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HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1935-11-21, Page 3s OPERATION LEFT HER CONSTIPATED Nothing Was Effective -- Until She Tried Kruschen Constipation is an evil at any time. When it follows upon an operation, it ie a condition that simply must be remedied. This woman tried various remedies, but found relief only when she took a regular daily dose of lirusehen Salts. She tells of her 'experience in the following letter:— "I have used Kruschen • Salts for about 10 years• every morning with.. out fail. I ha an operation years n ago (abdominal), getting over it that ) should have to take aperients, as constipation devel- oped. I took various medicines and pills, which somehow did not do much gaod. "Finally,, I tried Itruschen Salty, and found it very satisfactory, and harve carried on with it ever since. My health is much better since I started using it."—(Mrs..) E. T. Kruschen is the surest, safest, and most sensible way to keep your inside regular in its most important daily duty. You will find that your system never becomes hardened, but always submits to Kruschen's gentle .and friendly power of persuasion. Butter Shortage Due To Lack of Milkmaids SERIN,—Too many "frauliens are sitting behind typewriters and too few behind glistening milk pails," the newspaper Tageblatt said in a dis- cussion of Germany's butter shortage. The shortage, the article said, is due in large extent to a "'mills.maid shortage". Too few persons in Ger- many know how to milk cows said the writer in suggesting that more city girls be sent to the country. Don!t Guess But Know Whether the "Pain" Remedy You Use is SAFE? Here r There Everywhere A brother to every other Scout, without regard to race or creed A 'beautiful silver service sub- scribed to in small sums by bora was the unique tribute paid Col. E. S. Wigle , Scout Commissioner for Windsor and Essex County' since the organization of Scouting inthat area. Presentation was made by Wal- lace R. Campbell, President of the Border Cities Scout Association. The nscription en the service reads: "To Col, Wigle, from his Scouts, Cubs and Rovers". Don't Entrust Your Own or Your Family's Well - Being to Unknown Preparations, THE person to ask whether the preparation you or your family are taking for the relief of headaches is SAFE to use regularly is your family doctor. Ask him particularly about "ASPIRIN." He will tell you that before the discovery of "Aspirin" most "pain" remedies were advised against by physicians as bad for the stomach and, often, for the heart. Which is food for thought if you seek quick, safe relief. Scientists rate "Aspirin" among the fastest methods yet discovered for the relief of headaches and the pains of rheumatism, neuritis and neural- gia. And the experience of millions of users has proved it safe for the average person to use regularly. In your own interest remember this. "Aspirin" Tablets are made in Canada. "Aspirin" is the registered trade -mark of the Bayer Company, Limited. Look for the name Bayer in the form of a cross on every tablet, Demand and Get " -1 9 * * * Boy Scouts of Edmontbn, Alta, are acting as traffic officers in schooti zones before and after school and during recess. * * * A weiner roast at the Orchard Inn, an interesting talk on astronomy and an opportunity to observe some of the wonders of the heavens thro- ugh a powerful telescope made up an outstanding evening for the 1st Simcoe Troop. Edmonton Crew' are assisting Soni master Holloway with the n,. group, * * * 600 Border Cities Wold Cubs, sac' ing six chartered street cars, journap ed to Amherstburg for' their eon;!( I autumn field day, of games and eclllait-. petitions, "eats", and songs Aga stories around a big camp fire. * * * The• latest addition to the stead y growing Museum of the Coldwats, Ont, Scouts is the skin* of a six-foot copper head snake, shot at McRae Bay by Mr. J. R. Gill of North River, 4.* * }. * * * Over 400 Cubs and Scouts and their leaders attended morning ser- vice at St. Paul's Anglican Church, Toronto, and listened to a sermon by Bishop Renison on the Good Samari- tan, the favourite Biblical example of the Scout good turn. :k * *. As a result of Scout co-operation during Fire Prevention Week in In- gersoll, Ont., the boys have been asked by Fire Chief Gillespie to aid the local fire department "for all time." Chief Gillespie is preparing a series of talks and demonstrations for the Scouts, following which priz- es for the best essays on the sub- ject will be awarded. * * * At the first autumn meeting of the 1st Parry Sound Troop a hand- some new stand of colours was pre- sented by President J. M. Daly of the Canadian Legion. * * * A charter has been granted the newly organized