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Zurich Herald, 1920-06-03, Page 3Make Up Your Mind. tie might have been something—he's plenty of brains, And to labor he isn't avense; Tet I'm sorry to say that the fact still. remains He has never much coin in his purse. Ile always considered just what he would do, And would hope something better to fled; But the more that he thought, more uncertain he grew, And he never could make up his mind, Quite often he might have got on the flood tide, And havo ridden to power and wealth; But be never felt able at once to de- cide That the damp wouldn't injure his health. If Fortune would knock at hie door he would wait, To her becks and her smiles he was blind; If he opened or followed 'twos always too late, For be never could make up his mints. So he's plunging along, ways in doubt Whether this plan thing; But the chances that come never lin- • ger about, Being birds that are strong on the wing. He's provided with salt for each fugi- tive tail, And to drop it he's almost inclined; But it's certain and sure that he al- ways must fail, 01' andlies al - that is the Since he never can mind. make up his Towers For Airships. How will airships be anchored? General Maitland, the Admiralty senior airship officer, who took part in. the R. -34's Atlantic crossing, re- cently gave the following explanation, says a London newspaper. "We hope that in time," he said, "an airship arriving, say, from New York at an English terminus, will come over a single mast under her own power, drop a coupling, and be connected up by one or two men on the ground to the coupling inside the mast. Then the airship will be pulled down by a winch to the top of the mast, and the passengers will go down the mast in a lift." Steel towers are now being con- structed from which it will be possible to supply airships moored to them with fuel, water, gas, and goods; and crew and passengers also will be able to go aboard from the towers. The completed mooring -tower will be about 150ft. high, and will be built of steel lattice -work. ' It is being furnished with a revolv- ing head. To this the airship will be closely moored, bow on, and floating clear of the ground, the vessel will be able to swing round in accordance with the direction of the wind. An airship making for the tower will send out a wireless message an- nouncing her intention, From the tower head a wire cable will be drop- ped to the ground and there picked up by a man who will enter a small car and drive ,away some 300yds. A second cable, weighted with sandbags, will be dropped from the airship when a ground signal has indicated the point at which it will bo picked up, and the two cables will be coupled. The airship will then be hauled in, assisting where necessary with her own power, and when she has been moored it will be possible to uncouple the cables and rewind them. The air- ship will be released automatically from the mooring tower by mechanism controlled by one magi, so that from first to last, apart from those on board, not more than three men will be need- ed to bring a dirigible to port and send her out again. Real Trade Secrets. There are at least two trade secrets which have been so jealously guarded that they have remained close secrets for hundreds of years, and may never be known to the world at large. One Is the Chinese method of making the bright and brilliant color mown as vreriniilion., or Chinese red, ante. tire other is a Turkish. secret the inlay- ing of the hardest steel with gold or silver. imo g the Chinese and Turys these two secrets are guarded well. Ap- prentice's, before they are taken for either trade, are compelled to swear an iron -clad oath to reveal nothing of what passes in the workshop. They enlist also belong to families of high standing, must pay a large sum of money as a guarantee, and must fur- nish certlficatee of good character,' and honesty. These secrewt %»e, b� Wit landed d0".. f ltj;f;l ytrent one gene• - 141Q.,11. "., another for hundreds of ears. Nearly all at eortt!ons are Made in Faris. t •t Buy Thrift Stamps. • 'SYRUP OF FIGS" CHLD'S LAXATIVE Look at tongue! Remove poi- sons from little .stomach, liver and bowels Accept "Calrtarne,. Syrue o Inge only—look for the name California on the package, then you are sure your child is having the best and most harmless laxative or physic for the little stomach, liver and bowels. Child. ren love its delicious fruity taste. Full directions for child's dose on each bot• tie. Give it without fear. Mother! Yon mus: slay "Caliternla." cs © era ve-e ag nowt Purity the Blood "Fifteen to thirty drops of Extract of Roots, commonly called Mother Seigel's Curative Syrup, may be taken in water with meals and at bedtime, for the cure of indigestion, consti- p patios and bad bleed. Persist- ence in this treatment will effect a cure in nearly every case." Get