Zurich Herald, 1937-09-02, Page 9TAW
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AGCNTS WANTED
QOOD PROFITS EVERY DAY SEL -
our guaranteed hosiery. Plen-
ty of repeat orders, Protected terri-
tory for producers. Clarion Company,
Dost Office 162, .St, Catharines, Ont.
PROGRESSIVE AGENTS WANTED
for made -to -measure men's cloth-
ing. Supercraft Clothes, 5044 St. Law-
rence, Montreal, Quebec.
ARTIFICIAL LIMBS
ANGER STANDARD LIMB CO.,
126 Wellington Street West, To-
ronto. Improved light metal and wil-
low artificial limbs without shoulder
straps.
BARN ROOFING — FENCE POSTS
OUR DIRECT FACTORY PRICES
save you money on Supertite gal-
vanized roofing, Superior steel Fence
Posts and steel granary lining. Super-
ior Products Limited, Sarnia, Ont.
CEDARBROOK GAME FARM
reFFERS, AFTER SEPTEMBER
first, large, hardy young Ring -
necks, all breeds fancy Pheasants,
Wild Ducks, Geese, Wild Turkeys,
hundred leingneck breeders, non -re-
lated, imported stock. Write for price
list. 240 Jarvis St. (Department 0),
Toronto.
DOGS
MIGH CLASS SCOTCH, .ENGLISH
Collie Pups, natural born, low
heelers, good watch clog. Males, two
months, $3.50. 3 months $3.75. Females
$2.00. Failures ,replaced free. Trained
cattle dogs, trained fox, coon and deer
bounds. Rapidview Kennels, Morris -
burg, Ontario.
FILMS AND PRINTS
ENLARGEMENT F R ED WITH
every 25 cent order. Roll films
developed and eight prints 25 cents,
reprints 3 cents each. Brightling, 29
Richmond Street East, Toronto.
SPARKLING, HIGLOSS, DECKLE -
edged prints, three extra with
each roll finished 25c. Twelve reprints
25c Delhanty's, Webbwood, Ont.
ROLLS DEVELOPED; PRINTED,
one free enlargement 25c. Re-
prints 10 for 25c. Photo -Craft, 183%
King St., E., Toronto.
ROLLS DEVELOPED AND EIGHT
prints with free enlargement, 25c.
Reprints 3c each. Commercial Photo
Service, Dept. B., Outremont, Que.
25c — ROLL DEVELOPED AND
one deckle edge print of each.
Reprints 3c, 10 for 25c. One Free en=
largement with each order 25c or
more, Snap -Y Photo Service,Box 72,
Station K, Toronto.
FUR FARMING
R A
ISE MINK FOR PROFIT GET
S�
started right with Moss < Quetico"
strain mink—guaranteed stook. Write
for full information, Moss Fur Farms,
Limited (mink breeding specialists),
Sapawe, Ontario. •
FURNITURE
i3?ECIAL OFFER
Free delivery to nearest freight depot
if you enclose this advertisement or
present at our showrooms if shopping
in Toronto.
FIUGE SALE OF
TRADE-IN FURNITURE
Every article completely recondit-
ioned and sanitarily treated in Tor-
onto's largest used furniture market.
Special attention given to mail
orders.
6.95 Dressers, excellent condi-
tion, all finishes.
10.50 Singer drop head Sewing
machine, perfect shape.
8.95 Day -beds, complete with
new mattresses.
1 1.95 Kitchen Cabinets, perfect
shape, porcelain top.
PI 95 3 and 4 burner as Stoves
• perfect condition.
14.50 Breakfast Room Suites, 6 -
pieces complete includes
Buffet, several colors, enamel finish.
12 095 Bed Outfits, walnut finish,
all steel panel beds, way-
sagless springs, brand new mattress.
19.50 3 -piece Chesterfield Suite,
genuine French Jaoquar
covering, Marshall cushions, a snap.
29.00 3 -piece Chesterfield Suite
in heavy repp cover, used
less than 1 year. reversible Marshall
cushions, a dandy.
35.00 3 -piece Chesterfield Suite,
covered, finest quality mo-
hair, walnut, Marshall springs through
oft, reversible cushions, like new.
really beautiful.
