Zurich Herald, 1930-03-20, Page 7WAS RUN DOWN
AND VERY WEAK
Too Little Blood the Trouble
and i],'onic Treatment
Restored Health
"I am writing to tell you," says Mrs.
James A. •faugbn, Bridgewater, N,S.,
"the great health benefit i received
through the use of Ar..:Williams' Pink
Pills, I had become badly run down
and very weak; so much • so that I
could only 'with difficulty do my house-
work. l suffered from headaches, and
had very little desire for meals. The
trouble affected my .nervus, and as a
result I did not sleep well at night;
and would often awake with a choking
sensation, and would have to sit up in
bed. I was tarring treatment, but it
did not help me and I was losing cour-
age, when I saw an advertisement of
a case which seemed much like my
own, which had been relieved by the
use of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. I de-
cided to give this medicine a trial and
got two boxes. Before these were all
gone there was an improvement in my
appetite, which seemed a hopeful
sign. I procured a further supply of
the pills and found a steady improve-
ment in my health. I could eat well,
sleep soundly at night, and my house-
-work was no longer a task beyond my
strength. ' From my own experience I.
would advise weak, run-down people
to give Dr. Williams' Pink Pills a fair
trial, feeling, that what they have done
for me, they will east as readily do in
other similar cases."
If you will send your name and ad-
dress to the Dr. Williams' Medicine
Co., Brockville, Ont., a little book,
'Building Up the Blood," will be
mailed you prepaid. This little book
contains many useful health hints.
You can get these pills through any
medicine dealer or by mail at 50c a
box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine
Co., Brockville, Ont.
A Prayer to St. Francis
O saint! who taiketh with all the birds
In ancient woodlands dim,
Care for the fledgling sparrow perched
On yonder leafless limb.
When winds are cold, and snows are
deep
And dark clouds overhead,
Lead the belated robin where
IIe finds a bit of bread.
•
Owl Laffs
Easy Street Is reached by Hard
Tuck Alley.
Hazel --"Where
Helen?"
Helen ---"pawn to the drug store to
buy a package of dog biscuits, Where
are you going?"
Hazel—"Over to the grocery to buy
a box of Aspirin."
are
you going,
A subscriber writes to ask why
some people have electricity in their
hair? Of course we are not speaking
from personal experience. but it may
be because such people havo some-
thing shocking on their mind.
Electricity in the Home
Everything electric is an ad. you often
see,
Let us check up on its uses,
Everyone will soon agree
Curls your hair and washes dishes,
Toasts your bread so brown and nice,
Rings the door bell, sends best wishes
In summer time it makes your ice,
Cools the house and cleans the car-
pets,
In a trice it starts your car,.
Turn a switch and as you listen,
Yes, 'tis music from afar.
In the honeymooner's kitchen
Not a moment need they waste,
The percolator on the table
Has the coffee just to taste,
Eggs are cooked. Just press a button,
Hens lay eggs by day or night.
Oh! what a useful little witch
Merry little Kilowatt!
Every job just needs a switch.
Speak to the hearts of those
In houses snug and warm,
And bid them scatter crumbs about
After a freezing storm; '
And when the icy crust is hard,
And bitter northers blow,
See that the snowbird's tall seed grass
Still stands above the snow.
—Minna Irving in the New York Sun.
who sit
First—"Did you read about the man
who swallowed the teaspoon?"
Second—"No, what happened to
him?"
First—"He can't stir."
The modern wife doesn't know
where her husband goes in the even-
ings, says a critic. She should try
staying at home one evening; she
might find him there.
It was necessary for taxation pur-
poses to decide which side of the
Canadian and United States border a
farm, which an old lady h' i just pur-
chased, actually lay. Surveyors final-
ly announced that the farm was just
on the American side of the border.
The old lady smiled with relief. "I'm
so glad to know that," she said. "I've
heard that winters in Canada are ter-
ribly severe."
Cheer up and let the dentists do all
the looking down in the mouth.
She's a good' mother, confides a
friend. She never strikes her child-
ren except in self-defense.
Jones—"Weil, old man, how are you
getting along with your poultry rais-
ing? Making Expenses?"
Smith—"Not yet; but my hens have
taken to eating their own eggs, so I
hope they will soon become self-sup-
porting."
Chemistry- Professor -"What are
some of the uses of hot air?"
Student—MI orating it is said to
be especially useful in warming the
audience u_i to the subject.
"Mr. Edison doesn't like dancing,
bridge or golf; he thinks the latter in-
vented for men who eat too much."—
Mrs. Thomas Edison,
"I think radio broadcasting one of
the greatest developments culturally
that the world has ever seen."—Mme.
