HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1935-02-14, Page 7Enjoy a really fine
Bland -made cigarette loy
rolling your own With
GOLDEN VIRGINIA
ALSO MADE UP IN PIPE TOBACCO
'Farmer Fills Well
To Rescue His Cow
Sydney, New South Wales.—A far -
i titer in Now South Wales was dig-
ging a large well on his property
when his cow fell into the hole. The
well was down to a depth of 15 feet.
The animal was uninjured but the
problem was how to get it out. The
farmer shoveled the dirt which he
'clad dug out back into the well. The
cow, treading about, rose little by
little as the well was filled, in, till
finally it was able to walk out un-
harmed.
Classified Advertising
WRITE WYANDOTTES
)Gl AMOUS Superior Fischel Strain,
3' Closely feathered for severe weath-
er. Yellow skin early broiler: Brown
egg: Neuhausers, Chatham, Ontario,
PATENTS
S'A V OFFER TO EVERY INVENTOR
.Ist of wanted inventions and full
iu, 1 nation sent free. The Ramsay
Company, World Patent Attorneys' 273
;Bank Street, Ottawa, Canada.
$ $ $ POR YOUR OLD GOLD
d STAIN the highest prices for
• your old gold, silver or platinum.
Deal direct with the largest refiners
of precious metal scrap in Canada.
The Williams Gold Refining Co., Ltd.,
.Assayers. Smelters and Refiners, Box
219A, Port Erie. North, Ont. 76
Pimply -Sick Skin
That inferiority complex that a pimply -sick
skin brings to you, as well as the discomfort of
the rash, the pimples and the bumps all yield to
the softening influence of Mer Soap and the
healing influence of Mer Cream. These two
have 'long ,years of splendid service behind
them, and look forward to becbming your friend
as wall. Scientifically made by Caulk of
Canada, Limited, you can get them at Drug
and Department Stores. 3
Artists' and
Authors' Service
4' ehd""a three cent stamped en-
velope for information on our
MONTHLY BULLETIN SER-
VICE to Artists and Authors,
listing up-to-date information
on
"WHERE AND WHAT
TO SELL •
Canadian and international Art
and Literary Contests
Yearly subscription, One Dollar
Sample Sheet, Ten Cents
GIFF. BAKER
39 LEE AVENUE
TORONTO, ONT
*RELIGION SHOULD BOYCOTT
'WAR COMMITTEE IS TOLD
Biologically, S o c iologically,
Economically And Intellect-
' ually The Resort To Arms
is A Tragedy,
Washington, — Religion should
never again bless war but should
form so strong a boycott against war
as to make it impossible, Dr. Louis
L, Mann, , Chicago, told a banquet of
the U.S. National Committee on the
Causes and Cure of War,
"Commerce, education and science
have all failed, to abolish war," Dr.
Mann said. "They have been,utilized
to further the purposes of war. It
seems to me that religion, which
overrides the boundaries of nations
and. transcends the barriers of race
should take its stand of opposition
to all war at all times.
"If religion — not one religion and
not in one country — but if religion
everywhere would boycott war there
could be no war. There should be
no chaplain in any army. A chaplain
is not there to comfort the dying and
bury the dead. That is mere camou-
flage. He is there to give a divine
sanction to' the hellish business of
human slaughter Religion must never
again bless war. The religion that, in
the future' will ever bless 'war will
thereby damn itself."
War, Dr. Mann said, is founded on
falsehoods and propaganda. ,He said
the stron win, not those =who are
right. -
"The old idea that God is on the
side of the right is a superstition,"
he 'continued. "God has nothing to
do with war."
Biologically war kills the potenti-
ally best fathers,
"The flower of every land marches
forth to be mowed down like so nanny
blades of grass, and the weaklings
remain behind to become the fathers
of the next generation,
"Sociologically war diverts money
for slum clearance, health improve-
ment and recreational centres to pur-
poses of destruction; economically
war expenditures grab 80 per cent,
of all the revenues of the United
States. "It cost $30,000 to kill each
man who was sent to his premature
death in the last war.
