Zurich Herald, 1935-02-28, Page 7value
BIG
satisfaction
THE PERFECT
wing Tobacco
•
tr
+vete. envy May airy 4u111b
about the cooking?" -
New Maid: "No, but I noticed them
praying before they started eating,"
Classified Advertising
pATENTs
V OFFSR TO EVERY INVENTOR,
•ist of wanted Inventions and full
I.....irnation sent free. The Itamsay
Uompany, World Patent Attorneys' 273
Bank Street. Ottawa, Canada,
WSZTii WY'.NDOTTES
FAMOUS Superior - Fischel Strain.
Closely.feathered for severe weath-
er. Yellow skin early broiler: Brown
egg: Neuhausers, Chatham, Ontario,
SIT'U'ATION V9.C.6.NT-2IM.&
l i ON'T be a job hunter.—Start your:
own business on our capital.,,No
bard times; no lay-offs; always our
owa boss. Hundreds average $3,000 to
$6,000 annual Sales year after year,
We supply stocks, equipment on credit.
000 home necessities. Selling experience
tnneces ar . Wonderful opportunity to
Awnpleasant, •dignified profitable usi-
Mess backed by world wide industry.
Write . Rawleigh, Dept, 1000, 4005
Richelieu, Montreal, P.Q.
ifZi<RUNDOWN,--.
m AILING?
Mrs• John Blacicmon of1 ..S .Victoria., St; Stratford,
failed .Sl1 hadweak 'and
dizzy 'spells, lead an all-
gone feeling, poor diges-
(� , 4 R tion and was constipated,
3 After taking Dr. Pierce's
'i Golden Medical Discov-
cry the stomach trouble
and constipation were con,
iteted and I had no more dizzy or faint
rpells," New size, tabs. 50 cts., liquid $1.00.
Write to Dr. Pierce's Clinic, Buffalo,
Y., for tree mcaicai advice.
Poor Doing Stock
Should be Ousted
Marketing Half -finished Cat-
tle Is Seen As Obstacle
To Higher Prices
A serious obstltcl'e to improvement
in cattle prices in' 1935 is the pos-
sibility of the marketing of many
half -finished cattle early in the
year, says the 1935 "Agricultural
Situation and Outlook," issued by
the Dominion Department of Agri-
culture, in co-operation with the
Department of :Trade and. Com-
merce. Total supplies •w.zll be;heavier
than in 1934 and an improvement in
prices of good' °..cattle `during, the
early winter of 1935 $nay be: expect
ed. with some prospect of„table pric-
es for the better grades throughout
the year, ItWould seem t
ybe
ll a etU:
ter `' policy to rough'cattle through
to pasture, unless the feed'' supply
permits of reasonably good finish.
World production of beef ls'iiow on
the decline owing to restriction of
export outlets ;;and prices so low
scarcely reef' `production casts..
Nothing is to be ,gained by 'sacri-
ficing
sacri
ficing good' type's of ` young beef'
stock in "an unfinished condition,
but a program of steady weeding
out of poor -doing stock should be
carried on systematically. The de-
mand for fed -calves is increasing,
which is a reflection`; of consumer
demand for small cuts and joints.
Riddles
Why:ris a tree like a dog?
Eeaauise they both lose
their 'bark when they die.
Why is a watch like a river?
Because it won't run Iong
without winding.
nmt, aye 191, Ralnp's Inc, in 6 week. No Appliances
21 4, 5 , In b mita. Ao Drape,
,. s0
0,, 8 9i :.' In 16 dt`yr ^An Dialing.
- ., „fns .oak..
49. „ 1} ,, in
0 te// /rtTSpl
Incrcesed my oou 9ctsht to 6tt 9IIni. ASIfa7AUJ
rlundre4a of reslimowiots from .a .oar ikiprlrX
Fee $10.00 complete.
Details Free. Write Now,
'MALCOLM ROSS
Height Specialist, Sciirborougli, Eng.
ti
High School Boards & Boards of Education
'ire authorized by law. to establish
Indus ° Technical and Art Schools
With the approval of the Minister of Education
Day and Evening Classes
May be conducted in accord-
ance with the regulations issu-
ed by the Department of Ed -
Outten.
h; ommereial Subjects, Manual Training, Household Science
and Agriculture and Horticulture
Are provided for in the Courses of Study in Public, Separate, Con-
tinuation and High Schools, Collegiate Institutes, Vocational Schools
and Departments.
Copies of the Regulations issued by the Minister of Ed-
tccation may be obtained from the Deputy Minister.
Parliament Buildings Toronto.
Application for attendance should be Sladeto the Principal of School
'Theoretical and Practical
instruction
to given in various trade$. The
schools and classes are under
the direction of an Advisory
Committee
a.
Handwriting Reveals Character !