Schumaun-Hein.lt.
YOUR HAIR NEEDS
TO GiVE IT HEALTH AND LUSTRE
ASH YOUR BAR ER
GO OVERNIGHT
"Many Boils on neck. Doctor said
lance. Tried'Sootha•Salva' first; bolls
vanished overnight." C. T. Scott.
"Sootha-Salva"stops pain int minute;
boils go in few hours. At all druggists.
•
People who caul write their names
so anyone can read them, will often
complain if they are not spelled right
M the newspapers.
Comething in a Name
It is said that a young, lady by the
name of Adeline Moore invented the
postscript. -
Simile: As unpitying as a loan
shark.
Canada's
Participation
C
ANADA is taking a prom-
inent part in the Fourth
World's Poultry Congress,
London, July 22 to 30, 1930.
National Exhibits.
Provincial Exhibits.
Cc;nmercial Exhibits.
Live, Bird Exhibits.._
1,000 birds= -the largest
?hibit from any. country.
500 delegates—the most
from any country except Great
Britain.
- 1st Suburbauite—"We are getting
up a league of nations in our suburb.
Have 'yon heard about it?"
2nd One—"No, what is it? A straw
vote?"
lst One—"No, it's an agreement be-
tween those who are planning to make
a garden this spring and those who
are going to raise chickens.
He is one of those fellows who, if
he were a singing; celebrity, would
spend hours listening to his own
phonograph records; said a man of a
friend.
"The man who succeeds in his, work
is -the man who can keep quiet and
placid weep there is very severe pres-
sure."—Charles E.. Hughes,
4.
"I am enthusiastically for every-
1
thing ethat increases knowledge"—
Michael Pupin.
o�rUftV
PHILLIPS--
'
—4- 4..,1
�: -
''. For Tae Acid
rcr1 STO ossiMACH
t, HE gUaM
PHILLIPS -
1
,s IEA D a
IA EAOAG,I't
W GA5�5•/l
:Macy people, two hailre after eating,
suffer indigestion) as they call it. It is
usually excess acid. , Correct it with
an alkali. 'The 'best way, the quick,
harmless and efficient way, is Phillips'
Milk of Magnesia. It has remained
for 50 years the standard with 'physi-
cians.
physi-cians. One spoonful in water neutral-
izes many times its volume in stomach
acids, and at once. The symptoms dis-
appear in five minutes.
ex-
Classified A.drvertxsing
KEEP THEM HAPPY f l AGlprious.End
, � T9.�1iX Gill SQL&70
1 Slip of Polar E�plorexs, �x � �:1,,�--��'ia k1A'r��Ii.:D
KEEPING THEM WELL Fram' ed for Her Fast ties. Writ°e� A;reeeactalogue A. IL
er, °replan, tint,
Equipped
Switz
It is natural for children to be bap- Voyage f I.ATI S'l' SON S 11: C7'S.
. ship 1��� Words of ran latest song biers
Awn
py, active, and full of fun, When they I Oslo, Norway,—The
batteredNoivvegian of stage rind screen scot for riOc. 1 actory'
are fretful, fussy and disinclined to.; Fram, which s huri,Ius sales <:o., G '13, w1n]sor, Ont.
play you may be sure something is; explorers to their .cenquests flua'iilg All MS NIi. rs . Tf,RON O ^i�`/WM]
l for our Interesting free list, . Look. 'wrong, Almost invariably that some -I four decades, is being equipped for hart A: Lockhart, 119 Bay St., Toronto.thing lies in the .digestive traO't. her lea voyage.
Tee i.CIISTbllti is Hol
l'uI TSS
It is to meet the peed fop an abso. The Fram carried. Fridjof Nausea
inter *safe corrective of childhood ail toward the North Pole in 1893 and ; Arbogast, Mitchell, Ontario,eap. Ia°te>
insets that 73aby's Own Tablets have brought him back two years later
been designed. They gently regulate when he reported having s tl hedl'tli-t `t W273 'vT•i r$ LEt lltlztN
the stomach and bowels and thus rude 80 degrees 14 minutes, iunD Palle d l is mouth IL
drive out constipation and indiges-
tion; break up colds and simple fevers
and allay teething pains. Concern-
ing them Mrs. W. E. Forsyth, Dover,
N.B., writes: "1 would not be without
Baby's Own Tablets as I know of noth-
ing to equal them for fretful, fussy
babies who are troubled with colds or
sour stomach."
