HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1938-09-29, Page 2vironnienfol
fluence,On
Feebleminded.
• Before, School Age The., 1;044, ..
• ence of Children_Isfound:
• co`. Vp. and, 00WW According
To Conditions Under 'Which,
Th,7 , •
• Dr: Beth WellIngn. of IQW..ft State ,
Univer0I14', VPieS,d 4, Warning 33e. -
fore the ' Anierie4n PayeliOlOgie4,1,
• Association Meeting, at Columbus,
•'ONO! ,t4ati'ea.r1Y environment • PAU
,cause feeblemindedness in children.
Feeblemindedneas hasbeen con-
•. sidered.by:,Seleatistkas: either. -,'147
• ; born or visited- only UPgii.t11.00
•. • heriOng tbe,1CriOst grade of intent-.
Psychologists conceded'. that:. the
•
changes of fe* points usually less
•
than 10; could befohodcaused by
• 'edneatiOri and environment, , but
be rare. •
'r: Wellmantossed a.; scientific,
,h9inbaliell, in. the ,'form' of a 'report
on. children, Whose "I.Q:",•: had •
changed as much as 40 points. She.
said the changes were both ways, -
but , so tremendous • thAt they had
brought , „their possesiors, respec-
tively up to the genius level or else
down to feeblemindedness. • )1
• One child,'' shesaid, fell from a
• norinal Of • 108,0 feeblemindedness •
at 00. Two. others.,' dropped '• froni.
good intelligence, into the same.
teeblembedectsixties.'••
• In • these cases she.- blemed en!"
• ,‘ VirOnment.;before school age: The
ehndree.iwere in an orphanage
cot-
tage, she Said; ,ririder superVision. of,
•, antralhed help, ' with but little play
'facilities' and ,no planned' education..
• I TO back up her assertion
• .•virOtliabat Caused the feeblenliniled•
„nessshe . cited another group„ of
children Iiving umer imiIai orPh-•
• aneg,e condition§„eXcept 'that these
• attended , pre-school ,.:daily. The
children, she deelared,liraProyed in
' intelligence. " " • .7
, • ,
Keeps Fruit Fres
Many:MOnths
NewClheMicai: Process Also.
, , • , .
Assures Fresh Eggs •
:7-77 . • • : ,
, Discovery Of a' new. chemical pro
cess by Which all kinds of fruits.
•• May be licPtfresh4fhe year around
• .at pttle Cost; Is. claimed by Dr: .11:
•J. jay, Durban (South 'Africa) • the
•
inventor..
• ." Dr: Jay, who 'has ' been. 'experi,
'.1nentMg; for .fitteen. years; 13elieVeS
,his .discovery will revolutionize. the
.frult industry .and put An end, to
refrigeration...The' main feature of
' Dr.. Jay's process is a new chemical ,
conipound, which gives off a color-
less gas, causing the Ernieto be.;
come "dormant?'
One -and -a -half ounces • of • this
„. • . •
• compound..., which has sugar As it• a
base, will preserve. five , tens. 'of
fruit for 'a year ..at.a Cost of $1,25,
- it is clainied,::
'Theltait can be stored in: :large •
' iquantities ill normal :peeking ,in
shiPs; train's* and airplanes, Or on
'sad, OrdinarY.,'clesed *ore
rocuria. The only 'apparatus rieeded-.
, Is a pressure .gauge and an Open.
vessel containing a little of the See, ,
ret :dark:liciuid.•
• pr. Jay, contends that the prOcess
has been, Made a9 simple; and that •
the cheinicaleare So harmless,, that.
it could be worked by a child.' He
'clain* 'the -results of .t,ests reveal
that his process Can 'preserve: 'S •
Eggs.. for 4 nine nithatha, after
• which they will, be as good, As new '
laid; citrus .fruits in.perfect condi-
tion, :without, change in site, Color
or flaCvor, filial nine to twelve
months; peaches and apricots, irbia
-eine to, 'twelve monthk,' grapes,..to-
- 'iriatoes, 'pears, ,apples,clierriek, '
, • „ nec-
tarines,,and smooth -skinned
• fruit for at leek. twelve Menthe:
he World's TW• o•
Loneliest WOMen
?Live On an bland, Off the Coast
Of Africa ---Sometimes :See
No One For Months
,
The ' wcArld's loneliest women ,
have been .found'only 15 ,miles from
Cane Town,' SOuth.Africa.,'' :
:They ii.e with 'their husband,'
on Dassen sIand .— the island of a '
mhlhiofrdfr h lightlionse
• •I$ Iiituated,
''An 0,ceeSioila1 Shipwreck;" Said.