Ringworm infection
Skin Troubles ,"
YIELD QUICKLY TO
Dr. D. D. Dennis' Liquid Pre-
scription, made and guaranteed
by the makers of Campana's Italian
Balm. Trial bottle 35o at your
druggist. is
If Your Ears Ring
With Head Noises
If you have catarrhal deafness or
head noises go to your druggist and
get 1 oz. of Parmint (double
strength), and add to it Ye pint of
hot water and a little sugar. Take a
tablespoonful four times a day.
This will often bring quick relief,
from the distressing head noises.
Clogged nostrils should open, breath-
ing become easy and the mucous
stop dropping into the throat. It is
easy to prepare, costs little, and is
pleasant to take. Anyone who has
catarrhal deafness or head noises
should give this prescription a trial.
Handwriting Reveals Character
TMs Fascinating New Chart Shows How!
Everyone should have a copy of
THE GRAPHOCHART
100 Illustrations
SIMPLE! -- ACCURATE!! -- INFALLIBLE!!!
By Geoffrey St. Clair
(well-known Graphologist)
it shows you how to analyse your own character, and that of
your friends from handwriting . It is not only a very
fascinating game, but it is extremely practical.
Copies sent Post Free for 12c each
THE GRAPHOCHART, Room 421, 73 Adelaide W., Toronto, Ont.
High School Boards & Boards of Education
Are authorized by law to establish
Industrial, Technical and Art Schools
With the approval of the Minister of Education
Day and Eveninjt Classes Theoretical and Practical
May be conducted in accord- Inttruatioa
&
ante with the regulations lieu- is given in various trades. The
std bythe Department of Ed- Ilieodis aro classes are usury
p the direction of an Advisory
nation. Committee
Coni nerciel Subjects, Manual Training, Household Science
and Agriculture and Horticulture
Are provided for in the Courses of Study in Public,. Separate, Con•
titillation and High Schools, Collegiate Institutes, Vocational Sehools
and Departments.
Copies of the Regulations issued by the Minister of Ed.
P1040011 may be obtained front the Deputy Ministe, ,
Partici/mo It Buildings Toronto.„,"771::
Applicatnon for attendance *hould be, Wade to the 1 rinalpall.IDf'Scliool
"Intellectually ..war perverts
ence to sytematieefl murder,”
said.
"Most wars can be traced td"'own,'
omie causes, thocgle these are nee
mouflaged and idealized, since no
mother would cheerfully send her
son to his premature death for .corrl-
mercial aggrandizement and oonimer-
cial supremacy,". Dr, Mann said.
His address brought atiplause• from
the 1,000 women delegates, repre-
senting 11 national organizations
here to press on every possible peace
front. The women were already well
along in their campaign to see every
Senator personally to. .urge passage
this- week of the measure for world
court adherence.
sol,
Coal Miner Shoul'adn't
Mend Clothes And:;
The State of Ohio agreed recent-
ly that maybe it would be ellt.right
for Ida Mae Stull to work. iu;--her
own coal mine.
So Ida Mae, 34 years ''o1d and
buxom, donned overalls, boots 'and'
carbide lamp and went back into the
pits from which she was barred; when
state mine inspectors said loading
coal was not for women.
"I've got to start making a' living
again," said Miss Stull. "I've been
doing sissy work long enough. I've
got no business baking cookies and
mending clothes, 'm a coal mined.
"I've worked in the mines ,for 22
years. I've shot it down and I've`
hauled it out, I've cut props, dug
entries and loaded coal. I can load,
five tons a day with pick and shovel,
and that's as much as any man in
the mines can do."
Miss Stull is part owner of a win's
near here. She also keeps house for
happy J. Wolfe, 65, who owns the
other half of her mine and who was
a former partner of her late father;
Ida Mae was barred from the
mines last summer when a state,
mine inspector recalled a .state law
prohibiting women from performing
"manual labor." She stormed and;
railed, but the state mine department;
was adamant—the law was 'the law.
