HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1949-02-10, Page 35,7
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REFUGE 1
CANADA •
t 50;000 DE's have, found-
„ a ill'.\\' lease on life in Canada,
•trvhicii,.lias admitted more clivi-
;plac'ed persons than: ,alt,other. ..
non-Isuropean nations' 'Olt
.,.gether. Many thousands more
"near •D]'.'s"••'- persons.. front
war -weary Localities --- have
swelled. Canada's postwar im-
migration. At`left is. Herman
Boersma, Dutch farmer now in
Ontario, getting his first experi-
ence with; harvesting corn. , At . .
if'g'1i iTff erry W1a'dysl6w'Meier;'
a Polish -trained metallurgist,
i , a, r
` A% \' opting Ila,. Canada s,.L- ur-
eihu of Vines. Below,. left, a
or\iegxall girl 1ealris English
—the b14,ckboar'd,1ias. waiting •iz4_
Germang: Slavic, Polish, Dutclt
and Es'flonian, Beloit right,
are three Netherlands' immi-
grants, .:rnoldus, Henrietta. and
Wilhelir its van Mooi-se1, no\v
on an ttawa'farhi txl stag;
MUM
TEST YOUR 1
•
ulz
TThM GREGORY
There re many sola 1 which ask
a question, 'thennAnswei : it as well..
Below. are Seine -Stith question—you'
try.tq s9PP13..tlxe.answers. No.sta>t.,.
you ofrright, rite answer to No. 1 is
"No, It's Love •ia. •Bloomat. ....
Go on from there. Then check
with -the ,correct- answers 'pri'nted'
upside-down, to prevent peeking,
elsewhere,.ort ,this pager
OueStionr
1, C'au it be the breeze that fills
the trees with,: rare .and. magic .
perfuine's
. Shall. we gather. at the river?
3, Ding dong bell, pussy's in the.
well; who put her in? '
4, Who'; that knocking .at ztiy
door? -
5, A ticket, a tasket, a.green and
yellow basket . Was.it red?
6. What, never?
7, What are the bugles blowing
for? said Files -on -Parade,
8. Oh where,and oh where, is my
highland laddie gone?
9, ,Where do we go from here,
boys?
10, I joined the Navy to see the
world, and what did I see?
11. Mother, may I go out to swim?
12, Tell me, pretty maiden, are
there any more at home like
you?
13. Who stole my heart away?
14. How is dear Ireland, and how
does she stand?
15, Do I worry? '
16,, Am I blue?
19'. What is 'that that the breeze,
it fitfully blows, half conceals,
•
'.half discloses?
18. Did you ever hear Pete go
tweet -tweet on. his piccolo?
19. Who is Sylvia? What is size?
20, Who's that walking down the
street?
Answers ,
•Sgt1q 'cut s;tatlt 'its `sad 07
'asznt pati alt:,; `ztl°H '6e
'oN 'St:
•,tauura Pat urds••lu;S DIIl 51.1., 'Gl
d no:t Bul{{a;
said asot{l ul siva; at'; ;,unit
-op I hast trap t{so2 moue! no;r`
•uaaatl aq; ;o ,ut. ra.et
.to; Valu EmBr1n{
xct {rte { 'ata; > sat: aaar{,1,
<atfflu.p• flittli11P
i1 as a'lls aims .1
tail ,C,40 ¢as to f,
it 04 dal:Atli:4 tttoa;l M 1iss,
ao} 0113 itlg4i o L '8
• 3110' tlofi• mitt od -4
a0•ta iipAen `/last • • '• aaAatt `0N •'9 ,
• •bu' "ort `on 'ox '
zoI{fig. dui MR' a{511u11111 'fr
• - 'uaaa j Symp.( ajar '8
t•tzao{d1 tit aA01 511, 'oN :'"jl
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You can send a message around
the Korid in one-seventh of a
second, yet- it may take years 10
force a, dimple idea through a
quarter inch of human skull.