the genuine at druggists. tri tr America's Pioneer Dog seetediee noon On DOS DISEASES anal How to Peed Mailed Free to,nny Ad- dress by the Author. . Clay allover Co„ 3no. 118 West 81st Street New York, U.S.A. Apr Hap lleS „. There's job; In • the song ofa the robin that rests no the twig of .the tree, _And tliere'm joy m the hlorsoms of su1n- finer, and a thrill in the mar of the sea, Oh, the peace and the gladness we're: seeking are clothed in all manner of dress, And some in the laughter of Whir:all` may conte to their dream of success. There's joy in the smile of a comrade, and joy in the blue of the sky. Who lives in the sunshine of friend- ship has joy that no money can bay. There is peace to be found in the val- leys and calm in the shelter of trees, And millions of people are happy in. clalining such pleasures as these. The man that is proud of his children owns more than ,the man with his gold, And he that has chummed with the songbirds has found a delight he can hold; There are millions of ways to be hap- Iry, too many by far to recall, And who lives but for gold and for sig-. ver has chosen the poorest of all. - Peopling the World. The present population of the world does not exceed 1,000,000,000. With an even distribution of people, rela- tively to area and soil productiveness; the planet on which we dwell might support 0,000,000,000. But the distribution ,is exceedingly uneven. In India and China there are so many human beings that the failing. of crops even slightly below the nor- mal for a single season means famine, bringing death to multitudes'. A prime cause of the age -long turmoil in :Europe is overcrowding, which makes frequent wars inevitable. There is plenty of room in. Africa and South America, when the conquest of the tropics (mainly a matter of dis- ease elimination) shall have been ac- complished. The latter continent - 1 o -day relatively vacant territory for the most part—especially invites popu- lation, because, save in the far south, it is so'bouuteously watered. • Was Columbus First? The popular belief that Christopher Columbus was the first to discover America, in 1492, has had another shock. The theory that Buddhist missionar- ies first visited America in the fifth century was put forward some years ago by Professor John Fryer. Hieroglyphics have now been dis- covered on the foundation stones of the pyramids of San Juan Teotiltuacan, in Mexico, which are stated to be similar to symbols used in the Chinese language. These lend color to Pro- fessor Fryer's beliefs. He paints out that from early times the Chinese classics, as well as the historical, geographical and poetical works, allude to a country or continent far to the east of China, under the name of Fusang or Fusu. The narrative of only one visit to Fusang is on record in Chinese history —that of Hui Shen, a native of Cop- hene or Cabul, the centre of Buddhist missionary activities in early times. The narrative states that Hui Shen, in the year 499 A.D., during the reign of the Emperor Yung Yuan, came from the country of Fusang to Kingehow, the capital of the Dynasty of Tsi. He was treated by the Emperor as an en- voy, and one of the principal feudal lords- was deputed to interrogate him concerning the country and to take down his history' in writing. All the descriptions given of the country of Fusang and its people and their customs nark them as applying to the Pacific Coast in. general, and to Mexico in particular. As one lamp lights another nor grow less, so nobleness enkindleth nobleness. —Lowell. Minard's Liniment for sale everywhere .e, A "Food" Flower. The calla lily, which was cultivated on a large scale in Egypt, and prob- ably in Palestine, thousands of years ago, was and is grown as a food plant. It .develops underground, fleshy tul3,ers that somewhat resemble : potatoes, though more elongated in shape. With preliminary boiling they may be cook- ed for the table by frying, baking, or in any other way that potatoes are cooked. Large areas are nowadays devoted in Florida to the culture of the calla for its tubers. It grows admirably in swamp lands that are useless far other purposes, the yield of a single moist acre being enormous. In olden tinges, in Egypt, calla tubers were one of the most important food crops. They were .grown over extensive areas in each annual season of the Nile's overflow. EURIT1S So runny have Neuritis, that painful, paralyzing inilantrmatdbn of the nerves. Do note er an - ether day. If you are to victim, try ithemtic Capsnies 1Tothine. else brings relief so quickly and so surely. Send for free sample to Templetons, 142 ling St. W., Toronto. For sale at reliable drug- gists for $1.04 a box. Postman as Fairly Godfather. The little French boy can experience a joy that is unknown in this country. His father or mother, or kind aunt, inay have a generous impulse, and send him a