Zurich Herald, 1935-05-30, Page 7Activity was Go�d
fo.r Her Figure
Helped by "That
Kruschen Feeling"
Her husband assured her that
it was her age and that she could
not expect to wear stock size now.
He was evidently a believer in the
ancient "fat and forty" legend.
To -day she dsmisses the idea with
laugh. But let her tell the story
:herself :---
"I must tell you I had develop-
ed beyond the 'stock size.' My
husband assured me that it was
nay age. One day I saw an ad-
vertisement and decided to try
T;►ruschen Salts. That was last
July, Now once more I wear a
size 38. Besides which, I feel so
much better, more energetic, and
can do my work without that tir-
ed feeling." --(Mrs.) 3. M.
• Your figure will not develop a
"middle-aged spread" if you keep
yourself healthy and active with
a daily dose of Kruschen. When
you have taken Kruschen Salts for
a few days that old indolent arm-
chair feeling begins to desert you—
it doesn't matter if you are in the
forties the urge for activity has
got you—and you're "stepping live -
And, best of all, you like this ac-
tivity—you walk a couple of miles
and enjoy it—you thought you'd
YOU SEE 0 CAN WEAR STOCK
SIZE NOW THAT„-►aORE
ACTIVE
WHY YES, MADAM,
iT'$ MARVELLOUS!
HOWEVER HAVE
YOU DONE IT?
T e S 'lendid Spirit
', Of The West
ae. a greatspirit that obtains in
e c'lrciuth I;dden, grasshopper de-
ntestat0`aieas of the West. At
Ol2 ?g -field, south-west of Weyburn,
et 'tai• farmers unable to get further
•1elp from the Department of Ed -
n.
ication or from the municipal coun-
SEE THE
' 'ireStOtte
HIGH (Scaeed TIRE
Firestone Tires have
always been noted For
their Long, low cost mileage.
Now, in the New High
Speed Tire For 1935, you
get 50% more Non -slid
ileage*_ at no extra costa
Put these the last
word in tires on your car a.
see the nearest
Firestone Dealer
;today.
FIRESTONE
SENTINEL
TIRES
AS LOW A9
$5.25
with previous Firestone tire.
never dance again, but you find
you're getting as spry as ever—and
you can wear the modern dresses
with as much comfort as the young
folks.
Get a 75c bottle of Kruschen (it
lasts four weeks) and start right
away to take a half -a -teaspoonful in
a tumbler of hot water every morn-
ing
cil were not daunted in their effort
to educate their children, An "emer-
gency meeting" was called and one
farmer offered to donate his granary
for a teacherage, others volunteered
to plaster it, whitewash it, put
windows in and equip it from the
meagre supplies of their homes. A
teacher was engaged and sustained
out of their restricted food supplies
and school is going on. There are
many like instances in these days of
difficulty. Their churches are kept up
in the same way. Ministers are
cheerfully living on Iess than half
their salary in manses and parson-
ages segregated in one or two rooms
to save fuel expenses and are min-
istering to their flocks without
thought of further comfort or re-
muneration, bring siveetness and
light into homes where were it not
for these ministrations might come
gloom, discouragement and despair.
It is hard to discourage a people us-
ed to vicissitudes. Such determin-
ation is bound to bring its own re-
ward.
"Before a man can become serene
he. must cease to live for his sense
or himself."—H. G. Wells.
One Sample Lesson
in Water -Colour
Painting -25c
A preliminary water-colour
art course $10.00
An advanced water-colour
landscape course $35.00
A Commercial Art Course
$50.00.
Personal Art Lessons by
Special Appointment
Send 3 cent stamped envelope
for other information.
DIFF BAKER
39 LEE AVENUE
TORONTO, ONT.
Throat Tickle: A pinch of
Windsor Salt stops throat
tickle.
REGAL Table
Salt
iefree running..
Dainty, fine
salt for your
table, for all
cooking, and
for oral health.
A WlndeorSalt
product.
�c R1 GAL1
Hirai Off and Mail Today
DA$ADMN INDUSTRIkS LIMITED
• SALT DIVISION "+ijp
WINDSOR. 'ONT.
Without obligation please send special Child-
ren's )3ooklet. "SALT allover the World."
Ne na.._._—.
• In certain parts of
France the bride's wed-
ding costume has salt
sewn into the seams
to ... I Read all about
this and other customs
of gripping inteet,
in wonderful NEW
PICTURE BOOK FOR
CHILDREN.