Finally, however, Attorney -General,
John Bricker was asked for a 'ruling.)
He handed down an opinion that as
long as Ida Mae owned the mine she
cnuld work in it.
Natural Question
An American woman who,
presented at Court this year
among her staff a Chinese alnahr•;
or nursemaid, for her children: The,
amah was extremely homesick, and
to cheer, her spirits a little, her
mistress wouldrelate small in-
cidents of the day in as amusing a
way as possible.
The evening of the Court presen-
tation, still in her Court dress, com-
plete with train and feathers, the
American returned to her hotel and
related to the amah, with complete
gestures, how she had advanced to
the throne, curtsied, withdrawn. She
went through the whole ceremony.
The amah watched with fascina
tion, and broke into a broad smile.
"King laugh?" she inquired — Our
Empire.
Have
You
'Wear
A friend of this Colyum says he
believes in prayer' but cannot ask
for further blessings after having
-wasted what's already been given.
x.,. o -0-o
WHERE' IS THE JUS'T'ICE?
Happiness is very dear, sadness very
cheap;
Cars and castles bring us cheer,
4o'nions make us weep
Travel costs 'a pile of jack, mumps
;are thrust right at_ us;
Shows and, sherbets set us back;
chilblains. we get gratis.
Halls of fame are gained by grit,
jails are soft of entry.
Birth briD'tgs : •lots of "please' remit,"
death is complimentary.
o -0-o
4 Woman (at bridge party) Does
your husband always lie to you?
Other Woman — No, some nights
I am just too tired to ask questions.
o -O -o
The high-pressure salesman al-
ways brings •to our memory that con-
versation on between the little girl
and her grandfather: After having
heard of his oft repeated war
stories, she said: "Grandpa, didn't
anybody at all 1: elp you win the
war?" _
o -O -o
i'riend — You say after the last
banquet you attended you gained
fivle pounds. It must have been
mi ;l :y good food they served.
1r 1th — No, it was the silver -
w, „t
o -O -o
I. sneak has to be able co fool
hi self, or else he couldn't stand
liv ng with himself.
o -O -o
Veil - Why did you break off
yo it engagement with Dr. Cutter?
,frladys — Oh, it was his awful
wrting. Every time I had a letter
fr%rn him I had to take it to a drug-
gi•to And out what was in it.
o -O -o
he depression has revealed a
sutrising number of things we can
get `along,,just as well without, in -
chiding ,depressions.
j a o -O -o
:ondoner — I went bald, so 1
f ' a small fortune on hair re -
Immunity from the law is granted
to members of the Diplomatic Corps,
their secretaries and servants, resi-.
dent in London. A pedestrian run
down by an Embassy care is power-
less to take action unless the dip-
lomat waives his privilege.
6%
WITH SAFETY
or PRINCIPAL
FIVE OUTSTANDING
REASONS WHY INVESTORS
CHOSE C.D.L. 6% INVEST-
MENT-
1. An attractive return ,cit
6% per annum. /;',Ze.
2. Safety . . . . The Company's
assets consist of cash and •
guaranteed contracts onlee
8. Immediate Interest.
At 6% from date of
Investment.
4. N'o Trouble or Expense.
in cashing Dividend cheques.
Payable without exchange.
5. .Amounts of $100 and Upwards
Accepted. Partial Payment.
Investments from $3 per
month and up.
Contract Discounts
Limited
Commercial Bankers
45 RICHMOND ST. WEST,
TORONTO, ONTARIO
Tear out this coupon and send
for information.
Name
,Address
onian When I'. went bald
my brush and comb.
0-0-0
• • he ' ideal climate is the kind
w yore white men have imported
so' ie other race to do their
•
o -O -o
Lena
ady (1oo k'
ing out
yard)— What was that
claltter, Hawkins?
Hawkins — 'Twas
pants fell off the line,
o -O -o
Not once in ten times is
w4th much to an owner wee) does
not` live on it and cultivate it. The
high price of land rested purely up-
on 'speculation.
o -0-o
Pa tand Mike went for a walk.