postcard which will carry more fun with it than any conic card, such as they ordinarily love. On the opposite side to the address - is a large space devoted to close print- ing, whichis signed by the generous relative, and commands the postman to hand over to that lucky boy, at his own door, some ndce little sum, per- haps five or ten francs. The space de. voted to correspondence is about an inch strip down the side, the right pro- portion for a small boy, Think of the joy of answering a postman's knock, and finding yourself presented with an extra bit of pocket money quite unexpectedly! It adds a new thrill to life. n a antaValt .un3"' ;E:I ""Fin attar al.?aialara".:...Fu War; . T r your b ° .f 1-� ready -t© -eat f,od- that cost; . but little and i fill . of';? the, aaiar dxacaU _iS im It `of wheat. axtd'-ixa.a. `Hod barley:, '11 4, or Wheat +a rvkq, E,p6Ekn P„i,m Vctiif 61,1141 AFOOb ,w.,,,..ww—," jww k©t.,,,, M`,b , .,gM,,,},AaWhyMf �� A .Ar, Et` zi - `r.+f conn ice At O rocers Everywhere! ?,411t4erl t:�r,t.at t i;,. ASTH Templeton's RAZ-MA 14 Cap- sules are guaranteed to relieve .AST xi MA. Don't suffer an- other day. Write Teinpletons, 142 King St. W., Toronto, for free sample. Reliable druggists sell 'them. at 531.04 a, boa. "English Bay Road, Stanley Park, B. C. FROM HERE &IVE *„,., ... Not What She Meant. Ile (after the proposal): "Why are you crying, dearest? Are you not hap- py to know I love you?" She: "Oh, 710, dear, it's not that. I am. crying from pure joy, Mother has always told me that I was such an idiot that I wouldn't get even a don- key for a sweetheart, and now I've got one, after all!" Good Example. A little Ontario girl who had a ban- tam: was disappointed at the smallness of the first egg laid by the bird. Her ideal egg was that of the ostrich, a specimen of which lay on the table in the parlor. One day the ostrich egg was missing from its accustomed place. After a prolonged search it was found near the bantam's nest, and on it was written these words: "Something like this, please. Keep on trying." 'Vancouver would be famous if it had only the attraction of "Stanley Park," was the opinion of au English tourist who had circled the globe. That peerless playground of 1,000 acres of virgin forest, with many acres of priceless waterfront and over six miles of marine panorama of park foreshore, is the greatest municipal park on the continent. It is fringed by English Bay which abounds with mirrored reflections of forest trees and birds of every shade and plumage bank on the surface. No bulwarks or ocean wall mars the beauty, no roar- ing billows disturb tranquility, but there is all the beauty and majesty and novelty of its placid surface with a soft calling of the waves. The park is picturesque with its magnificent firs and cedars, and is largely in its natural state, yet with touches of the conventional in that it is encircled by a perfect motor road which affords the pleasure of enjoying the innumerable points of interest in this, wonderland. The unique bril- liancy of the exquisite scenery in the distance where mountains of grace and stateliness form a group of peaks, grey and green and rose-colored, call, ane again and again by their enchant- M,nt. Down tLeir pine -clad slopes, se -in. e real lets 'wind their way. A variety of enormous trees, spreading their branches on the green lawns, greet .the eye, creeping ivy decorates the base or these giants of the forest. Walks - through. the park reveal plc- ttiresque retreats where the aroma of nature in all her bewilderment of luxuriant growth, sweetens the out-of- doors. The "Lions," the "Sleeping Beauty," "Siwash Rock," the grave of the Indian Princess Poetess, Pauline Johnson, who cast over the Iovely surroundings a gracious mantle of romance, are some of the points of interest.—C,G. Your iallh TO -NIGHT TRY Minard's linimont for that Cold and Tired Feeling. Get Well, Keep Well, Kill Spanish Flu by using the OLD RELIABLE. MINARD'5 LINIMENT CO., LIMITED,. Yarmouth, N.S. A Poultry Problem. "Tell me"—'twas a question addressed To a maid farmeretting— "Should one say of a hen on a nest That it's sitting Or setting?" But a shake of her pretty, fair head Was her way of replying: "Tell me, when it cackles," she said, "Is it laying Or lying?" • Banjo at South Pole. One can scarcely imagine a greater contrast titan playing a banjo in a crowded meeting in the heart of Lon- don, and giving a performance in the icy atmosphere of the Arctic regions. At the hundredth lecture given by Sir Ernest. Shackleton, when he told the thrilling story of his last polar expedi- tion, he intro'du'ced some of his old colleagues, and insisted on the produc- tion of the old banjo which played so .great a part in keeping 'up the spirits of the men Who were marooned on Elephant Island for a dreary four and a half months. At an informal gathering after the lecture