This Fascinating New Chart Shows How!
Everyone should have a copy of
THE GRAPHOCHART
100 Illustrations
SIMPLE! .r; . ACCURATE!! -..,. INFALLIBLE!!!
By Geoffrey St. Clair
(Well-known Graphologist)
it shows you how to analyse your own character, and that of
your friends from handwriting . y . n It is not only a Very
fascinating gabne, but 'it is extremely practical.
Copies tent Post Free for 12c each
THE 'GRAPHOCHART, Room 421, 73 Adelaide W.5 Toronto, Ont.
Unfortunately too Many are ae me- (' ees
diwn quality and 'if quality continu-
o to decline as numbers. increase
the :net result will be an appreciable.
deep in average returns to the pro-
d'acer. Economic conditions in the
industry demalzd a much quicker
turn -over of investment in cattle
but a successful issue of suchpolicy
involves a much more liberal use of
feed.
Care of Hon
Wocy seed
Montreal ' 7
which horses are'(
while working in the \goods and
their treatment on the spot; with-
out the expert aid of a veterinarian;
were discussed here by J. W. Suth-
erland, of the Canadian Interna-
tional Paper Company, before the
Woodlands Scetion of the Canadian
Pulp and Paper Association, at the
Pulp and Paper Research Instituto.
Lameness formed the main item
of the paper, but the speaker dealt
at some length with the general
treatment of work horses, with spec-
ial reference to the necessity of
keeping ailing horses off work and
resting them until thoroughly fit to
resume their tasks. A number of
the more usual form of lameness
causes, efects and treatments were
illustrated.
aeczd tike)..; to
1 uionly subject
THE HEALTHY MAN
When I look at men over fifty
who have lived strenuous lives, more
or less, of the sedentary type, 1 find
some who have maintained their
health, whilst others are quite worn
out.
On investigation 1 usually find
this difference, the healthy one
has made a strict habit of finishing
with his work the moment he leaves
his place of busniess. The other has
taken some work home with him, and
possibly continued until bedtime.
"Keen man," you'll say; "deserves
to get on."
ActuaIIy the man's a fool. No man
is justified in doing the work of two
people—he must sacrifice' his health.
So,'"in the end, he,doesn't,,get on
he usually "goes under" "est when
he should be about to retire and en-
joy the fruits of his labor.
If you find yourself working over-
time continuously, ask yourself the
reason. Is it because you think no
one else is capable of doing the job
during the day that you are more
or less indispensable? Conceited and
short-sighted notion! If you died,
the work would be done just., the
same. No man is indispensable.
,.--.Or i •
s it because you are keen 'tar
Succeed and "make a pile?" What
,dae Will the pile be, in any case, when
you have sacrificed your health
through depriving yourself of leis-
ure? Work strenuously and dili-
gently,
illgently, ,by all means; but do think
twice before, you •alley Iaek of leis-
ure and recreation to undermine
your physical and mental powers.
There are so .many who do this
in their lust for position, power or
wealth. Thoreau calls it the "spend-
ing of the best part of one's life
earning money in order to enjoy a
questionable liberty during the least
valuable part of it."
Though your work may be im-
portant, and though you have the
right spirit in trying to do it con-
scientiously,—From "The Secrets of
Happiness," by Wilfred Northfield.
AND SKIN RASHES -USE
D r. D. D. Dennis' Liquid Prescrip-
tion, made and guaranteed by the
makers of Campana's Italian Balm.
Trial bottle 35c at your druggist. 13
One Sample Lesson
in Water.Coloar
Painting '25c
A preliminary water-colour
art course $10.00
An advanced 'water-colour
landscape course .. $35.00
A Commercial Art Course
$50.00.
Personal Art Lessons ,by
Special Appointment'
Send 3 cent /tamped envelope
for other Information.
CIFF BAKER
39 LEE AVENUE
TORONTO, ONT.
Issue No. 8—'35
COUT1NG
Here ` There
Everywherc
brother to every other Scour, without regard to race or creed
Plans for the celebration this year
of the 150th anniversary of the
• selection et Fredericton as the capi-
' tal. of New .Brunswick, will include
a' huge bonfire to be supervised' by
firemen and the Boy Scouts,
* * *
The value of the used clothing
recently collected in the annual one -
day Welfare Campaign of the Boy
Scouts of Toronto, wasplacd at
$40,000.
* * *
A waste paper project of Fort
Erie, Ont., Scout troops is alined to
raise funds for next summer's camp
at Turkey Point. It is planned also
to secure a small cabin within eyel-
ing distance, where various outdoor
hike and camp tests can be passed
at any time during the summer or
autumn.
Dr. R. C. Wallace, Chancellor of
the University of Alberta, address-
ed the Edmonton Chamber of Com-
merce on the importance of the
Scout Movement in Canada's nation-
al life.