19.50 8 -piece solid oak Dining
room Suite, buffet, table,
and 6 leather seat chairs in perfect
shape.
59.00 Modern 6 -piece Bed -room
Suite, large dresser, vanity
with venetian mirrors. chiffonier and
full size bed with eagless spring and
new mattress, complete!!* refinished.
89.00 Beautiful 9 -piece Solid
walnut Dining -room Suite,
large buffet. china cabinet, extens-
ion table, 6 leather upholstered
chairs, cost new over $300, Cnniplet-
ely refiniehod.
49.00 9 -piece walnut finished
Dining -room Suite, buffet,
square extension table, china cabn-
et and 6 leatltt, ti,pholstered chairs,
in perfect coiiclitrote
Send money order for celr.,ilete
price of good... Monty back gaur
antee,
LYONS CHESTERFIELD MFRS.
Trade-in Departri detit
478 'ont o rwl'eo li, Toronto
LADIES' WEAR
d
LADIES --TO INTRODUCE OUR
new methods of selling direct
from Mill to Wearer, compare these,
big honey saving prices,
It is smart to be thrifty
1 Slip (shadow proofed) $2p50
regular..
1 Dance Set (double gusset) $2.50
regular ,.. ,
1Teddy (double gussets) $2.50
regular
Any two of these numbers $3.00
for n
Or all three for $4,50
Our exclusive Hollywood designs
are Tailored•in our own factory of the
finest silk; shades white or tea rose;
guaranteed to wash and wear like
iron. Wear and wash them and if you
are not satisfied return same .and your
money cheerfully refunded. Buy in
confidence from an all -Canadian firm*
Order today: State size, enclose your
check, postal or money order.
WEAR -RITE MANUFACTURING
COMPANY
707 Yonge St., Toronto, Ontario.
Telephone MIdway 1613
LILY BULBS
PLANT LILIES NOW — ADD TO
brightness of your garden with
Lilies from home-grown bulbs of re-
liable varieties. Also other perennial
flowers—and fruit trees for northern
gardens; all of the hardiest strains.
Send for Autumn Catalogue with in-
structions for . Lilies, etc. Arrival of
all plants in good condition guaran-
teed. The Manitoba Hardy Plant
Nursery, F. L. Skinner, Prop., Drop -
mere, Manitoba.
MACHINERY
reET OUR NEW PRICES ON THE
Goold, Shapley & Muir gas, gaso-
line, and fuel oil engines and grinders.
Also repairs for Brantford engines,
pumps, windmills. J. A. Fellows & Co.
Brantford, Ont.
FANNING MILL (IKLINE) SEED
Grader, guaranteed increase crop.
Write, Kline Mfr., 121 Empress Cres.,
Toronto.
MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS
EARN TO PLAY A SAXOPHONE,
Trumpet, Trombone. Become a
Musician. Send for Form for six days'
Free Trial. Ten months' terms—no in
terest. Literature free. Greene Music
Company, 57 Queen St., East, Toronto.
PERSONAL
BOOKS EVERY MARRIED COUPLE
and those contemplating marriage •
should read. "Entering Marriage," 24.
pages, postpaid, 15c. "Sex and Youth,"
104 pages, postpaid, 25e. Our 20 page
illustrated catalogue of books, drug
supplies, and household novelties, free
upon request. Supreme Specialty, 169
Yonge, Toronto.
ARE YOU RUPTURED? RELIEF,
Comfort, Positive Support with
our advanced method. No elastic or
understraps or steel. Write, Smith
Manufacturing Co., Dept. 219, Preston,
Ont.
POULTRY AND EGGS
7 TO 10 WEEK OLD PULLETS 20c
NEVER BEFORE HAVE WE OF-
fered pullets so low in price. Bar-
red Rocks or White Leghorns 4 week
old 18e, 5 week old 22c, 6 week old
25c, 7 week old 28c, 2 month old 330,
4 to 6 week old 170, 7 to 10 week old
20c. Super quality 2c per pullet more.
All pullets from Government Approv-
ed, bloodtested breeders. Terms —
Shippod C.O.D. anywhere. Baden El-
ectric Chick Hatchery, Baden, Ont.