Free ... Write now!
VINOS OR
SALT
CC")
TOURIST TRADE
SOWS CLIMB
$129,794,000 Is Estimated
As Amauunt Spent For
1934 In Canada
Ottawa.— A substantial increase
was shown in the total expenditure' ofl
tourists in Canada during 1934 when
they were estimated at $129,794,000
compared with $117,124,000 in the
previous year, the Dominion Bureau
of Statistics reported .. recently.
Overseas tourists were estimated to:
have spent $9,455,000 against $7;-
763,000 in 1933. Tourists from the
United States by automobile spent
about $86,259,000 compare with
$72,196,000 in the preceding year„
while those by rail and steamer wei:,
estimated to have spent $34,260,000:
against $29,460,000 in the previo;
12 -month period. :t
Canadian tourist expenditures
foreign countries were estimated at
$60,905,000 compared with $50Le
860,000 the previous year.
r�.
^"n-aclian tourist
to overseas':•counti•'es was estimat'.
at $14,272,000 against $13,982,0
in 1933. Canadian tourists by aut .t
mobile to the United States sped
approximately $32,645,000 again'
$24,611,000, while those by rail a
u t.ie United States we
estimated to have spent $13,988,0;•
compared with $12,267,000 in th
previous year.
Vicious Trees
One of Nature's oddest growths is
the electricity tree of Central India.
Its leaves are so full of electricity
that if you touch one you receive an
electric shock. They- will influence
a magnetic needle seventy feet away.
The electrical strength is strongest
at midday, and weakest at midnight,
In wet weather its powers disappear.
Birds and insects keep away,
The "Saymal," or "Cotton -tree" of
Nepal, will eat other trees. Its seeds
are dropped by birds in the forks of
is victims, where they germinate and
drop a sort of root which starts a
cotton -tree branch. This, spreads and
drops other roots until a large stem
of the victim tree is seized. 'Then the
cannibal spreads round the main
trunk, After its meal, a fine coton
tree appears on the scene of the re-
past.
ALCOHOL FORESEEN
AS MOTOR
Seen As Chief Product Of
Agriculture In America-
Boon To Farmers.
Dearborn, Mien,,—Alcohol, to be
used as a .motor fuel, soon will bo
the chief product of American agri-
culture, it was predieted at the con-
eluding
oneluding sessions of the agrieulture$
industry and science conference here..
BOON TO FARMERS
Dr, William J: Hale, research con-
sultant, and Dr. L, M. Christensen,
of the New York Chemical Founda-
tion, told the 150 industrial, agri-
cultural and science leaders meeting
here that this concentration of al-
cohol manufacture would be the best
way of accomplishing their announc-
ed program to restore American
prosperity diverting the chief ae-
tivities of farmers to supplying raw,
materials for .industry.
"Our domestic gasoline require-
ments were 17 billion gallons in
1929," Dr. Christensen said. "If the
entire output of agricultural pro -
dads had been used for manufac-
ture of motor fuel, the yield would
not have been satisfied the demand."
Dr. Halle pointed out that differ-
ent crops in parts of the country
could be used for alcohol produc-
tion.
DIFFERENT SECTIONS
"In the south, it will probably be
the sweet potato, in the north the
potato and sugar beet, in the middle
portion corn, fruits and the Serusa-
lem artichoke."
"By intensive use of new fertiliz-
ers, Dr. Hale predicted, the farmer
could produce 350 gallons of alcohol
per acre at a cost price of ten cents
per gallon."
Obliging 'Phone Girls
From midnight to dawn telephone
girls in the great New York hotels
are pleasant buffers for loneliness.
Strangers far from Biome turn to
them for conversation in those often
bleak hours of wakefulness while the
rest of the city sleeps, One in the
hotel zone on Central Park south,
known as Mickey, has become widely
known for her soothing voice. She
has a list of `regulars" in the hotel
and former patrons who call her in
moments of dolor, "just to hear her
voice."
Hire r There
Everywhere
) . A brother to every other Scout, without regard to race or creed
Field Executive Bernard Cousino
of Toledo, Ohio, and a party of
Scout leaders of the 7th and 27th
Toledo Troops were special guests
at the big annual Parents' Night at
Deer Park United Church of the
123rd Toronto Group. The party
brought with them an invitation to
the 123rd to camp this summer at
the Scout reservation near Toledo.