Baby's Own Tablets are sold by
medicine dealers or by mail at 25
cents a box from The Dr. Williams'
Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont,
Two
After -Congress Tours
After the Congress -:an eleven
day tour of the British Isles—the
Shakespeare country, North Wales
Ireland, Lakes of Killarney, Dub-
lin, Belfast—Scotland, the Tros-
Laacash e,bthe English Lakeh--back to s land,
Then a ContiPental tour --
st Am-
sterdam, Frankfort, russels, Holland; tLMunich,eOber-
ammergau (to see the Passion Play),
Switzerland, Paris.
Canadian and United States dele-
gates and visitors sailing together
from Montreal, • July 12th, on the
"Duchess of York."
For detailed information write to
the nearest of the following:
Dr. F. N. Marcellus, Ontario
Agricultural. College, Guelph.
Prof. W., A. Maw, Macdonald
College, P.Q.
J. D. Barbeau, Department of
Agriculture, Quebec, P.Q.
5. G. Morgan, Experimental
Farm, Nappan, N.S.
or
F. C. Elford,
President of the World's Poultry
Science Association, Ottawa.
CANADIAN NATIONAL
CONGRESS COMMITTEE
The Hon. Dr.W.
. RCh, Motherwell
Dr. J. H. Grisdalo
Honorary Vice•Chairrnan
H. B. Donovan—Chairman
Presidenntt,uC Y Ci Council
PoL. F. Burrows—Secretary
+114 Vittoria St., Ottawa El
The Opportunity
Of a Lifetime
The opportunity of a lifetime is real-
ly what is offered in the post -Congress
tours which have been arranged to
follow the closing session of the
Fourth World's Poultry Congress, to
be held in Old London, July 22nd to
30th, this year.
The tours have been arranged, one
following the other. The first starts
July 31, and takes one through the
nder-
historic, storied and scenic Ivo
lands of the British Isles. The Shake-
Ispeare country, North Wales, Dub -
lin, with its Rocky Road; the Irish
Free State, youngest of the British
Dominions; Cork and the lovely Lakes
of Killarney; the Giant's Causeway
and, of course, the Blarney Stone will
be on the route. Crossing again to
Scotland, Glasgow and the Burns
country is viewed; the Trossachs,
Edinburgh, the English Lake Country,
and Liverpool provide days full of
wonder and amazement. This part of
the tour returns to London August 10.
Then conies the visit to the con-
tinent which begins with a twenty-
four hour stay at Brussels. From
Brussels the quaint' Holland country
is visited, then the party proceed to
the lovely Rhine Valley country, pass-
ing on the way up that river the his -
ii ♦clth its cathe-
ernmost point visited by man up to
then.
The same Fram, with a few new ate
coutrements, carried Roald Amundsen
south in 1911 and carried him back in
triumph as discoverer of the South
Pole, to be acclaimed at home.
Now the Fram is to proceed to
Trondhjem to take part in an exhibi-
tion on the occasion of the 900th an-
niversary of the introduction of Chris•
tianity into Norway. When she re-
turns she will be placed In the Arctic
Museum here.
On her final voyage the Frani will
be captained by Wisting, the only liv-
ing man besides Rear Admiral Rich-
ard E. Byrd who has seen both poles.
Wisting was with Amundsen at the
South Pole in a dirigible in 1928.
The Fram's crew will be made up of
old- Polar explorers from the Nansen,
Amundsen and Sverdrup expeditions.
oak Baby
Chicks, Wonderful winter layers. We.
have been hatching for 447 years Dela',
mere Poultry Farm, Stratford Ont.
A Peril to Egypt
Cairo Sphinx: (Egypt is menaced
by vast swarms of locusts in the Sinai
Peninsula). At any moment, a strong
east wind may drive the swarms of
locusts across the narrow strip of des-
ert and sea, but a still more serious
situation may arise if the locusts sue -1
teed in breeding in Sinai. Indeed,'
this is more than probable. The
hatching of locust eggs requires a cer-1
tain amount of moisture in the soil.
Normally, Sinai is too dry for this to C
happen, but this year's rains are with-
out precedent, and there is a possi-
bility that the sand will remain moist
till the weather becomes warm
enough for the locusts to breed. The
situation is a grave one that calls for
immediate action, but it is difficult to
get the authorities to realize the mag-
nitude of a danger that is at present
just at their doors. The swarms can
be destroyed now if a fleet of cars is
employed in sufficient numbers and
equipped with flame guns and trained
teams.
toric cities of Coble ,
dral, and Bonn with its world-famous
universities, both places which were
held by troops of the Canadian Ex-
peditionary Force immediately follow-
ing the armistice. Frankfort and
Munich are also visited, then the
party proceeds to Oberammergau for
Sunday, where they will be privileged
to view the famous Passion Play,
which exemplifies what is regarded by
most of us as the greatest event of all
history. Returning the party are the
guests at a government reception at
Munich before proceeding to Switzer-
land for a four-day stay, which will in-
clude a visit to Geneva, seat of the
League of Nations. From Switzerland
the party r un to Paris, where an-
other four days will be spent.