>u
• MOTORISTS WHO HAV BEEN
STRANDED ON DESOEA1' HIGH-
.
MAYS WITH BOILING RADIATORS
WILL KNOW THO',, VALUE OF AN.
• EMERGENCY WATER
PAIL THAT:Cm..9E ._
CARRIED IN THE
Tool, ,KIT... LY.•,CAN
BE MADE BY CUT-
TING HANDLES ON
A•.SECTION OF OLD
INNER TUBE ;AS
SHOWN.,
SPRING
sTEr
A PIECE OF THIN SPRING STEEL,
SHAPED AS ILLUSTRATED, MAKES A
GOOD HANDLE. TO LIFT TiN CANS
USED AS CONTAINERS FOR HEATING
LIQUIDS.
Animal Stuff
When a Bucklin, Kan., farmer,
investigated a decline in his cow's
milk production, he discovered that
a pig' had been beating him to the
draw,
In New Zealand, working cats
which keep commercial warehouses
freeof rats and mite get ration tic-
kets for six -penny worth of meat a
week at the butcher's.
A. Harvard survey finds that mar-
ried melt have more muscles than
bachelors. Probably because bach-
elors are seldom called upon to un-
screw canning jar tops and beat
rugs.
.: • t:
Each year a keeper at the Whip -
spade Zoo in England clips the
wings of the pelican in order to
keep it grounded. But last time
he was late.,;. just as he: approached
with his shears., the pelican took off
and at last report,,has not returned.
Riled by the presence of too many
pigeons, some laostonians recently
fed the birds whisky -soaked grain,
That's one way to destroy the halt'-
ing instinct,
One chiropodist predicts the
eventual disappearance of • the hu-
man leg, And with it, Hollywood:
ttly then ism, to rely.on acting ahlt•
•
.t.
z. .
y '
Isime he prediota stock
ntarket s;,•'. i, by the rnovemen't of
the moon, l'liat'5 more than fitting,
Since prices Mese gays are asttott-
ottllaat tel vxeir,
Careful
Mark Twain, in his reporting
days, was instructed by an editor
never to state anything as a fact
that he could not verify from per-
sonal : knowledge. Sent out to cov-
er an important social event soon
afterward, he turned in the follow-
ing story: "A woman giving the
name of Mrs. James Jones, who is
reported to be one of the society
leaders of the city, is said to have
given what pur.por•ted to be a party
yesterday to a number of alleged
ladies.. The hostess clam's to be
the wife of a reputed attorney,"
Poor Memory/
A touch -married Hollywood actor
was confronted by a gay -damsel
"Dont You renteniber me?” she
greeted hila. "Ten years ago you
asked me to marry you l"
"Really:?" yawned the actor. "And
did you?"
NSW and
USEFUL T
•3.
• BLOUSE "ANCHOR." 'This
-simple device keeps blouse in place
and skirt seams. straight. By fast. -
,
ening side of. blouse and. side'seazrts
of skirt directly in line it prevents
slide' or ` t *.rist of skirt and;kee `s
blouse tucked snug. - Elastic tap
fa5teited"- to ' Wedged -shaped metal
clip iabsbr strain to keep blous
from;: tearing.
SIUR"LrFIED WASHING M4.
CHINE. For homes, apartments,
self-service .laundries, etc. This if
a rectangular.'.; tctlaopetling, 16 -gal.
portable unit. 'which automatically
washes, rinses and damp dries up
to 8 pounds (dry) clothes, then
cleans itself and shuts off. Activat-
ing washing action, cleans clothes
by soaking, flexing and "rubbing,"
drics to ironing stages by spinning
1140 revolutions a ,minute. Water
connection by rubber hose,
TRUCK SIGNAL,' Five hundred
foot visibility, day or night, in nor-
tnal weather is claimed for vacuum -
operated truck and trailer signal
with automatically illuminated plas-
tic arm. The arm consist of two
tapered panels of transparent
amber; set into either side . of a
swordlike section of :opaque white.