* * *
In recognition of alertness and
promptness in warning the occupants
of a house which was discovered to
be on fire, Scout Bunyon of the 129th
Toronto Troop, was presented with a
Scout knife at the troop's annual
Parents' Night.
* * *
For the presentation of a Group
Charter to the new 3rd Barrie
(College St. United) Scout Group,
five "Seconds" of the 118th Toronto
(Eglington United Church) Troop
accompanied Assistant Provincial;.
Commissioner F. C. Irwin to Barrie:`'
* * *
Hamilton Sea Scouts proved their
right to be considered water activity.
Scouts by capturing first place in
eight events of the Hamilton Scout,
Swimming' ivitet.
Since th YYiret of the year thei
number of Sdouts in Chatham, Ont.,l
has increased from 162 to 306,
* * *
Each of the P. L.'s and Seconds of
the 129th Toronto Troop had the'
responsibility of staging an item of
the troop's annual Parents' Night ati ,
St. Crispin's Anglican Church Hall.
t;
Items included a camp loom, friction;"
fire, compass points, knots, first aid,, `'
P. T. and bridge building. Morsel ,
signalling was demonstrated by th�.'
new Radio Patrol,
* *
Burlington, Ont., Scouts sponsored'
a boy's and girls' hobby show in.
the Town /fall.
* * *
An investiture of fifteen new
members ' of the lst Mimics, Wolf
Cub Pack took place around an in-
door campfire.
. * * *
Charged with deserting the Pack
and going into a "foreign jungle,"
Baloo Christie (formerly Baloo
Carter) of the 4th Moncton, N.B.,
tack, was given a trial before the
itoys of the Pack. In spite of an
ble and eloquent defense, the was
declared guilty, and sentenced to
receive a gift and best wishes.
* * *
The 2nd Cobourg Troop has been
provided a fine new meeting place
in the basement of K. of C. Hall.
* * *
A "commercial hike" of the lst
Guelph Troop took the boys through
the plant of the Canadian Bakery. A
not unappreciated feature was an in-
vitation to sample a liberal piece of
cake.
* * *
The lst New Toronto Scout Troop
was asked to provide ushers for a
series of Sunday evening concerts
sponsored by the New Toronto
Lions Club.
* * *
The final indoor session of an
Indoor Training Course for Scouters
at Timmins, Ont., held in Masonic
Hall, took the form of a model'
Scout meeting. The concluding week-
end outdoor session was postponed
until more favorable weather later
in May or early in June.
A Sunday service at the Brooklyn
Mission, Guelph, was - taken full
charge of by Scouts of the 3rd
Guelph Troop.
* *
A party of some eighty Buffalo
Scouts and leaders were week -end
guests of the 3rd and 17th Toronto
Scout Troops. The American Scouts
were extended a welcome to the city
by Mayor Simpson. They placed a
wreath at the Cenotaph, and later
were taken on a sightseeing tour.
THE FAMOUS
RUBBING
LINIMENT
Rub on — pain gone.
Get the new large econ-
omy size --Also avail-
able in smaller, regular
size.
n
"KING OF' PAIN"
LINIMEN1'!
Issue No. 21 -- '35
46
CIGARETTE ;',APERS
OU
Automatlc
Booklet
Pure Rice Papers--'
in the handiest
pocket size booklet.
Says Droughts
Have Cycles
Veteran Astronomer Sees History
As Bearing Hirn Out
Droughts occur only once in every
11 years, according to Cap. Tom See,
veteran American astronomer, who
recites history over a period of 1,-
000 years to prove the assertion.
"This regular cycle of droughts is
caused by sunspots," the weather ob-
eerver says.
The basis of theory is a book out-
lining the history of China, His find -
of weather data—were placed at the
Ings --the results of painstaking study
disposal of the U.S, government in
a letter to Secretary of Agriculture
Henry A. Wallace.
Capt. See believes his discovery
will be more important to agricultur-
ists than any data government wea-
ther forecasts can produce under their
"haphazard system." He has found
that the 11 year cycle of cold wint-
ers and plentiful rainfall in this coun-
try against cycles of drought in
China coincide With available rec-
ords of European weather compared
with the drought this country suffer-
ed last year.