troop at University Hospital, Edmonton, Alta. The troop is composed of boys being treated for infantile paralysis, and will be known as the 30th Edmonton Troop. One of the boys, Patrol Leader Swanson, already bas achieved the distinction of winning his Second Class badge. Rover Scouts of the 6th The Srd Toronto Group celebrated. its 26th birthday in October with .' a Parents' Night attended by over 3N, persons. Sixteen new Wold Cubs were invested and 14 admitted to the Sftco t troop in an impressive Going ceremony. A presentation was made to Scoutmaster Bert Hayes, in ree- ognition of his completion of 25 years with the troop. END IT THIS WAY Millions have found Omega Oil the quickest and surest relief from deep-seated pain. Entirely different from ordinary liniments,• it works down deep to break up congestion and quiet throbbing nerves. At all drug stores, 35c. asteeSeee , Ser B RADIO till you see the NEW Northern' ElQctrIc BATTERY OPERATED New standards of radio enter- tainment. Amazing brilliance of tone. Unusdal cabinet beauty. New ax lane type dial. Operates with air cell, storage of dry cell. Mantel and console models. S�50 From..,,•.... HYDRO OPERATED The most revolutionary sets of the year , . . the only sets with the new CcntaOmatic Unit which banishes 104 trouble sources found in ordi- nary radio .. Controlled Selec- tivity and the new s4 i 9,50 Metal Tubcll . Prom Only Northern Electric Has Alt These Features See your Dealer 111.1110 110 YE SOF AG Farmers' Market In Great- Britain Britain's Oldest Woman Still Enjoys Her Tea Believed to•be the oldest woman In Britain, Mrs Caroline Merriott ; cele- brated her 110th birthday in Mayday Hospital, Croydon, by being hostess at a tea-party. Arrayed in her best clothes, ` and with a new white bonnet, she .cut?fa birthday cake that had been specially made for the occasion, and entertain- ed some of her friends In spite of her age, Mrs. Merriott is still an active woman mentally, and her voice is surprisingly strong. She eats three meals a day, and drinks several pints of tea with great enjoyment. When she was born she was so small that for a week after her blrth they could not put any clothes on her. Despite the one hundred per cent,- Increase in Canada's exports to the British Empire, under the Empire trade treaties, the exporters of the Dominion are not yet taking full ad- vantage of the agreements. Take the Anglo -Canadian agreement, signed at Ottawa in 1932. It gave Canadian ag- riculture and other primary produc- era for the first time in generations a definitely preferred place in the markets of the United Kingdom as compared with the exporters of fo- reign countries. Canadians are not yet, however, deriving all the advent- ages that they should from the open- ing made for them in the Mother Country by the Bennett Gbavernment. ','his fdcit was emphasized in a speech at Montreal by Dr. J. H, Gris- dale, formerly Fedei:al Deputy Min- ister of Agriculture. Just returned from a trip overseas, this eminent agricultural authority drew attention once more to the desire of the people of Great Britain to buy our horses, dairy cattle, cheese, bacon, honey, chickens, turkeys and other products. )tut, insisted the speaker, our pro- ducers have not put tlieanselves out to please the buyers. Speaking., at length on impressions he gathered on a visit to England on behalf of the Cheese Patrons' Association of Ont- ario, Dr. Grisdale said that Canadians, like sellers the world over, are too prone to think only of their own end of the business and to forget the special tastes and desires of those to whom they wish to sell. He de- monstrated that, under the British Marketing Act, which created the milk pool, milk production has increased in Great Britain, with the result that She loves to recall her father's t of how one of her 'uncles bet £1 -that they could put her in a qu jug. "They tried," she gleefully s "and they got me in." Born at Tooting Corner, ten. ym. after Waterloo, Mrs. Merriott re nt• hers the Crimean War, the Co , } riots, and the- Coronatio tie 00 rt aid, 5 Victoria. She has been married ,tale substance. Shire horses and Perch - and her second husband died in 19x'36. erons are becoming more popular. She worked in a laundry until she While the dairy cattle market is op - was 85. ening up, he warned his hearers that some Canadian shipments have not been quite up to standard, although they are now improving, and point_ ed out that British requirements are slightly different from Canadian. Heavier flesh characterizes the av- erage herd in Great Britain and most of the animals look fit for the block. Canadian farmers will be well advis- ed to see that cattle they ship are a little fatter than they have perhaps thought they need be. All of which should be taken to heart by serious-minded Canadian farmers all over the country. The Bri- tish market offers them under unique preferred conditions an opening for which the farmers of all the rest of the world daily hanker. It is up to our people to take fuller advantage of it. —Toronto Mail and Empire MOTORISTS .