RADIO
FARM -CITY RADIOS $7.95 COM-
plete. Save half. Agents free offer.
Amazing prices windchargers, power
plants, accessories. Marco 1243X Mc-
Gee, Kansas City, Mo,
SALESMEN WANTED
SALESMEN, EASY TO EARN $25.00
' weekly. Sell shirts, pyjamas,
made -to -measure. Dignified work, Ev-
ery man interested. Write D. Stetson,
Box 2110, Montreal,
!ANTED BY WELL KNOWN RE-
putable Toronto Brokerage Rouse,
Representative Salesman over twenty-
five years of age, in various Cities and
Towns in Ontario outside of Toronto.
Exclusive territory if desired, good
commission and full co-operation. Ex-
perience Helpful but not necessary.
Reply giving full particulars to Box
52, Wilson Publishing Co„ 73 Adelaide
St., W., Toronto.
STAMPS
WANTED, CANADIAN STAMPS IN
quantity. Best prices for accumu-
lations and collections. Queen Stamp
Co., Toronto.
TELEVISION AND RADIO
:. ENGINEERING TAUGHT PRACTI-
tally. Motors, generators, arena-
ture winding,' electrical drafting, etc.
Day and evening classes. Special cor-
respondence course. Employment ser-
vice guaranteed, Canadian School of
Electricity, 282 Ontario West, Mont -
yeah •
TIRES
'ENZIE'S 'USED TIRES $2.95 UP
for I,'orcl, Chevrolet, Plymouth
Dodge, Buick, Oldsmobile, Packard,
Cadillac and all other cars and trucks.
Every tiro guaranteed. 190 Meg West,
T'ol eato,
Issue No. 36-'37.
0-1
He Was Afraid To
Cross A Street
Lost His Nerve After 12 Months'
Agony
Suffering from acute rheumatism In
both his knee joints — treated in trios,
pital twice without result so uit-
nerved that he was afraid to cross a
street—how readily every rheumatic
sufferer will sympathise with this
man. Read what he says;
"For 12 rnonths, I srtfferod pain and
misery with acute rheumatism in both
my knees, Twice, I was treated in hos-
pital—but it was no use, I could not
walk up or downstairs. I was afraid
to cross the street, for I had lost all
confidence in myself. Fourteen days
ago, I started taking Krusoheu Salts,
and . already I am a new man. I San
walk with a smart step, go an and
downstairs with ease, and cross the
street with complete confidence. M3'
rheumatism is getting better every
day." D.L,
In a good many cases, rheumatism
cannot resist the action of Krusohen
Salts, which dissolve the painful crys-
tals of uric acid — often the cause of
those aches and pains—and assist the
kidneys to eliminate' ,, this, . poison
through the natural channels.
Alleged
WIT
Wheat Prices
Will Go H her
Drought in .Australia and Argent
tiria Threatens Wheat Production
CHICAGO, Big drought areas in
Australia and Argentina threatening
to curtail crop production are 'now
looming as a major influence for high-
er prices on wheat.
Estimates current here indicate that
75 percept of the 13,600 acres seeded
to wheat in Australia, is facing criti-
cal; necessity of rain, and that the
chief producing districts of northern
Argentina continue to suffer from a
lacic..of moisture. It is already too late
for additional planting of wheat in Ar.
gentina,
The outlook for Argentina and Aus-
tralia is regarded by the Chicago
wheat trade as suggesting a below nor-
mal yield for the southern hemisphere
and that the crop situation there is
likely to become more important
every week from now on.
With fairly accurate figures at pre-
sent available as to the 1937 harvest
in the northern hemisphere, and with
much closer attention being given to
conditions south of the Equator, the
wheat' prices as compared to one
week buck were ranging from 1-8 of
a cent off to 7.8 up. Simultaneensly,
corn was 3-S to 2 3-4 down, oats 1/2 to
ll/j, lower, rye varying from 1 cent to
1 1-8 advance, and provisions showing
22 cents to 55 cents setback.
Great opportunities in life may bo
scarce. But every hour of every day -
of our existence is a little opportunity
to improve yourself, to the end that
you may be better, your neighbor hap-
pier, and the world the gainer for
Your presence in it for a'short Wale.
