Zurich Herald, 1922-06-08, Page 7t,
Elad Your iron Today P
Let' He
m ;il. n
r.�,, � (,^,5� qh�e � • �
read .. � ,fit
T.jaw long since you've had delicious raisin
tree
a since ;, uu' ve tasted that incom-
parable flavor?
Serve a loaf tonight. No need to bake it.
Jus telephone your grocer or a bakery. Say
you want "full -fruited bread --- generously
filled with luscious, seeded, Sun -Maid Raisins."
The flavor of these raisins ,permeates the
loaf: A cake -like daintiness makes every slice
a treat.
Serve it plain at dinner or as a tasty, fruited
breakfast toast.
Make delicious bread pudding with left-
over slices.
Use it all. You need not waste a crumb.
Raisin, bread is luscious, energizing, iron -
food. So it's both good and good for you.
Serve it at least twice a week. Start this
good habit in your home today.
But don't take any but a real, full -fruited
genuine raisin bread.
Your dealer will supply it if ybu.insist.
Sun aid
a
ii
Blue Package
0
Seeded .a‘ars1e 8
Make delicious bread, pies, puddings,
cakes, etc. Ask your grocer for them. Send
for free book of tested recipes.
Sun -Maid Raisin Growers
Membership 73,000 .
Dept. N-43-3,0resno, Calif. .
HEALTH EDUCATION
,414
BY DR. J. J. MIDDLETON
Provincial Board of Health, Ontario
Dr. Middleton will be glad to answer questions on Public Health mat-
ters
atters through this column. Address hini at Spadina,House, Spadina
Crescent, Toronto.
A little girl ran away freni home
recently to avoid taking lessons on
the piano. Her parents tried to make
a musician out of her, although she
had no taste for music. Lr thus forc-
inglessons
music
the child to take nil. sic
they were spending money foolishly
and bringing much unhappiness to
the whole family. At the same time
they were showing to their friends
and to the whole country how little
they knew of psychology.
Psychology, to many people, is a
strange word, a word about which lit-
tle is known. In reality it is a word
that should be well understood by
everybody, because it is of tremen-
dous importance. Every human being
to -day has likes and dislikes, has a
taste for one thing or another, or a
leaning towards some particular oe-
cupation,, or hobby. You cannot find
two people exactly alike, it is claimed,
either in looks or in personality. Well
then, to get the best out of people of
whatever age, but ' particularly
among the young, to help them to
help themselves along the bines to
which 'they are best suited by temper-
ament, education or natural bent, is
What is meant by psychology. -
Twenty leading American •psycholo
gists, Including President Angell of
Yale University, have formed an in-
corporated company known as the
Psychological Corporation. The first
practical application of psychology
made by the corporation was the se-
lection of its own force of steno-
graphers. Applicants in response to
an advertisement in the newspapers
were eon fronted by a set. "of psycho-
logical tests instead of the usual
questions. "The girls selected by the
tests have proved thoroughly
com-
petent,"
mpetent,"
declared the secretary of the
corporation. "I can tell more about a
girl in half an hour by such a test
than I could by having her work in
the office for three weeks."
Gradually the work is being ex-
! tended to apply tests for different'
ages and conditions. How often we!
see the need of this in our own little
circle of acquaintances where a man
or woman is doing some kind of work
they are not interested in, just be-
cause somebody else thought it would
be the best thing to. do. I personally'
know a civil engineer who always re-:
grets he did not study medicine, even •
though his father had urged him to
take engineering. He is only doing
mediocre work in consequence because
his heart is not in his occupation.!
Similarly I know a manufacturer who •
carried on the business left him by:
his father, although he was always,
keen to be a lawyer. It is in •circum-;
stances like these, and' they apply to'
practically everybody in all walks of l
life, that we see the need of psy-1
chology. When it becomes more
widely extended there will be less
restlessness in the economic world,!
and work .instead• of being a 'boredom
will become a labor of love.
the summer, when corn is in the roast-!
ing ear, there is nothing better. Mere-!
ly cut the grains from the cob and put;
two to four gallons into .a bag. Fasten
a long wire to the"hag and sink the
bait Where you intend to fish, Tie'
the wire to the bank, so that you can
pull the bag in and rebait it; but you
will have to bait a new hole when you r
have scared the fish away from the t
first one,
It is best to wait two days after
placing the bait 'before you try•to fish,
although the fishing may good the
!hist morning after. Do not allow
any disturbances on the bank. Move-
ments of per..sons, dogs or: other things
will scare the big ones away. The
sound of running feet or beating upon
the ground disturbs the fie' ,at a great
depth. If you want to get the big fel-
lows, keep quiet.