some of the old songs were sung and specimens given of the im- proreptu ditties that helped to pass away the time and amuse the men the tale of whose fortitude end patience is bola listened to by thousands of people from the"4„5hiolted seats of the Philbartnonic Hall in London. Sir Ernest Shackleton tells his ad- venture in simple, homely language, with a sense of humor that is a relief to the thrilling story. The penguins, in the pictures, all unconscious of their London audience, behave in their usual amusing way, familiar to stay-at-home people who love to roam the world by the help of more adventurous spirits. I#unman blood passes through the dr- culatory system at a rate of seven miles an tour. ED.. yep, ISSUE No. 22•---'2Q, MONEY ORDERS. Dominion Express Money Orders are on sale in live thousand offices throughout Canada. Classified Advertisements. P.P• ItTXf4ZEE. TI YENS' COMPLETE VEIRTILIZ1:Rt 1'9 will pay You. George Steven& Pe I erborough, Ontario, FOR '63.0.:4361 � 7 ELL EQUIPPED NSSWSPAPEZ i Y and job printing plantin Boater Ontario, Insurance carried 61.600. 3S i E2 for 51,200 en quick sale. I3oz 424 wilean I ubltshing Co., Ltd„ Toronto. CLI OFT ELM WANTED, 2 IN. AND k3 thicker, shipped green from saw., Do not sell until you oomniu:.lcate with us. li;eenan 13ros. Limited, Owen Sound. Ont. T.ADSES WANTED. 'Ir ADIES WANTED TO DO PLAINT A.1 and light sewing at home, whole or spare time; good pay, worst sent any dis- tance, charges • paid. Send stamp for particulars. National Manufacturing Co.. Montreal. Firm "Demobilizes" Top- - 7coats. The swagger cut of the British army officer's regulation overcoat makes possible the maintenance by a Scottish dyeing establishment of a service that is proving increasingly popular with demobilized officers. On receiving an army overcoat through the parcel post the firm removes all military insignia, and dyes it. Ask for Minard's and take no other. Coffee sold for $29 a pound when first introduced into England about the middle cif the seventeenth century. Anoint Irritations With Soothing Cuticula First bathe with Cuticura Soap and hot water. These super -creamy emollients not only soothe, but in most cases heal annoying rashes, irritations, eczemas, etc. Nothing so insures a clear'skin and good hair as making Cuticura Soap and Oint- ment your every -day toilet prepa- rations. Soap 25c, .Ointment 25 and 50c, Sold throughout theDominion. CanadianDepot: L",y�mma���n�s, Liahited, St. Paul St., Montreal. pt 'Cutis fro Sump shaves without mug. .22taxxviivet scnoon FOR NURSES. [OrEGISTERED TRAINING SCHOOL for Nurses: tlt. Elizabeth Hospital. 204 South Broad Street, Elizabeth, Rew Jersey, Complete course. Monthly al- lowance: first year $5.00, second 510,00. third 516.00. Address: Superintendent, MISCELZANE0tIa .NCER, TUMORS. LUMPS, ETC-. internal and external, cured withoutl Pain by our home treatment. Write us Co... before CollDr. gwo Hellman Ont. Medical No abilities, however splendid, can command success without intense labor and persevering application.—e A. T. Stewart. GMLSI DRAW A MOIST- CLOTH THROUGH HAIR Let "Danderine" save your hair and dou&e, its beauty Oh, girls, such an abundance of thick, heavy, invigorated hair; a per- fect mass of wavy, silky hair, glorious- ly fluffy, bright and so easy to man- age. Just moisten a cloth wit t a :itti r "Danderine" and carefully draw it through your hair, taking one small strand at a time; this magically re- moves all dirt, excess oil and grease, but your hair is not left brittle, dry, stringy or faded but charmingly soft, with glossy, golden gleams and tender lights. The youthful glints, tints and color are again in your hair-. "Danderine" is a tonic -beautifier. Besides doubling the beauty of the hair at once, it checks dandruff and stops falling hair. Get delightful Danderine for a few cents at any drug or toilet counter and use it as a dress- ing and invigorator as told on bottle. 30 Eng COUGHS ONLY TABLETS MARKED "BAYER" ARE ASPIRIN Not Aspirin at Ali without the "Bayer Cross" The name "Bayer" identifies the contains proper directions for Colds, Only genuine Aspirin, --the Aspirin Headache, Toothache Earache, Nein preseribed by physicians for over nine- raigia, Lumbago, Rheumatism, I+Teurie teen years and now made in Canada. tis, Joint Pains, and Pain generally-, Always buy an unbroken package Tin boxes of 12 "Mayer" cost but pf "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" which a .few cents. Larger `Maayer packages), 'There its only one , .sptx3n.J Bayer" --You must say "Sayer" Aspirin is the trade mark (registered in Canada) of Bayer 'Manufacture of Ideno- esetteacidester of Saltcylioaoid. Willie it is well known that .,.spirin means x3ayer fnanufaetute, to owlet tho public against irnitattons, the e1e1,lete et 'Byer Com.pe4a5; Will be etainped With their general trade mark, the "never Orono," d