Panels light up along their whole
length, or arm positions and are
controlled from steering column.
Pilot light on fingertip control indi-
cates to driver when arm is in sig-
nalling position, reminding his, to
turn it to neutral.
GLASS MAILBOX. This glass
mailbox is hung on a hinge, with
spring tension which holds maga-
zines and papers against the wall.
NO -TWIST HACKSAW. To
beat the old problem of twist when
you tighten a hacksaw blade, this
one-piece steel tube which fits into
a precision -machine handle has
been developed. Tube is held in
handle by a set -screw arrangement.
By shifting position of tithe and
resetting screw you tighten tension
ort the blade without twisting it
or warping the frame.
Boy, was that train slow! A
couple of newlyweds got on the
train in New York and, v hetr''they
got to •Niagara. their son carried
their bag;.
1336 Hope.
The -popular ditty with the refrain
which 'started off "Jiow're .You
Gonna keep 'Them Down on the
Farm" tised' to be sung; back in the
faraway days of World War One,
snore' or less as • a joke. But that
very Same query today isii't by any
means funny, as many of my read-
ers could no doubt testi' y. -
* is .
"For' now,' as a roiiteinpoi-
ary has it, there are countless boys
who are not staying on the farm—
where, theoretically, they are . sup-
posed to belong. What,s mthey.,
the':
have no ititeutioin of ever going
back. it they can help doing so. In-
stead. they are probably carrying
union cards -in: our-worleshops or
factories, or engaging themselves
in 'seine -outer • we11.1zaying• form pf
city or town employment.
R .
This is a coiditiou which 'regular'
ly brings forth gloom and lamenta-
tions •front,;editoriyal writers, iii ,some
of otir More ponderous newspapers.`
"Why don't they stay where they'd
he so nnzd h healthier, ]Happier. and .
store secure?'"'tifet say: (A Int of
those same writers probably think
that, to quote another oldie—"any-
body who gets up before 10 a.m. is
a night watehman"—aud would
drop:dead at the Alicia ideapf ci aiti'l-
ing out of the quilts before dawn in
•4i1)-7e.ro S):94,1ier s to.,.8o, .oyt ,.and,,
teed a lot of hungry stock.
Every Canadian surely i;a the
right: to seek .properly paid 'erizpioy-
meat wherever it `tray lie found;
and a lot bf,•thos'eYoung' `yolks are
going to think twice, or maybe three
times.. before, giving ,up jobs which '
bring them a dollar or more an
hour for a 44., hour week to '•the
farm where the "seven hour day"
means seven.before dinner and sev-
en after.
1. r . * # M
(Naturally, I ant not referring to.
those who are what is known as -
"born farmers'.' and who could not
be happy anywhere but 'On the
land". Nor to the fortunate few who
own ,farms that are well situated,:
well watered, well stocked, thor-
oughly machined -=and have no,
mortgage hanging over them).
Perhaps some of. those newspap-
er pundits who paint aiuth .rosy;
pictures„ of the rural life, and who
shake their ` editorial pews so
gravely over the trend cityward,
have never studied the real meaning
of a statement like this—one made
by a plan who is not a dairyman and
who does not produce milk for sale.
X..*
He said, "The average hulk driv-
er, who delivers milk from door to
door, gets more moneyefor his ser-
vices than a farmer can get for the
milk of eight average Ontario cows
delivered at a processing plant 860
the sante day." '
Pm not saying that driving a milk,'
wagon or trick is in any *ay to"fi s
"described as a "soft touch" or atftr•'i'
thing of the sort. But there doers •
semi to be ' sonaetlting slightly'
screwey about such an'economu1i1st;
setup—something that should be
studied closely before even...hinting
that there is anything resembiin '
"profiteering" in connection witbt''
the production of milk."
