authors ' (Walter Bodin and
Burnet Hershey) of "It's A Small
World: All About Midgets" --a per-
fect title, isn't it. A midget, by the
way, is defined as a man or woman,
correctly proportioned, less than 4
feet 6 inches in height. The smallest
adult on record was Pauline Musters,
a native of Holland, who at the time
of her death, at 22, had reached the
height of 1 foot 7 inches.
* * *
MIDGETS have a history of their
own and it is an honorable one. To
quote Messrs. Bodin and Hershey:
Nebuchadnezzar was known as
"the dwarf of Babylon."
Tradition says Aesop was a
midget.,
Croesus, wise and wealthy King
of Lydia in the. 5th Century B.C.
(traditionally ;considered the weal-
thiest man who ever lived), wrote of
himself that he was a midget.
Cicero had a 3 -foot rival. This was
C. Lueinium Calvus a Roman gentle-
man who challenged , the polished
Cicero's superiority as an orator.
Attila the Hun was a dwarf, if
not an actual midget.
* * *
COMING to more modern times, the
two most important midgets of the
17th Century were Sir Jeffry Hud-
son, a courtier,"Captain in His Maj-
esty's Army, and a Knight of his
Lord, the King (Charles I., of Eng-
land) ; and his friend Richard Gibson;
a famous English painter, some of
whose pictures hang today in Hamp-
ton Court Palace. Sir Jeffery, "when
booted and spurred stood 3 feet 9
inches," and is the only midget
knight in history, Gibson was 3 feet
10 inches, "and it was in keeping that
his specialty should have been paint-
ing in miniature. He painted most of
the important men of his day and
has left us several excellent miniatur-
es of Cromwell"
BIG BEN
A FEW YEARS ago when Big Ben
--London's famous cloak --was wound
up' by hand, the job of winding oc-
cupied the full. ,working day of two
men, says Mrs.. M. V. Hughes (in
delightful book ,,`,,`London,At Hone.")
Big Ben, by the''•way, is not the clock
-but the big bell that does the strik-
ing. The name Ben is from Sir Benj-
amin Hall, who was Commissioner of
Works when the clock was put up.
* * *
Apropos the Cockneys frequent
rnisplacing of the aspirate, Lewis
Melville tells this one:
At the London Zoological Gardens
the following was overheard:
Child: 'That's a heagle;'muvver,"
Mother: '•`You hignorant child,
that's a howl."
Keeper: :'Execuse me, Misses, but
you're both' wrong, it's a nawk."
Your Liver's Making
You Feel Out of Sorts
Wake up your Liver Bile
—No Calomel Needed
When You fea blue;• debressed,' sour
on the world, that's your liver which
isn't pouring its daily •two pounds of
liquid bile into your 'bowels.
Digestion, and elimination are being
slowed up, food is accumulating and de-
caying inside you and making you feel
wretched.
Mere bowel -movers like salts, oil,
mineral water, laxative candy or chew-
ing gum, or roughage, don't go far
enough.
you need a liver stimulant. Carter's
Little Liver Pills is the best one. Safe.
Purely vegetable. Sure. Ask for them by
name. Refuse substitutes. 250 at all
druggists. 82
Rocket Air Mail
Makes Trial Trip
In Great Britain
SPECIAL STAMPS ISSUED FOR
MILE TRIP OF 1,000
LETTERS
Rottingdean, England. In the cold
of the early morning several excit-
ed men met high up on the downs
here recently; the leader spoke a few
words; a space was cleared; sudden-
ly there was an explosion—Britain's
first mail rocket tore into space.
Although the attachment of rock-
ets as a means of propulsion to bi-
cycles and airplanes has previously
met with only scant success, all the
1,000 letters in the rocket mail reach-
ed their addresses safe and sound, al-
though probably a little later than if
they had been taken round the corner
and dropped in the letter box to be
sent by railway.
For, although special stamps were
issued, a set of which were sent to
King. George by the inventor of the
rocket' used, this first mail was only
a trial. The letters were shut in the
rocket, fired for about a mile, then
taken out of the rocket again and
postedrin Brighton.
All the same, Herr Gerhard Zucker,
the rocket's inventor, has declared
that before long he hopes to have a
regular rocket mail service in opera-
tion across the English Channel, tak-
ing
aking about a minute instead of the
two hours by boat. Before attempt-
ing this, however, it is said that Herr
Zucker is preparing to operate a rock.
et mail service between the Isle of
Wight and the mainland.
The way in which letters inclosed
in a steel cylinder rocket will hurtle
through the air at about 500 miles
an hour, and drop gently to earth by
means of an automatically released
parachute at a rocket -mail sorting sta-
tion, was envisaged by Herr Zucker's-
exhibit at the Aero Postal Exhibition
at Horticultural Hall, London, re-
cently.
Experimental flights in Austria and
Germany have already been made for
which postage stamps were issued.
These stamps were among the most
popular exhibits.
NO MERCY FROM VULCAN
•
Eganville Leader: Misfortune pur-
sues Purchille St. Louis of Perrault.
Last summer he had his home des-
troyed by fire, and only the other
day --on Sunday when winds were
high—sparks from a burning stump•
on his farm reached his outbuild-
ings with the result his fine new
barn, a new fourspan stable and oth-
er buildings went tip in flames. A
cookhouse and granary were saved
Mr. St. Louis had not rebuilt his dwe-
lling house which was burned last
year but has been gathering the ma4
terial for one., : , i
Puppies Por Sale
Newfoundland puppies pure brg
from registered stock for sal ,,
prideOreasonable,
rea p able, Box 26, Campbel -
Are You Sluggish ?
To Throw Off Energy -Stealing
1%mpulritics, etijoy a glass or two
each week of
Energizing, Effervescent
ANDREWS
LIVER SALT
In TIN$-3Sc and 60e
NEW, LARGE BOTTLE, 75c