Lonely• -Valley
Blackened trunk and blackened twig,
and still the living green
Comes bravely forth to hide the scars.
O Friend, when you have seen
The naked hillside, bare and gray,
where once the lilac bloomed,
Wi11 you not give a thought to these
your careless act has doomed?
The smouldering fire you left behind
that bright September day,
The match you flung so_ carelessly as
you drove on your way,
That half -burned cigarette that fell
beside the winding road;
You bear the sin in secret yes, but
you bear a heavy load.
And yet, the stricken valley wears a
trusting hopeful air,
As though it really triefi,'to say: "Now
don't you fret and cafe!
This frightful thing that came to me
was never planned by you;
We'll both forget the harm they did
—but, 'YOU be careful ,too!"
Husband (reading .newspaper ac-
count of an incident at travelifng melt ..
agerie)—"With a hoarse roar the lion
sprang at the trainer and pandemon-
ium broke loose!"
Wife—"What queer names they give
animals to be _sure!"
Jack—"There is a 1 jj•, <Of favoritism
in our family."
art
. e
h
j<�, � t. On
Jack, Uncle—"Why, J ,
do you mean?"
Jack—"Well, I get punished if I
bite my fingernails and when baby
puts his foot in his mouth they think
it's cute."
Judge—"Your wife complains ;;that
you never work. How about it, Sam?"
Sam ---"Dat woman's crazy, Ask, her
what Ah was dein' de second Tuesday
of August, last year?"
Shoe Merchant — "Business is so
quiet that we bad better have a spec-
ial sale."
Store Manager—"All right. What
shall it be?"
Shoe Merchant "Well,. take that
line of $5 shoes and mark them down.
from $10 to $7.95.
Read It Or Not.—All wild men of
Borneo are fakes.
l
Continental Landlord (to 1215 Arms -
lean 'visitor)—"And how do you like
our city?"
American—"I hate it. It's as hot as
h—, and just as uncomfortable."
Landlord (admirably) — "Alai Is
there anywhere you Americans have
not been?"
Narrowest Street
Closed By Gates
QUEBEC.—Sous le Cap street, the
narrowest street in North America
and the mecca of tourists from all
parts of the continent willno longer
be traversed by automobiles and
other,. vehicles, including the quaint
caleche.
At the request of the Quebec Saf-
ety League fearful of injuries to the
flock of children who play in this
narrow alleyway which is graced by
the name of a street, Chief of Po-
lice Trude! has closed it and .gates
have been built at either end to pre-
vent their passage.
The children who made a liveiie
hood by begging for pennies, now
find their source ofinceree eut off.
WHEN 1N TORONTO
HARLEY,
DAVIDSON
Distributors
Used Motorcycles, Parts and riccessortes
KENNEDY r MENTON
421 College St Toronto
St. ring Cheese
In The Horne
Best Place is in Refrigerator or
Very Cool Cupboard
Most people who live conveniently
near, a grocery store buy cheese,. as
they do other foods, in small quan-
tities. In such cases there is no need
for concern over the problem of stor-
ing cheese in the home. It is simply
a matter of keeping a pound or less
in good condition for a short time.
Cheese should be kept in a cool place,
as high temperature will cause some
of the fat to melt and escape from
the cheese, states the "Cheese for
Better Meals" bulletin issued by the
Dominion Department of Agriculutre.
High temperature also has the effect ,
of drying out the cheese, particular-
ly if it is left uncovered. The best
place for cheese is the refrigerator
or in a very cool cupboard, free from
dampness. The flavor and texture of
the cheese will be preserved if it is
kept in a covered container or is
wrapped in heavywaxed or parch-
ment paper;. To prevent waste, scraps
of cheese may be grated and put in
a -covered jar, to be used as required
in cooking. Process cheese should be
stored in the refrigerator, and may
be left in the package in which it
was purchased. •
Prevent Drying Out
If a whole small cheese, or part
of a large cheese, is bought to be
stored in the home, care must be
taken to prevent drying out or the
development of mould. A good plan
is to cut a small portion from the
cheese and wax the surfaces of the
remainder with a coating of paraffin
wax, applying the melted wax with a
small brush. When stored in a cool,
*ell -ventilated, dry place, cheese so
treated will keep in perfect condition
for some considerable time. The
portion cut for immediate use should
be covered and kept in a cool dry
place. When it has been consumed,
another portion can take its place,
and the operation repeated until the
whole cheese is used up.