Pat, who was the shorter of the two,
could not keep up with Mike's long
strides and after a while began to
be very tired and short of breath.
Pat — Sure, Mike, do ye always
walkas fast' as this?
Mike — Yes, and faster than this
when I'm by myself.
Pat - Indade. Sure, and I would
not like to be walking with ye when
ye're by yourself, Mike.
o -O -o
Machinery is essential in this
age, but intelligent management is
even more necessary if our pace is
to be quickened.
o -0-o
Goldberg — Please shut
Sternberger — I can't.
no room in racy pockets.
o -0-o
One well-known man says: "1
call my wife's hash "enthusiasm
hash" because she puts everything
she has in it.
0-0-0
Dorothy So your new
friend is a furniture finisher?
Clarice --= Yes,
Dorothy — Does
;move?
work.
into the
terrible
Sir Oscar's
muni.
a farm
upl
There's
he
boy
polish or
• ,.e -0-o '
Father says' he bought the chime
clock to keep daughter's company
informed, but it doesn't do any
good.
A Body Builder
Mr. Jaincs Howarth of
3 E. 25th St., Hamilton,
Ont., says a "My appe-
tite failed, I lost weight
and strength and caught
cold easily. This state of
health also affected my
digestion. I' took Dr.
Pierce's Golden Medical
Discovery and fully re-
gained my lost health'". I
picked up in appetite and weight."
New site, tablets SO cents, liquid $1.00.
Large size, tablets or liquid, $1.35.
Issue No, 6---'35
Code of a Family
Rules the Mitsuis
(Winnipeg Tribune)
In the Occident the name of Roths-
child is one that by over a -century
of common consent, represents econ-
omic power and influence.
Today, along with the sharper
projection of Japan's progressive in-
trests into Western and world af-
fairs, the name of Mitsui figures
largely as the dominating influence
in the economic set-up of the leading
power of the Orient.
Long before entering into financial
enterprises in 1673, over three hun-
dred years ago, the •Mitsuis of the
seventh century were established
among the warrior aristocracy of
Japan.
Hacherobei Mitsui came to the
front as the founder of the business
house at the latter date. The great
sign of his business establishment
still exists, reading, CASH PAY-
MENT AND A SINGLE PRICE.
Each of the eleven Mitsui fami-
lies of today are under an identical
code, bound to it by formal written
pledges, unchanged in the past 35
years. Then the older rules of 1876
were drawn up anew but practi-
cally the same in principle.
* * *
These eleven separate Mitsui fami-
lies of today occupy fields of bank-
ing, trade, mining, shipping, ship-
building, insurance, trusts, ware-
housing, mining, manufacturing and
brewing. They all trace their an-
cestry back to that seventh -century
warrior, to the seventeenth -century
tradesman and to a good many
other celebrities.
They constitute by war the largest
organization of its sort in the world
and their world operations are
spreading with the expansion of
Japan's aggressive methods in world-
wide trade and rommerce.
Examination of the code, as pub-
lished in a recently issued book at
Tokio, written by one of the f amily.
Mitsuia Gomel Kaisha, gives an indi-
cation how seriously the House of
Mitsui takes its obligations. Here
are outstanding pledges:
Not to quarrel with relatives.
Not to over expand.
To observe thrift and avoid all
luxury.
Not to retire from active busi-
ness too early (the recent head of
the house quite active work in 1933
at the age of 77).
To marry only on advice o- f the
family council.
To employ able subordinates, and
listen to them.
To make executives'` only of' those
who know how to do
work.
To sacrifice today, in order to
avert a larger loss tomorrow.
To worship the gods, revere the
Emperor, love one's country and do
one's duty as a citizen.
In the days when Japan was
changing from the old order to the
more modern system not as other
money lenders were the Mitsuis.
They did not hitch their wagon to
the local daimyos, (feudal lords)
making a lot of money when the
daimyos prospered but losing it all
when the daimyos repudiated their
debts. The businesslike Mitsuis
confined their efforts to commercial
loans, forfeiting some of the easy
money and also escaping the losses.