-`.s._....-- .-. .
Adnnirals, tolumodores, and eerdain
other officers, when boarding vessels
oe tho Fleet, are "piped over the side"
by the bosun, an old Navy custom,
the
the "or'igin., of wield, is unknown;
driinard'e L;irdraeo. Rejjevetl Neuralgia
Baiting the Fishing Hole.
Most river fish like a regular place
to feed, where they can go for their
food at certain hours of the day, es-
pecially fn the early morning. In
choosing a place to bait, pick - one
where it is easy to land your catch,
where the water is from five to fifteen
feet deep, with low' banks. You have
a • better ,chance' then to fight it 'out
with a big fellow and can get to him
atter he is exhausted. The very best
fighters in the stream, the buffalo fish
and the carp, the chain and the eat,
are 'among those that visit a place that
has been baited; so you must prepare
for the big ones, In baiting a. place
to fish you Can throw the, feed into
the water to sink, or put it into a
bag, Putting it into a bag is the bet-
ter way. The fish suck round a sun-
ken bag and feed upon the waste as
it oozes ,out. If the feed is thrown
loose into the , water, it may spread
over too much area,: au•cl it floes not
last long 'enough.
-Suchthings as bread, potatoes, corn
meal or beans can be,'used for bait,
, iarticulerly in the early ;spring. In
Salute to the Trees.
Many a tree is found in the weed
And ever' tree for; its use iii good:
Some for the strength of the gnarled
root, •
Some for the sweetness of flower or
fruit;
Some for shelter against the '.storm,
And some to keep the hearth -stone
warm;
Some for the roof encs some for the
beam,
And some for a boat to breast the
s treem—
In the wealth of the wood since the
works began
The trees have offered their gifts to
man.
But the glory of trees is more than
their gifts: -
'Tie a beautiful wonder of life that
lifts,
From a Wrinkled seed in an earth-
bound clod,
A. column, an arch in the temple of
God,
A pillar of power, a dome of delight,
A shrine of song, and a joy of sight!
Their roots are thenurses of rivers
in birth;
Their leaves are alive with the breath
of the earth;
shelter the dwellings of man;
and they bend
O'er his grave with the lock of a
friend.
I have camped in the whispering
fairest of pines,
I have slept in the shadow of olives
and vines;
In the knees of an oak, at the foot of
a palm
1 have found good rest and slumber's
balm -
They
And now, when the morning gilds
the boughs
Of the vaulted elm at the door of my
house,
I open the window and make salute:
"God bless thy branches and feed thy
root!
Thou hast lived before, live after pie,
Thou ancient, friendly, faithful tree."
—Henry Van Dyke.
That See -Saw Sea.
Why are some animals and birds
immune from sea -sickness, while hu-
man beings and dogs are often "bad
sailors"?
A scientist in France, probably with
dreadful recollections of a rough cross
Channel trip, has- set himself to .un-
derstand the complaint and, if pos-
sible, to devise a preventive. M.
Pozerski is experimenting with ani
mals at the Pasteur Institute by
means of a mechanical apparatus,
which swings a cage wjth the Motion.
of a ship at sea.
I AII, WEAK GIRLS
AND DELICATE WOMEN
Can Find New Health by Enrich-
ing Their Blood Supply.
Nature intended every girl and every
woman
to behappy, active and healthy.
Yet too many of therm find their lives
saddened by suffering—nearly always
because their blood is to blame. All
those unhappy girls and women with
colorless cheeks, dull skins, and sunk-
en lustreless eyes, are in this condi-
tion because they have not enough red
blood in their veins to keep them well
and in, the charm of health. Thy suf-
fer from depressing weariness and
periodical headaches. Dark lines
from under their eye's, their heart pal-
pitates violently alter the slightest ex-
ertion, and they are often attacked
with fainting spells% These are only
a few of the miseries of bloodlessness.
When the blood" becomes thin 'and
watery it can be enriched through the
use of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills and
the troubles that come - from poor
blood disappear. In almost • every
neighborhood you will flied some form-
erly ailing woman, or pale breathless
girl who has a good word to say for
this medicine, Among them there is
Miss Laura Monaghan, Campliellton,
P.E,1., who says:—"Before using Dr.