- READ Autumn it a season when travel- ling is keen, trees assume their colorful autumn dress; even nature seems fiirtatioue, as though to make herself sadly missed during the long winter months. A.uturnn, how- ever, is a season which offers sev- eral dangers, when rains have soak- ed the highways, or early frosts have covered the surface of our roads with a thin coating of ice, With the arrival of autumn, it is fitting to call motorists' attention to the fact that if they should be pru- dent and careful at all times, they should exercise even more caution during the period when the temper- ature may be an additional source of danger. The few pointers to safety given below, whieh are borrowed from the Office National du Tourismne de France, do not particularly apply to autumn activities, but are so gen- eral that motorists can put them in paetice at all times: Motorists, be careful; human lives depend on your prudence. Remember that the highway belongs to every- body, and not to you alone, and that it is not a race -track. Motorists, travel quietly at night. Do not arouse everybody in villages by repeated tooting; of your horn or an open muffler. There may be wo- men, children, aged persons, those who are sick, who need rest and quiet. Pass through villages quietly. Don't imagine that you will amaze your passengers or passers-by by speed alone. They will be more ap- preciative of your safety and pru- dence. Being prudent does not mean that you have to dawdle along the road. It is the grouping of a thousand and one minor matters, of sureness of home farm cheese is being driven 1 the eye, rapid thought, adroit handl- off the market by the inferior factory ing of the wheel, of anticipating product. Canadian cheese now ranks what others may do that may be high and he is convinced that in fut- the cause of your having ari accident. ure the good cheese will be coming It is in knowing when to slow from Canada. At present, consume- down, and of sounding a warning be - tion is 240,000 tons a year, and Can- fore you reach a crossing, not at ada ships only 30,000. crossings themselves. It is stopping There is not much place for Can- at level crossings—even if they are adian butter, but bacon prospects are protected before crossing over them. improving. While Denmark has gone It is never failing to be master of down, Canada has gone up and, with your vehicle at all times, and of the English bacon producers unstable, turning only when you are sure of Canada has an excellent chance to. Tieing able to do this he perfect establish a good reputation. Honey safety for all concerned. and poultry offer further opportunit- Finally, it means observance of fes, but there is need for marketing all precaution in turning, at the them in a sane way. crests of hills, and when the road is Dr. Grisdale said that he had been slippery• greatly impressed with the opportun- Being prudent means that you will ity which recently opened for Oan- prolong the lifeof your car, your adian horses. "The horse market is own and those of others. booming a bit, and the end is not While travelling, never be a slave yet." In Glasgow, 60 Canadian work- to a time -table. Tell yourself you are ' ing horses sold at an average of $265 touring, not indulging in a race 1 apiece in August. The opportunities against Time. Look at the country - are especial( good in Scotland, where side through which you travel, and the farmers. have been going• in too „admire Nature's handiwork, stretch- miich for quality and riot "enough:Vie ed ,before your,• -pates -detain in• your mind memories of the picturesque sites which most impressed you. Forget about your business once in a while, play truant; you may dis- cover, at the end of a road which others have passed by, unsuspected marvels. Hunting Season To Be Best Known In Years Reports received from various ag- ents of the Canadian National Rail- ways, at widely different sections of Northern Ontario and Quebec in- dicate that the Indians were right, when they declared that big gain& and game birds were unusually plentiful this season. Throughout the North Country both noose and deer have been seen in abundance and in some sections, where the an- tlered kin„ of the woods had been scarce for years, he appears to liave returned to his old haunts. Deer is also stated to be seen in gratify- ing numbers on forest lands which previously had been burned over. They are feeding upon the grasses and