In 1876. And again in 1900, when
the institution was reorganized on
thoroughly up-to-date models, there
was little need of change.
Long before western merchant
princes were inventing advertising
ideas these Japanese business men
were practising them. Paper um-
brellas, neatly marked with the
store's advertising slogans, were
given away to customers caught
there in a sudden rain. Handbills
were passed about the streets an-
nouncing the current bargains.
Double entry bookkeeping was used
by this ingenious family long before
the West heard of it. Rest periods
were set for employes, and a profit.
sharing program arranged for the
responsible workers.
subordinates'
NOTA A RHEUMATIC
PAIN FOR 4 YEARS
70 -Year -Old Man Praises
Kruschen
,A man who once suffered severely
from rheumatism writes: --
"For a long time 1 suffered with
rheumatism, and at one time was laid
up for about nine weeks. About five
years ago I was advised to try
Kruschen. 1 did so, and have con-
tinued using them ever since. Krus-
chen did the trick, as I have not had
a rheumatic pain for over four years.
T am nearly 70 years of age, and
feeling fine, and always able for my
day's work—thanks to Kruschen."—
A. S.
Kruschen dissolves away those
needle -pointed crystals of uric acid
which are the cause of all rheumatic
troubles. It will also flush these
dissolved crystals clean out of the
system. :• Then if you keep up "the
little daily dose," excess uric acid
will never form again.
Loses Trade
Germany's Balance I3rops
380 Millions In
One Year
Berlin. — Germany's foreign
trade balance dropped by $380,700,-
000 within the past year, it was
disclosed recently. '
While the 1923 foreign trade
balance was favorable by $267,200,-
000,
267,200;000, the balance for 1934 was un-
favorable by $113,500,000. In-
creased imports of raw materials
and cattle sent the total of 1934
irnports to $1,780,000,000, an in-
crease of $98,700,000 over the pre-
vious year.
Germany sent out goods valued
at $1,666,000,000, a decline of
$282,000,000 from 1933, attributed
partly to decreased prices. Food ex-
ports declined one-third while the
quantity of foods brought in in-
creased, although its total value
was smaller.
Why at 40
You Think You're
GROWING OLD"
It's Frequently Just an "Idea."
Not "Old Age." And According
to Scientists, May be Something
No More Alarming Than A
Touch Of Add Stomach
At about 40, many people think
they're "growing old," They're tired
a lot. Have headaches. Stomach up-
sets. Dizziness. Nausea.
Well, scientists say the cause, in a
great many cases, is merely an acid
condition of the stomach. The thing
to do is simply to neutralize the excess
stomach acidity.
When you have one of these acid
stomach upsets, all you do is take
Phillips' Milk of meals and before going to anesia fter
bed. -
Try this. You'll feel like another
person! Take either the familiar
liquid "PHILLIPS' ". or the con -
rt new Phillips' Tablets. Made in Canada. of Mag-
nesiaAlso in Tablet Form:
Phillips
ae nowonsofalane
aat
Tab-
lets all drug
stores everywhere. Each tiny tab-
let is the equivalent of
a teaspoonful of Gen-
uine Phillips' Milk of
Magnesia.
PHILLIPS'
4ltl e. til//t r
The Abundant Vitality of Cod liver 011
PLUS
PLEASANT TASTE
1 EIGHTGEf1MS,
ere V ITAMIN A.
PEOPLE
NESO ME
EVERY.
For over fifty years doctors have specified
"Scott's Emulsion ", wherever the hone•
building, strengthening qualities of pure cod
liver oil were indicated For Scott's Emulsion
is more than just cod liver oil. Scott's
Emulsion is pure cod liver oil, emulsified for
easier digestion, greater efficiency and pleasant
taste.
SCOTT
ULSI
1 BUILD BONES,
I'M ViTAMIN O.
UeALm 4STRENGTH
DEPEND !�
ON mei
THE COD LIVER OIL WITH THS ° PLUS ALU '
For Sale by Yourr Drug ist SA