Williams' Pink, Pills I was in- a badly
run down condition, I was pale, thin
and scarcely able to go about. The
least exertion made. my heart palpi-
tate so violently that I -actually was
afraid one of those spells might carry
me off. Often my nights were ,sleep
less, and as the treatment I was take
ing did not help me I was almost in
despair. - Finally a friend advised the
use of Dr."VVillieensr. Pink Pillsy and in
the course of a few weeks after be-
ginning this treatment there was a
decided improvement in my condition.
1" `continued tieing the pills, and "am
now enjoying good health. I am .glad
to give you my experience in the hope
that some other sufferer may find the
way to better health."
These pills are sold by all medicine
dealers or may be .had by mail at 50
cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from
The Dr, Williams' Medicine Co., Brock-
ville,
rockville, Ont.
The area of .. England is 5.0,874 sq.
miles,
Oil prospecting is about to begin in
the Hay River re,g'iom, The Montreal
syndicate, under whose direction a
survey of that meet was made last
year, has completed a �rranigenrronts to
take up an active development pro -
g 'rain during the coming summer, and
a praetic&1 test of the field Will be
made. The work planned, for will be
on a more extensive scale than any yet
done in the -Great . Slav Lake or Atha-
basca areas. 1
Salyag ng the L>l sitaria. . SAYS RHEIIMATISM
ready Selvage Syndicate, expects to x i GONE.
begin his attempt to raise the Dal-.E.(�i U, . lL �
tarlia'o cargo next month, the date de -
Coup. "Lauerdi Lands, of the Aye-.
pending upon the cessation of the Na-
tional Engineers' strike, says a Lon-
don -despatch, ,
Lerida spent many years in Canada
and reised a number of shlpe in the
Pacific and elsewhere. Re is now in
London in the possession of a salvage
contract with enderwriters whereby
his syndicate will take 80 per cent
of the value of whatever is raised
from the Lusitania,
Landi has already received bide for
the film rights of the expedition, He
says be is satisfied there is enough
bullion, ;jewels and .furs in the wreck
to make operations commercially
sound.'
In order to remove the valuables
frons the ship and make the hull
buoyant he will employ forty divers
wearing special suits which will en-
able them to work 280 feet beneath
the surface of the water, which is
the depth of the. Lusitania's keel.
Lanai -is finding that few experts
agree with him that it is possible to
salvage the liner. Captain Bestic, third
oflicer aboard when the ship was tor-
pedoed says the operation is commer-
cially and technically impossible.
"The specie room was practically
empty" he said. "The cargo was of
no special value. Even if the vessel
after being submerged seven years
isn't now covered with sand, she was
probably broken in two by the en-
ormous impact with which the bows
must have struck the bottom. Cer-
tainly every rivet was strained and
the boilers probably tumbled into
the bows." "
0
CIII.LDIIOOD INDIGESTION
Nothing is mare common in child-
hood than indigestion. Nothing is
more dangerous to proper growth,
more weakening to the constitution or
more likely to pave the way to dan-
gerous disease. Fully nine -tenths of
all the minor ills of childhood have
their root in indigestion. There is no
medicine for little ones to equal
Baby's Own Tablets in relieving this
trouble. They have proved of benefit
in thousands of homes. Concerning
them Mrs. Jos. Lunette, Immaculate
Conception, Que., writes: "My baby
was a great sufferer from indigestion,
but the Tablets soon set her right and
now I would not be without- them."
Baby's Own Tablets are sold by medi-
cine dealers or by mal at 25 cents a
box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine
Co., Brockville, Ont.
Lucky Horseshoes.
Why do we regard horseshoes as
lucky? - Many people believe that the
superstition comes from the sea -god
Neptune, .whose horses were looked
upon as sacred. A horseshoe picked
up on the road was suposed to belong
to one of them.
But the truth is that the horse is the
national animal of the English peo-
ple. The first Saxons who came to
t115 country were Hengist
andHorse,
both of whose names mean horse.
Smiths were regarded with peculiar
reverence, since theirs was held to be
almost a sacred art.
Do not forget that a horseshoe is
lucky only if its points face you as
you find it, for leek streams out from
them. If it is lying the other way,
walk round it until you are opposite
the points; then pick it up and carry
it with the points uppermost.
Nail it on your door in the same
position. 'Good fortune will then be
showered—so says the old belief—
over your house. If the points are
downward as it hangs on the door,
the lucky influences will pass into the
earth and be lost. -
England's Last Invasion.