The Paris visit may he cut in half
and those desiring to do so will be
afforded an opportunity of a two-day
tour of the battlefields of the Great
War. To most of the party this visit
to the battlefields will be the climax
of what all will regard as truly the op-
portunity of a lifetime.
4rI .teicatieneiteareseemestseeraias
MED 11 Lbs. in S Wks
And a Boy Friend."
writes Susan Saline. Thousands
Mamm-ths' Graveyard
Is Sought Along Yukon
Fort Yukon, Alaska.—Seeking ante-
diluvian monsters with hair and skins
intact, two scientist -traders have be-
gun a leisurely journey cloavn the
frozen Yukon River in the hope of
finding the burial place of mammoths
in the high bluffs of the stream unap-
proachable during the season of 'open
water.
East spring frost forces huge bones
out of gravel beds along the river.
Many valuable finds of ancient Ivory
were uncovered in the sante manner
in recent years and marketed by the
two traders.
The last well preserved carcass of
a mammoth was found near Dawson
in 1904 and sold to an Eastern college
museum for a large sum. That there
are more such remains still intact in
the frozen subsoil along the Yukon,
where nature may do the excavating,
is the opinion of the searchers. They
You will never 'crude methods
when you know this better ernethod.
And you will never suffer :from excess
acid when you prove out this easy re-
lief. Please do
that—for your own
saltie—now.
Be sure to get the genuine Phillips'
Milk of Magnesia prescribed by 'physi- tions of John Bull, its biggest creditor.5 cting excess
tise
say new Ironkzed Yeast adds 5
to 15 lbs. in 3 weeks. Skin clears
like magic. Constipation, nerves,
end. Gat pleasant Ironized Yeast
tablets from druggist today.
samaterscessacareseterausrrirmissesusna
"After 'ears of rheumatism, now iu
perfect health," says Mr. A. Duch-
arme. Thousands write rheumatic
pains, neuritis, vanish like magic
with"Fruit.a-tives".Constipation, indi-
gestion end overnight. Nerves quiet.
Get"Fruit•a•tives"fromdruggisttoday.
ice Ii C'
flash
on Coughs & Colds
A speedy, safe, proven remedy
for children and adults.
Arts Lite aFlash , ASINGLE SIP PADVESir
17A
Boils
Dry up and disappear with Min-
ard's. It kills the poison and
draws out the inflammation.
Minard's Kills Dandruff.
Banff Park Set Aside in 1885
Banff national park in the province
of Alberta is the oldest of the Domini-
on playgrounds, the original reserva-
tion having been set aside in 1585. It
comprises an area of 3,530.5 square
miles of territory. Reserved for the en-
joyment of all who visit it, it is also a
wild life sanctuary, evidence of which
is manifest in the large number of
sheep, deer and bear to be seen in the
areas adjacent to the highways of the
park.
—FARM HELP-.
Economy and Politics
Perth Western Mail: (The Ccullin
Government in Australia has abolish-
ed, on the ground of economy, the De-
velopment and Migration Commis-
sion). In the interests of that very
economy which the new Government
would hug to itself. for justification,
the continued functioning of the Com-
mission would have meant much to
Australia. . . Whatever its meth-
ods, it stood for a very necessary prin-
ciple in Australian public life, pre-
venting the dissipation of public funds
in political ventures whose only rela-
tion to development was their descrip-
tion. Its executive death is a calamity
—a calamity of peculiar concern to
Western Australia, whose spaces cla-
mour for people and production, but
whose political "pull" against Eastern
States' interests is weak,
"The quality of an art is in inverse
ratio to 'the numbers Who support it.
Charming Pollock.
expect to exchange dog sledges for
barges early in the spring near the
mouth of the Tanana River's con-
fluence with the Yukon.
Beaverbrook's Proposal
•
Sydney Bulletin (Criticizing the
"traiff truce" conference, which was
barren of results, the Bulletin com-
pares it with the "Empire Crusade.")
The idea is smile relation to news-
paper millionaire Beaverbroolc's de-
mented proposition that all the British
Dominions shall somehow be tricked
into an arrangement for absolute Free
Trade within the Empire, so that all
the products of the United Kingdom
and of some 350,000,000 attached Dig-
gers shall enjoy the run of the Aus-
tralian market, and this Common.;
wealth shall throw the biggest item of
its revenue Into the ash -heap, and go
broke immediately amid the vitui• iara-1
eians for ( years in COl'1'e ,.
tide, Each bottle contains full direr-
`tions—ally drugstore. Use IVIlnarc s in the Stable.