second growth r;1ncn are now growing in profusion. In the Maritimes game is also re- ported plentiful, with a large nmm- ber of moose available. It Is inter- esting to note that the first deer to fall to the hunter's rifle in Resti- gouche County, New Brunswick, was one of the white species which are very rare in those parts. Known as Albino deer, very few have ever been taken in New Brunswick. The hunter who shot the white deer is going to nave the head mounted. Some men are born great, while others roll up their trousers- and wade right into the middle of it, ,,: * The following is reprinted in this column by request: The ladder of life ii fult of splinters, but they al. ways hurt the worst when we are sliding down. A Relieves Consestlel* *Does Hot Blister At filet sign of a cold on the chest apply a 14fecea i'oulnce with the addition of muStsrd. The warmth marvellous properties combination ici Otrncwilivqul relief, lull directions in each package. 38 Something Money Cannot Buy Sometimes when you feel resentful because you cannot have certain things you especially want, it will pay you to make a list of the bless- ings that money cannot buy. Your wealthy acquaintance may have a house you envy, but his millions cannot buy hint a conscience at peace. He may have several models of expensive cars in his garage, but his wealth does not assure him the respect of his neighbours. Make out your list and think it over. You will realize that life's precious belong- ing are not to be bought with money. Housewife—Just look at that milk; it's disgraceful. Milkinan—What's the matter with it? It looks as rights as rainto me. STOPS ITCHING in One minute For quick relief from the itching of pimp - es, blotches, eczema, rashes and other skin eruptions, apply Dr. Dennis' pure, cooling, iquid, antiseptic D. D. D. Prescription. Thirty years' world-wide success. Its gentle oils soothe the irritated and inflamed skin, thus aiding nature itself to heal the disor- der. No fuss—no muss. Clear, greaseless and stainless—dries up almost immediate- ly. Stops the most intense itching instantly. Try D. D. D. now. A 35c trial bottle, at drug stores, will prove it—or money back. D. D. D. Prescription is made by the own- ers of ITALIANN BALM. There's No T amt° like glen's "That's why "roll -your -owners" everywhere are getting back to Ogden's Fine Cut—the one tobacco that assures cigarette satisfaction. And -Wen's costs so little that it doesn't pay to deny yourself the best tobacco. You'll rola Ogden's best with "Chantecler" or 'Vogue" cigarette papers. 52 Poker Hands, any numbers, now accepted es a complete set. FINE CUT Your Pipe Knows Ogden's Cut Plug When some people say: "I'll think about the matter," they flatter them- selves. * * * Look ahead, plan ahead, keep your head, and you'll be ahead( Classified Advertising INVENTORS I AN OFFER TO EVERY INVENTOR List of wanted inventions and full information sent free. The Ramsay Company, World Patent Attorneys, 273 Bank Street, Ottawa, Canada. LIVE STOCK MARKETING Shipping on the co-operative plan has been productive of splendid results. Selling on the open market means real value for the owners. Get in touch with us. Write—Wire—or Telephone LYndharat 1143 TSE UNITED raRMEIe,s CO-OPERATIVE COMPANY, LIMITED LIVE STOCK f,OMMISSION DEPT. Union Stock Yards, 'West Toronto -6/.5A YOUR 'blue coal' dealer! The Health Restoring Value of COD LIVER OIL PLUS Easy Digestibility Invalids ` struggling bs,.:is tu health need strength and vitality giving foods. SCOTT'S EMUL- SION is an emulsion of pure energy -packed Cod Liver Oil. PLUS bone -building Hypophos- phites of Lime and Soda. It is four to five times more easily digested than the highest grade Cod Liver Oil. These are PLUS VALUES you get only in SCOTT'S EMULSION. THE DIGESTIBLE COD LIVER OIL WITH THE PLUS VALUES FOR SALE BY YOUR DRUGGIST asem t STOP WAST e 1G FUE . This Automatic Heat Regulator assures greater comfort --greater con- venience and eliminates waste heat. It's the lowest priced Regulator in Canada. 4 St10374:i0 THE FAMOUS RUBBING LINIMENT Rub on—pain gone. Get the new large econ- omy site --Also avail- able in smaller, regular, size. Issue No. 46 35 19 SHORT -STORY WRITING CONTEST THERE is at least one good story in everyone's life. For the best 3 Stories received on or before November 10th, 1935, A CASH PRIZE, and Twa Other Valuable Prizes, will be given for Original, or True Life Stories of 1,000 words or under. Send in with your story a signed statement that it is either original, or a true life story, your name and address, and number of words in the the story, enclose return postage for its return. Entry Fee Twenty -Five Cents. Typewrite if possible or even legible handwriting accepted. OFF BAKER, 39 LEE AVE., TORONTO