DOMINION OFFERS
G DENING DMA
As a resullt of more than half a
century of actual experience ane, ex-
periment by the Dominion Depart-
ment of Agriculture, . an storehettse
of information on every phase.. sof
gardening is at the disposal of every
member of the Canadian public who
wfshea • 'to : take_.edvant=a e- of ,this
knowledge. How to grow shrubs,
trees, flowers, and vegetables, how
to protect them from disease and
insect enemies, how to attend to the
soil, and the thousand -and -one things
connected therewith are dealt with
in plain language. Year by year
hundreds of bulletins, pamphlets,
and circulars are distributed free to
persons who write and ask for them
from the Publicity and Extension
Branch of the Department in Ot-
tawa. In this way Canadian gar-
deners, professional and amateur,
are helped to maintain a high de-
gree of horticulture.
There are circulars or bulletins
on spring and fall work in the rose
garden, flowers for the prairie home,
the growing of peonies, gladioli,
dahlias, ferns, carnations, growing
caragana for field shelters and
hedges, tree planting for ornamental
purposes, how to make hot -beds and
cold frames, grapes for home use,
mushroom culture, how to grow to-
matoes, asparagus, cucumbers, po-
tatoes, any known vegetable in
short, and how to make a sketch for
a proposed shelter belt, just to hien-
tion a few
The cultivation of the apple in
Canada, Hedges and their uses, the
prairie farmer's vegetable garden,
vegetable growing in the coast area
of British Columbia vegetable in-
sects and their control, cabbage flea
beetle, crown gall in fruit trees and
small fruits, the undesirable pest
and earwig, onion maggot control,
gladiolus thrips, diseases of the
raspberry, potato and tomato, the
strawberry root weevil, . and many
other subjects relating to the garden,,
i
and pest control are fully dealt with
and may be obtained free by write
ing to the Publicity and Extension
Branch, • Dominion Department of
Agriculture at Ottawa,
Aar Route Coal
Costs Are High
FOOTHILLS, Alta.,—Seventy tons
of coal are being prepared here for
shpment by rail and air to Arctie
trading posts, unique In the annals
of northern air freighting, Transpor
ration costs will be $100 per ton.
LONDON,—Experts have again ad-
vised the foundations of St, Paul's
Cathedral have little margin of safe-
ty and work improperly carried on
in the vicinity might disturb subsoil
and even cause collapse.
Classified Ackertisift
OLD COINS
HP TO $60.00 EACH PAID FO%c;CT.S.
Indian head cents, We buY'•• all
dates regardless of condition. Lip,. to
$1.00 each paid for U.S, Lincoln :rte;. •¢
up to $150.00 each for Canadian -ccs
We buy stamp collections, Me . ' '
Books, Old Paper Money, Gold„;,.a
Send 26c (coin) for iarge Musd'tted
price list and instructions. Satisfaction
guaranteed or 25e refunded, HUB
COIN SHOP, 159-23 Front St., Sarnia,
Ont.
csxOXS MGM SAL8
JCIX BREEDS CHICKS, 0 C12;NTS;
pullets 25c. Complete catalogue mail-
ed. St. Agatha hatchery, St. Agatha,
Ontario.
WANTED
HAVE YOU COTTAGES, ROOMS,
cabins, etc., available for tourists
anywhere in Ontario? Write Dominion
Correspondence Club, 97 Howard St.,
Toronto.
.BONDS AND C0 ERENCXES WANTBD
IMPERIAL RIiSSIAN, GERMAN AND
and Austrian government- bonds cur -
reticles wanted. Highest prices mitt..,
David Davis, Queen and
VZOL/N-'SOU I D
TIMPROVE 'SOUR VIOLIN. :NEW 1N-'.
vented violin sound pest, guaranteed
to wake any violin ]nud.r an? clear
tone, 25e. J. Naboznik, ;;;ii I',srkview
St., -Winnipeg,
Replaceona
ci wen oOral
and Windows
A. broken screen is like a
bucket with a hole in it . . .
useless. You may think you
are protected against flies anti
mosquitoes, but you are not.
For health's sake, check over
your screen doors and w:21-
dows now. Replace those4hat
are damaged. t
SCREE EVES” Y.
D O & I E OW
ONTARIO SAFETY LEAGUE
Apply to your local
agent or to
21(7g t1pin iay Street
3471)
TORONTO
iw7k1,e
55
Cosy public rooms and cabin
.. excellent food and plenty
of it .. good sun decks
happy days of sport and fun
. fine steady ships,
MOUTH. iiveVREro from OON,1 andRt
5ELPAST, LIVERPOOL, GLASGOW
Third Class Ocean Rate- • $B2.t.rone way.