Although we have lately passed
through the greatest war in history,
we must go farther back to find the
last time that our island was actually
invaded by a foreign enemy .that is
to say, the last time a foreign invader
actually stepped on British soil, -says
a London newspaper.
The -man who led the invasion was
an American adventurer, named Col-
onel Tate. His force of fifteen hun-
dred men --most of them French ex-
conviets and rascals—,landed in Cardi-
gan Bay, without opposition on our
part, en • one spring day in 1797.
They were merely a "side-show" in
France's 'unsuccessful attelnpt to land
troops in Ireland, and they did no dam-
age. - After twenty-four hours, our
own troops were hurried up to en-
gage them, and Colonel Tate offered
to surrender on terms,:
His 011ier was not accepted. He
then surrendered unconditionally. No
foe has succeeded in landing en British
soil since.
And lot us hope no foe ever will!
A rooster strolling about the barn-
yard stumbled onto an ostrich egg, he
looked at (Ara and rolled it into the
hen house where the hens were and
said, "Now, ladies, 'I do not want to
embarrass ;you, but I just want to
show you what other folks are doing."
MONEY ORDERS.
Send e Dominion Express Money
Orders. Five Dollars costs time cents.
The roses of pleasure seldom lade
long enough to adorn the brow of hien
who Pinc-e stens,- H inilah Moro. '
ISSUE No. 22 22.
MRS. 'CHAPLE.A.0 COULD
GET ABOUT ONLY /3Y
PAINFUL EFFORT.
Three Years of Suffering End-
ed and Stomach Trouble
Also Overcome.
"It used to be the moat painful of
fort- for mos to move about the house,
but since taking Taniac I am so well
and strong my housework, Is like a
pastime," said Mrs. S. Chapleau, 325
Mount Royal East, Montreal, "For
three years I suffered constantly from
rheumatism. My appetite was also
very poor and what little I ate caused
ore no end of trouble from indigestion.
I became so thin and weak 1 almost
lost all hope. My nerves and kidneys.
bothered me; a great deal and I always
had a pain across the back that kept
mo miserable.
"Tanlac helped me just like it had
been made especially for my case. My
food now all agrees with me and my
nerves and kidneys never bother me
any more. r owe my good health en-
tirely to Tanlac."
Tanlac is sold by all good druggists.
Advt.
Duke of Richmond to Sell
Huntley Estate.
Owing to the pressure of increased
rates and taxes, the Duke of Richmond
and Gordon has announced that he in-
tends to sell the entire famous' Hunt-
ley estate, comprising 60,000 acres in
Aberdeenshire.- The Duke says that
from his property, in many cases, all
that comes to him out of a pound
rental are two shillings, with which he
must meet the cost of upkeep and
build new houses. A year • ago the
Duke intimated that he was ready
to sell, but his tenants asked him to
reconsider, and said they were pre-
pared to give financial assistance—
which was regarded as remarkable
testimony to his popularity.
The sale will 'bring to end one of
the most historical territorial con-
neetions in the British Isles. The.
name Huntley was attached to the
castle very early in the sixtenth cen-
tury, when the third Earl Huntley
obtained a charter from James IV.
The X-ray is still one of the world's
wonders. To prove its wonderful
penetrating powers, a French scientist
produced plho'tegraphs of human bones,
which were taken across a courtyard
250 feet wide and through a thick
yell.
Minard's Liniment for sale everywhere
In all the novels written by Jane
Austen, there is not a single lover',1
kiss mentioned.
One curious remedy suggested for
leprosy, a plague of the East, was
I eating pythons.
TROUBLED
ECzE:\A 2 YEARS
On Face and Arms. Lost
Sleep. Cuticura Heals. -
"I was troubled for about two
years with eczema. It broke out on
my face andarms in pimples and
itched and burned so badly that I
lost much sleep on account of it. My
face and arms were covered with pim-
ples, and I was ashamed• to appear
out of the house.
"I began using Cuticura Soap and
Ointment an d immediately found
relief, and after using one cake of
Soap anis one box of Ointment I
was healed." (Signed) Miss Helen
Mark, 4259 Maryland St., San
Diego, Calif., April 18, 1921.
Use Cuticura Soap, Ointment and
Talcum exclusively for every -day
toilet purposes.
Semple Eaelareeb Melt, Address: "Lvaear,Lins-
ited, 344 8t. Paul 8t., W., Montreal." bold every-
where. Sonpiie. ointment25end60oTaieum26e.