* * *
9,
.A fancy dress ice carnival raised
some needed funds for the 1st Stir-
ling, Ont., Group. Gifts for prizes
were contributed by several of the
town's leading' merchants. '
*
The I.O.D.E. Chapter of Wa-
wanesa. Man., presented the local
Scout Gronp with a Union Jack and
fiag staff. •
* e *
Patrol Leader Malcolm Oxby of
the 5th Regina Troop, lives three
and half miles from troop head-
quarters. To attend every troop
meeting he hikes that entire dis-
tance, and return,to has not yet
missed a meeting this winter, des-
pite storing and cold weather.
* * *
Selected Toronto King's Scouts
will, as in previous years, act as
ushers at the opening of the Ont-
ario Legislature on February 20th.
* * *
Four Scouts of the 18th 1jalifax
Troop, spent a week at the troop's
cabin at Miller's Lake, December
26th to January 5th, and in the conic
pany of the sanctuary ranger studi-
ed animal tracks. They followed
deer and weasel, and discovered an
otter slide. For some ice sport they
tried sail -skating. Several :Halifax
Scout troops own snug cabins in
the area.
* * *
The 84th Winnipeg (Greenwood)
Troop is carrying out a planned
series of nature study and tracking
hikes,
* *' *
The first application to attend
the World hover Scout meet to be
held at Stockholm, Sweden, in Aug-
ust next, has been received at Dom-
inion Scout Headquarters from Al -
Ian F. Hiron of the 6th Edmonton
Rover Crew. Rover Hiron attended
the last International Raver gather.
ing at Kanderstag, Switzerland, in
1931.
* * *
14 Lone Scouts of Alliston, Ont.,
have organized as a Scout troop,
and are planning the formation of
a Cub Pack. That's enterprise for
you!
:p *
Lone Scouts of an Ontario patrol,
learned of a needy farm family in
which a nine year old boy had to
remain home .from school and do all
the farm chores, including cutting
wood, because of his father's illness.
The Lonies and their Counsellor set
their alarms for 6.30 one morning,
and armed with axes and saws
caught the stage coach at 7, for a
four and half mile trip to the
settler's bush lot. When they swung
axes and saws on their shoulders
for the necessary hike back home,
they left behind piles of wood cult
and split sufficient to carry the
family for several months. The
oldest of the Lonies was 15.
* r
Two miles of "hot dogs" were
stowed away by the Scouts attend-
ing the Australian Jamboree. To
fill in odd corners they also dispos-
ed of 5,000 pounds of potatoes,
7,500pounds of meat, 9,000 pounds
of bread, 200,000 'eggs. To wash it
all down they tossed off each day
some 1,000s gallons of milk. Real
. Scouts, eh?
OW LONG IS IT NEW
An engaging question, which com-
mands attention all the more because
it cannot be answered, is put,.by the
'London Times, which asks wh the
new year ceases to be new and be-
comes just an ordinary year. The
suggestion in the "Thunderer's" col-
umns is that the year Ioses its
newness when everybody stops mak-
ing mistakes in dating cheques and
letters, which is the sante thing as
saying that the yea);a? s new only so
Iong as the ghost of "the old year
lingers and affords a comparison.
But this is an unsatisfactory sug-
gestion, for the reason that the per-
iod' is never the same for a number
of persons..yand in fact may not be
the ,same,_ for an individual in suc-
cessive years. There are even re-
peliently efficient persons who never
make a mistake, who proceed calm-
ly to change all their calligraphic
habits overnight and who never,
never dip the pen intg� last year s
' inkwell,
Yet it is preposterous to argue
that these superhumans never feel
the impact of a new year, for they
do.
This, in turn, would provide the
pretext for outlawing ern January 11
all delineations of the new year in
swaddling clothes, all cartoons of a
baby leading an old man off the
stage, and all other suggestions of
the infancy of time. After ten days
surely all persons ought to be able
to examine a new year dispassion-
ately.—New York Sun,
Selecting and Mating Breeders
Are Essential for Husky Flocks
Too often in selecting the stock
for breeding high egg records or
sone outstanding feature of the
sire or dam are allowed to influence
the judgment, without due regard to
vitality or good breeding qualities
that may or may not be present.
The selection for vigor and for
those desirable qualifications that
(conform to the breed is compara-
tively simple, because mostly these
are visible characters and can be
chosen by comparison, Vigor is
evident by the carriage, desirable
body weight for age and breed,
health and bloom of feather, and
good bone formation, while the clear-
cut head with clear, bright and
prominent eye in the male and
female is a certain indication of
brain power and nervous energy and
the hall -mark of high vitality and
reproductive strength.