.Foundation Complete
For Largest Telescope
MT: PELOMAR, Calif. — A squat
mass of steel 135 feet wide huddles
atop Mt. Palomar waiting to receive
a 200 -inch glass eye that will reveal
to man more than eight times as much
of the universe as he has ever seen
before.
It is the turntable foundation for
what is to be the world's greatest tele-
scope. For 14 months scientists at the
California Institute of Technology at
Pasadena have been grinding the
great reflecting mirror -200 inches, or
almost 17 feet, wide—that will rest in
the bottom of a G0 -foot tube to be
mounted On the steel base.
The tube is nearing completion in
Philadelphia and soon will be shipped
here.
California technicians are now bor-
ing 36 holes in the bottom of the mir-
ror. "Baso supports will fit into the
holes:
When that task is finished, they will
start, the tedious process of malting
the flat surface concave so that it will
centre its view of the heavens into
the telescope's eyepiece. Seven small-
er mirrors will aid this procsss.
The large mirror is expected to bo
finished and installed in 1939. It will
weigh 20 tons.
The mirror, tube—all material used
in the observatory -must be hauled
by truck up this 5,600 -foot mountain,
50 miles northeast of San Diego and
150 miles south of Pasadena.
CAP TOWN —• The charge was
withdrawn against Arthur Vogt, who
stood 111 the vicinity of a highway
"speed trap" and warned motorists.
ITe Was charged with hindering the
The DOUBLE automatic booklet is
handier ---each paper comes cut easily,
,,. ..... <.., !llr, y..o.:....:""
Lindbergh May Move
To Home In France
PARIS, -- Co). Charles A. Lind-
bergh, was reported to be negotiating
this week, for the purchase of Mille,
a small island once owned by Aristide
Briand, near Trebeurden on the Bre-
ton coast.
The newspaper Le Journal publish-
ed the report in a special dispatch
from Perrosguirec, saying its inform-
ants believed the flier would buy the
property to be near Dr. Alexis Carrel
with whom he has collaborated in a
scientific research,
Dr. Carrel has a residence on St.
Glides Island nearby. Lindbergh has
made frequent visits recently to the
Carrel home.
Briand, now dead, used to spend
vacations on Mille Island when he was
premier of France.
Lindbergh, with his wife and five-
year=old son, Jon, has been living near
Weald, Kent, since the family left the
United States in. December, 1935.
Residents about St. Midas believe
Lindbergh and Dr. Carrel are working
on a "very important" invention.
Public Health
In Newfoundland
Peculiar Task Faces Government
—One Doctor For Every
7,000 People
Public health, which has been
commanding increased public atten-
tion in Canada and the United States
year be year, is now being consider-
ed by Newfoundland authorities 'with
more serious thought than ever be -
ore.
In, his–recent . budget speech, the
Commissioner for Finance declared
the problem of public health was one
of the most important with which
the Government had to grapple. The
Department of Public Health and
Welfare has been given over three
million dollars for its year's esti-
mates and in addition, it is expected
that part of the $3,000,000 recon-
struction grant from the British
Government will be devoted to im-
provement of medical facilities.
Newfoundland has a gigantic task
in bringing better health to about
290,000 people scattered over the
island and another 5,000 along the
Labrador Coast. In the remote fish-
ing villages there is only one doctor
to every 7,000 people, the area cov-
ered being so large that the burden
is tremendous.
Within the last year, nine cottage
hospitals have been put into opera-
tion and the work of planned public
health commenced by various pre-
ventive measures.
Some idea of the need of public
health facilities in Newfoundland
may be had from the infant mortal-
ity figures. Canada's rate of 73
deaths per 1,000 births is considered
large, yet in Newfoundland the in-
fant mortality rate in 1936 stood at
96.5 for St. Johns City .and 103 for
the country district.
r'utagaa Seeks Long
Air Flight Record
LONDON, — The Royal Air Force
will soon make an attempt to capture
the world long-distance flight record
with a non-stop hop from England to
Australia, according to the aviation
reporter of the London Daily Express,
Air distance from England to Port
Darwin, Australia, is 9,124 miles —
2,804 miles longer than the Soviet,
7,730 -mile record gained in a flight
from Moscow to San Jacinto Californ-
ia.