Effi-'
Cuticula Soap shaves without mule.
Classified Advertisements -
xsv S1i witorz a.
BOURSES WANTE.1.D 1'OR TRA.IX' INQ
.1.11 School in charge of graduate of
,1'0
has Hopkins Hospital. Apply Superin-
tendent, I onre'r',•ood sanitarium, Guelph.
A VANT le D — I'JIO1MTIONF1a'RS . --
9 Amass •Brood Hospital, St. Thomas
5 Years' general training, with rernunera-
tioe. Apply Superintendent.
AiGBIATs WANTED.
A GENTS, PARTICULARS, TIIN
winners and samples, Wonder
strife Sharpener 25 cents, Agency Sales
Company, 159 Church, Toronto, -
BELTIRia FOR EALB -
ALL KINDS OF NEW AND IYSE:D
belting, pulleys, saws, eable,hose,paeicing,
etc., shipped subject to approval et low-
est prices in- Canada. YORK 13I+1LTINCi
CO., 115 YORK $TREFT, TORONTO.
1N:•esigns on ` Stone.
A newly patented method of 'cutting
letters or other designs in stone con-
sists in placing frangible models of
the letters or what not on the stone;
flowing an elastic composition around
them, and, when the latter has had
time to dry, attackingthe stone with
a sand -blast. The sand -blast de-
stroys the model's and bites away the
stone where it is not protected by
the Composition.
The wettest area in the world is on
the Khasi Hills, in Assam.
Amsrrfca's Pioneer Dog Etam•eodiea
Boole on
OG DISEASES
and How to Feed
Mailed Free to any Ad-
dress by the Author.
S. Clay Glover Co., Ino.
129 West 24th Street
New York, U.S.A.
°ARSB GALT
LAND ALT
Bulk Carlots
TORONTO SALT WORKS
0. J. CLIFF - TORONTO
The publisher of the best Farmers'
paper in the Maritime Provinces in
writing to us states:
"I would say that I do not know of a
medicine that has stood the test of
time like MINARD'S LINIMENT. It
has been an unfailing remedy in our
household ever since I can remember,
and has outlived dozens of would-be
competitors and imitators."
AT AS
� LETTE
Many Times fit's • a Guide to
Health as is This One
Women—Read It
Marmion, Ontario.—"Before using
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com-
pound I was a total wreck. I had
terrible pains in my sides and was
not regular. Finally I got so weak
I could not go up stairs without stop-
ping to rest half -way up. I saw your
medicine advertised in the news-
papers and gave it a trial. I took
four bottles of the Vegetable Com-
pound and was restored to health.
I am married, am the mother of two
children and do all my housework,
milk eight cows and do a hired man's
work and enjoy the best of health.
I also found the Vegetable Compound
a great help for my weak back be-
fore my babies were born. I recom-
mend it to, all my friends."—Mas.
BENDY J limen, Marmion, Ontario.
Letters which. you read in the news-
papers recommending Lydia E. Pink-
ham's
inkltam's Vegetable Compound are gen-
uine expressions from women who
have been helped by this splendid!
medicine. They ere anxious for other
women, who may be suffering as they
did, to know of the great merit of
this medicine. Each one, with her
reputation, stands behind it, to point
out to sick women the way to health.
Lydia E. Pinkham's Private Text-
(Book upon "Ailments Peculiar - to
Women" will be sent . you free upon
request, Write Lydia E. Pinkhann
Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass.
WARNING! Say {`Bayer" when you buy Aspirin.
Unless you see the name "Bayer" on tablets, you are not get. -
ting Asliirin at all. Accept only% an "unbroken package" of
".Bayer Tablets of Aspirin," which contains directions and dose
worked out by physicians during 22 years and proved safe; by
millions for
Colds - Headache Rheurat"isms
Toothache Neuralgia , Neuritis
Earache_ Lumbago - Paid, Pain
Heady "Bayer" boxes of la tablets ---Also bottles of 24 and 100—druggists,
Aspirin is the trtdo marl; rrolisterid in Canada) of Bayer Manufacture of Mono.
t,cotioaoldt'ster of•Snilri ll ,sill, while it is -won known that Aspirin moans Bayer
rnanufitnturo, to avelat the ,,girlie against imitations, the Tablets of Bayer Company
'.31l iso ctauupt:t:t with th;Ir $; ntrai tiede zirnrl., the "Boyer Cross,'