Sometimes for the purpose of
compiling genetical data at the
Dominion Experimental Station at
Harrow, it becomes necessary to
carry over some undesirable birds in
order to obtain the complete family
record. But when this information
is recorded and before the mating
takes place families are carefully
combed for irregularities and defects
and the offending individual or May-
be the complete group of parents
and offspring are ruthlessly culled.
Only by such drastic practice can
WE WILL PAY
$100.00 III week to two then in thl*
violzzit r to Set aa puV,rrs»ressnto
*villi. Qu/ililleatiotet---3iuet be well
kno'l►`r,, and have a Rood reputation
Apel( bar letter oniye
-110.„elietrill 3ili{t. Toronto.
the flock be improved and vitality
retained. Vigor and freedom from
disease should be the essential fact-
ors in breeding, with due regard to
the propensity of the strain towards
high production. To select for per-
formance alone and ignore defects
in constitutional vigor is to court
disaster in the future.
INBED WilliNEURITIS
EVERY WINTER
Uxt#il Kruschen Brought
Relief
"For three years,” writes a woman,
"1 have been sick in bed about three
months every winter with neuritis iia
my drips and legs, Last winter T
started taking Krusohen. 'Salts, and
got relief from the first dose, This
winter I have not been in bed at all,"
-(Mrs.) D, M,
Neuritis Is a result of impurities in
the blood. And it is impure blood
circulating all over the system and
setting up inflammation in the tis-
saes, that causes those excruciating
pains. laruschen Salts ' can be safely
trusted to set the matter right. ]Be-
cause Krusehen contains just what
Nature needs to persuade your inter-
nal organs back into a healthy, nor.
mai condition.
WORTH TRYING
In this busy world of ours it is
easy to forget to do the thoughtful
things which make living so much
richer, and to say the simple words
of appreciation which may make
someone feel that his effort has not
gone unnoticed. It is equally easy to
get the notion that you are not ap-
preciated. Generally, you'll find that
somebody, perhaps the one you would
least expect, has noticed after all.
Why not be a bit more mindful of
the good other folk are doing and at
the same time try to do good your-
self without the expectation of re-
ward or praise 't"' ea
If You Eat Starbes
Meats, Sweets Bead I:his
They're 411 Necessary goods
..- But 411 ,4cid - .Forming.
Hence Most of Vs Rave "4cid
Stomach" 4t Times. Easy
Now to Relieve.
Doctors say that much of the so-
called "indrgestion:,.i'zom which so,
many of us suffer. 'is really :unci in-
digestion .. , brought:about by too
filmy acid-forming foods in our
modern diet. And that there is now a
Way to relieve this . often in
minutest
Simply take Phillips' Milk of
Magnesia after meals, Almost im-
mediately this acts to neutralize the
stomach acidity that brings on your
irouble,
You ar forget_ur have. -;e„_„
stomachf'
Try this just once, Take either the
familiar liquid "PHILLIPS' " or.
now the convenient nein Philli s'
Milk of Magnesia Tablets, But e
sure you get Genuine "PHILLIPS ".
Also in Tablet Form:
Phillips' Milk of Magnesia'! ablets
are now oi. sale at au drug stores
everywhere. Each tiny
tablet is the equiva-
lent of a teaspoonful
of Genuine Phillips'
Milk of Magnesia.
PHILLIPS'
Iii /ti..
MADG IN CANADA
Growing Deaf With
Head Noises? Try This,
If you are growing hard of ]rear-
ing, and fear catarrhal deafness, or
if you have roaring, rumbling, hiss-
ing noises in your ears, go to your
druggist and get 1 oz, of ?armint
(double strength) and add to it 14
pint of hot water and a little • sugar.
Take 1 tablespoonful four tines a
day.
This will oft nick relief
from. the dist( dad noises. -
Clogged nostrils ould open, breath-
ing become easy, and the mucous
stop dropping into the throat. It is
easy to take. Anyone who is threaten-
ed with catarrhal deafness or who
has head noises should give this
prescription a trial.
Guard against Rickets
FIG NTGERMS,
1'M VITAMIN A.
PEOPLE
NEED ME
EVERY
DAY. {•
ithCod Liv r&
AD ED STI OLITy
All babies need the anti•rathitic value of Vita-
mins A and D, found in pure cod liver oil,
Scott's Emulsion is rich in theseVitamins,, PLUS
the easy di gestibility thatresults from Emulsifica-
tion, PLUS the body-building aid of hypophes-
phites allele and soda. Pleasant to take, Scott's
Entulsion is tremetidously more effective.
COT
ULSION
i BUILD SONES,
PMtvITAN►Iiv D,
a641.TH IiSTRENGTf
OEpaNp
ON Ma/
THE COD LIVER OIL WITH THE PLUS VALUE
For Sate by Your Driver ist 6