1 * *
The need "for reasoned tlsinkingr`'
as '-lite St. Catharines Standard putt'
it, was never greater than today, ea.
pecially .with • regard to the produczt,
tion and distribution of the neces.
sitiesof life. Milk. is one suct4
necessity, and its 'Production shoul4
be encouraged than than repressed«;
• The liquidation of, dairy herds herari`•,
sir Ontarib lias aiteady'caused serit
ous declines in the quantity of tnilirn.
produced. ,.
d .4'
As an example of this decline,,,
-commercial sales of,fluid hulk ani7i'.
credit' were nearly ONE M1LLIO4
QUARTS less for September 1944
than for tine corresppndiz}g.tnonth it is
1947, Production of cheese for tib
sante month of September wav
THREE i�JIL1 r0N + E'UtiNI)
less—while butter dropped more
than .H,ALI,' A 5,1 1 l.J. 4,Q.4
pound s
Of course weather acid ;'astur
conditions may have had something
to do with°such declines—but by it*
means everything. If: °as'oue writer
points out—profits are so great qt-
the
rrthe production of milk as solids
people like to allege, :Vivi- the presk:
ent downward trend? Well, try azia
figure it out for yourself: it's tog,
tough, for me.
Which should be about. euongla
regarding milk for one session. Nov,
for •two or three items culled front
here and there. Here are some re-
garding the shipping, of live stock
during cold weather, Large numbers
of commercial live stock of al:
`• kinds go to market during the fir
four months of the year—and uta^
less proper cold weather shippiz g
precautionfi are.,taken,.. great dam-
age can result.
* x *
`Coming out of comfortable banns
smali...liv. 'tock, lax, ans.1jzy 'hesita>ftft
about wall Ing "up icy chutes MO,*
• or sleighs. Such chutes
should: be well cleated, and bedde'fi
with a light footing of straw, sand
or ashes. Damage to pigs, especial-
ly, can be - caused which plainly
shows Up on the carcass later.
*
1,
Trucks should be well bedded
with straw and have partitions to
separate cattle from small livestock,
and hogs from lambs and calved,
How To Get Wel( lief
From Sore, Painful Piles
1 can help most pile sufferers. 1 be-
lieve I can 11019 you too It you want
relief from the itching soreness and
burning pain of piles.
My' Hem Poid treatment is different,
Hem -Bold is an internal medicine —
small tablet taken with a glass of
water. It corrects the condittons IN-
SIDE your body that cause you such
intense pile soreness and pain.
But I'll be honest with YOU. Rem -
Bold seems to help some pile sufferers
more than others so I want to protect
those who are not satisfied. I refuse
to ask people to pay for something that
does not help them as much as they
expect it to. if Mem-hold helps you.,
surely It is worth the small cost. Other.
wide I want you to have your h'o'ist'
back. I'll take your word. 1 find people
are honest about such things.
All I ask is you use Mem-Roid *a
directed for 1.0 days. Then if you ata
not satisfied return what you did not
use and get your money back• This Is
an unusual offer but Rem -Road la an
unusual medicine. It has been sold on
a refund promise for over 40 years. )1
am not asked to make many refunds
so It must help most folk, who use
At all drug stores,
RECENT TEST PROVED
tills simply g'r'eat t relieve PERIODIC
with uncomfortable
tallness
Ars you troubled by distress of Ceulalt
functional monthly disturbances? Does
this make you sutler, feel so nervotu,
restless, cranky, weak—at such timed?
Then do try Lyd is E. I'iakham'b Vegeta•
• ble Compound to relieve such symptomel
In a recent test it proved very helpful
to women troubled this way. You owe it
to yourself to try it.
Pinkham's Compound is whatiskuown
as a uterine sedative. It has a seething
effect on one of woman's Most impor•
tont organs.
For over 70 years thousands of girls and
women have reported benefit. Just see if
you, toe don't report excellent results.
Worth trying!
NOTE, Or you *nay proffer LYDIA Y.
PINKIICAAPS TABLETS with added iron.
Lydia En i' 'inkhorn's VEGETABLE COMPOUND
1C,H.I['TLIE k-.
By Margarita
Fi 1 EANS..Wh1,.,1. 15 TWAT
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