;
•
DO YOU
SUFFER FROM
CONSTIPATION?
CoUnticss remedies are advertised
for constipation. lltauy relieve for
the moment but they are habit form-
ing and must be continued. Others
contain calomel and dangerous min-
eral drugs, which remain in the sys-
tem, settle in the joints and cause
aches and pains. Some are Harsh.
purgatives which cramp and gripe
and leave a depressed after effect.
Avoid lubricating oils which only
greasethe intestines 'and encourage
nature's machinery to become lazy.
A purely vegetable laxative such
as, Carters. Little Liver Pills, gently
touches the liver, bile starts to flow,
the bowels move gently, the intestines
are thoroughly Cleansed and constipa-
tion poisons pass away. The stomach,
liver and bowels are now active and
the system enjoys a real tonic effect.
All druggists 2$0 and 75c red pkgs.
BRITISH BOYS AND
SINGLE MEN
Weekly Parties During Early
Spring.
APPLY 'IOW—The Secretary, The
Salvation Army Immigration:
SOS. Dundas Street, Woodstock. Ont.
ISO Jarvis Street, Toronto, Ont.
114 Beckwith St., Smiths Fails, Ont.
1225 University St., Montreal, QUO.
Liver—in `Vancouver
"Three clears apo, ul,ile itt V.' ncouver, the
house physician at the hotel advised me to use
Rruschen Salts for a bad liver and constipation.
I can say I never have had anythfnp that pare
me almost instant relief before, and I therefore
got my chemist to order Ifrusehen for 111e-1 think
so less than 40 or 50 families hare used at by
any persuasion. Most other remedies on the
market leave a bad effect itt many ways, but IT
can safely say I haven't been as welt in many
Vara as since I hate taken h:rusehen. '—Mrs,
C. 12. AL, Williamsport,ial letter U.S.A. irinspection.
iituschen Salts is obtainable at drug and
department stores in Canada at 75e. a bottle.
A
ohealttains h half-ato -centfor
a day. 5
_ FREE TRIAL OFFER
% of TOTAL
FARES
to CANADA
ADVANCE
BRITISHERS
in Canada may now bring
forward their Families,
Relatives and Friends
on Easy Terms.
For full details aptaly:—
d'. 1a, CAMES,ON,
Dist, Supt. Colonization
Canadian Pacific Bailway, Toronto
BRITISH
RE -UNION ASSOCIATION
,iezliehz
FOR, QUICK,
HARJOILESS COMFOU
ChildipnCryforlt.
TOR cOHSTWPATIOH. RNARRHEA,FEYERISHktSS
If you have _never tried hruschen—try 0 now
at many special el GIANT"ve packagestwhicld h make
it easy for you to prove our claim for yourself.
Ask your druggist for the new "GIANT ' 750.
package.
'XItis consists of our regular 73e. bottle together
with a separate trial bottle—sufficient for about
ono week. Open the trial bottle dist, put It to
the test, and then, if not entirely convinced that
liruochen does everything we claim it to do the
regular tittle Is grill as good as new. Tal r. it
bark. Your druggist is authorised to return
your 730. immediately and without question.
your have tried Itruschen free at cur expense.
What could be fairer'' Manufactured bg
T. Griffiths Muxhes, Ltd., Manchester, Eng.
tEstah. 1750). importers: McGillivray Brea.
Ltd., Toronto.
es
""'" BACK eoattard
OP WARS.- ,MSEIOT
....;
6,5T x+
to n O'>l
EAR
13,23 Atl Orutytsts Descriptive taffies on request
A. O. LEONARD, Inc,
City
York Cty
er
Fifth
Ave.,
7
0
Lv - -
fness
'HEAD NOISES
REM' OF A CASE
UKE HER 1WN
Decided to take Lydia E.
Pinll hare's Vegetable
Cornpoklrld
Moncton, New Brunswick—"Befere
eny last balm was born I was very weak,
nervous and dis-
`; %�fr f'" couraged. 1 saw
an advertisement
in the paper about
a woman who had
been like ene so ll
bouiht n bottle of
Lydia E. Pink -
ham's Vegetable
Compound. I took
three bottles and
it carried me safe-
ly through that
critical time. I
have three children to care for and 1
feel well and strong. 1 have told two
medicine."—
other women about your
Mao. Gars Ans0fret.tJLT, 82 Albert Street,
Moncton, New Brunswick.-
ISSUE
runswick.ISSUE No. 11.— '30