Air Ministry officials, following con-
sultations with experts, are said to be
working out proposals for sending a
high-speed R.A.F. bomber, capable of
350 miles per hour and reaching a
"ceiling" level of 23,000 feet, which
would enable it to fly over the top of
the Himalayas without making any
deviation.
It has been calculated the flight
'would take about 55 hours at an aver.
age speed of nearly 220 miles an hour.
BOMBAY — Nationalist Congress
ministers accepting office in six
provinces have decided to take only
one-sixth of their stipend, in order
to emphasize that India is s poor
country.
Appendicitis Thought
To Be HereditaryWASHINGTON, —Appendicitis, one!
of the commonest human troubles re -1
quiring surgical treament, is apparent-!
ly a hereditary disease, a Midwestern.'
scientist reported this week.
E. G. Stanley Baker, of Wabash
College, Crawfordsville, Ind., announce{
ed in the Journal of Heredity he had'
found infection of the appendix, re-'
suiting in inflammation, soreness and
rupture, "runs in families."
He found it running through four' -
generations of one family, in which'
12 cases occurred. A second appendi
cites -susceptible family was found,
"without any especial searching," lid
added, and a third was reported ta'
the Journal simultaneously,
The trouble is not that a child is
born with an infected appendix, the
Indiana scientist declared. Instead ft
inherits -.a predisposition to the dia.'
ease in the same way that other per:
sons are believed to inherit a predis1
position to cancer.
"Since the immediate cause of apt,
pendicitis is usually absterial infect
tion, it is impossible to say exactly'
what weakness may favour the onset
of such a condition," he explained<
Cecile Donne
Ends "Talk Strike"
CALLANDEI.t. — It required
mother's cajolery to end the first
strike in the Dionne nursery. Mrs
Olivia Dionne, mother of the quintup4
lets, heard the "middleweight," Ced
cile, crying plaintively in the isola
-Lion ward.-
On one of her frequent visits tee
Defoe Hospital, Mrs. Dionne left th
four sisters in the playroom to visi
Cecile. A nurse told her .Cecile ha
been 'on -'a "talk strike" for severe,
days and pettishly refused to answer
when spoken to. The doctor was wort
ried about her, said the nurse.
,Mrs. Dionne talked to the pouting
youngster for some time before a red
ply was forthcoming. "Will I bring
Pauline's little pet dog over?" she'
asked in French.
"Gut, out," Cecile murmured. She
scampered from her cot to her mos'
ther's chair, kissed her soundly anti
trotted meekly back to bed,
Mrs. Dionne pursued her questions
and finally got the child answering'
readily. On visits from :11r. and Mrs.`
Dionne and the older brothers and
sisters of the quints last week, Cecile;
had not been allowed to see them duet
to her cold.
So much enthusiasm had the four
well quints for Papa Dionne's felt heti
it has become completely devoid of
lining in the last week. The littlel
girls find it jolly sport to rip and tugl
at the now battered fedora.
Hay Fever Cure
DAWSON, Neb., — William Stevente
of Dawson, explains how he fights haei
fever suniffles and sneezes. His tech-,
nique:
Takes all the furniture except'the
bed out of the room. •
Wipes the floor with wet cloths.
Hangs wet sheets in the room,. but'
takes them down an hour before retir-'
ing.
Keeps the doors and windows in the?
room locked.
T H E FAMOUS
RUBBING
LINIMENT
Rub on— pain gone.'
Get the new large econ-
omy size—Also avail-
able in smaller. regular
size, 49
SAFES
•
Protect your CASH and BOOI{S from G'1RI1
and THIEVES. New and used Sates, Cer-
titled Cabinets, and Steel Chests, alt sixes,
Moderate prices and terms, Vistt our
showroom, or write Dept. W.
J. & .I, TAYLOR LIMITBD
TORONTO SAFE WORKS
145 Front St. x., Toronto
Established 1855