Mrs,' Meinerney;. Wife of the chief
lighthouse i•;,keePer; •JibreekS.: . the,
111.16,antonk�f aur llVes•.„ • ‘. •••
Shipwreck tVlaket EicciteMent
•OnCe' eVerY,. siX.• 'Weeks, a, •yelief
ttig the . carrying. the
fresh food ; and mali fee the tiVo,
married .fainilies' and' three' baChe-
, co10.1ciata' 6f the lielitherise, de
• -pertinent'', '
• '''Als• ail right • to 'tny ilusband
And the 'Other' Men'," lylr,8%.'Mother•
toy ..tOld- a ,visitor; Who , Went: Out
WIthtlierhf ttig,'."Ife!' has no.
;•WOrtle§, but i4 two Weinen on the,
101a1d de, all the tlif feting arid the
Worrying: Far lhontlis' Arid mprithA
we tee nothing hilt Our ,tliten.trilles...
•,. Of and . the",tentalizing Ontline
Of Table" ,*folinteiri; •Calling OS th • .
-
• kr',
S9A.
•
, •If
REAP
ou are a timid soul who• gets iuniOY in the dark.
,pOtt$01 riFIir.
BY Lawrence Keating is a red:hlooded •riP-roar- ing de-
tective story full of high -flying crooks` money -madness and
STARTS IN THIS PAPIER NEXT WEEK
.411r4110740r...114k4irlinerdir. Aririfindrir.4111rAir...411,41K4
, .
I •
y REX BEACH
40:4 irig OrA ri in I KOWA IOW's; 4 .7411I I Ir. OWS 5111Ki 110 r.:41 CO:
CHAPTER- VI
•
• There was nothing in sight ex-
cept theHomestake .derrklci, a.
"gaunt skeleton silvered by the
moon; nevertheless that sigh grew,.
second 'by second, and as At con-
-Untied it changed. into ; a• whistlin
Moan, indescribably Ilbod-cur
ling, :.The in
The finally the
it carne fronr the weif. And ye
.that ,was • impossible! The „soil be
• neeth their feet was tremblin
new; from the casing .mouth is
sued A vibrating rumble,a rasp
ing,'gasning, gurgling rear::
, Then before their staring dye
an amazing thing took place
Hoinestelte , Number One voinite
into the night a. geyser of blec
mini and water and broken stone
• The brirden came with . a gree
retching; as if '.coughed. Out from
the very vitals of the eArthilbu
oddly enough, instead', of dirhin
ishing,' the jet mounted ,higher
'moment by • moOient, along Wit
the...pitch Of the Sound that -cern
With it. It ,sPreyed up, up, climb
,ing the eighty -foot derrick sec -
"tion by section, until the crown
Bleck ,was hidden. It stood there
• finally, a ,tremendous fountain
belching its rageup towards' the
empty sky. There vas. the rush of
inany waters; the • desert wa
drowned beneath a deluge; 'there
came a raw, , penetrating odor of
ga's. and petroleum. ,
She.Coniet In
• -
' ribmestakel !lumber -One ,had
eorne.
•
valley had fiung . off its
suffocating Shroud of heat;; for a
-few hours at least there was res-
pite. In";the living ropin of the
Fisk home the doctor • and the
nurse were talking- quietly, goner,
ly; Occasionally they stopped and
listened; for out of the night; came
a ,nipriotonoins note like thehoarse
blast of a ,siren Many Miles away.
Filially -through this irritating
'monotone came another sound, the
approaching. rattle • of', a ' 'rickety
automobile. The read. was
by the glare of headlights;
then in the open, doorway :there
appeared the •figure of. a ,man in
,
dripping, oil -soaked garments
which the ,dust: ofthe road had
renderedhidescribably. foul.. His
heir was reatted;'• his face . was
smeared; his shoes were Sodden,
and when he stepped they oozed
sticky liquid- the color of tar.
He had, it seethed, been plunged
intoa, lake Of oil, then 'rolled in
dirt,' for. he reeked with the Smell
of crude petroleihm • ' •
It was Donald 'Fisk. Ile stood
.rocking upon the threshold ; the
White's of his ,ekes glared idly As
he fixed hi's', gaze upon .the bed;
rem door; he tried . to , Voice
question; ..but the dust %Was. thick
inhis throat and he failed,: •
I3ettei ,
The doctor epproaChed him, laid
band upon his greasy sleeve, and
.
spoke in a loW tone."She is
asleep!" . •
'•Fiak finfig off the grasp', lifted
his arms on high and uttered a
.
cry of despair. '"Glerlel:OlOria—ft
He clenched his ,grimy fists and
shook therriy. he began to curse in
hoarse,.hortible,,droaking voice.'
"Huth!" The doctor .seized him
again, struggled with hint ,`,`11,1an!
'd
,You on't understand. She's as -
leen! She's better!"
d
7
t.
d.
t
t'.
•
• • , •
•
1
For Any OId
Lamp, ot'.,Lanteirol
Yoir ,
Coleiriati, Dealer payo
TWo.DOLLARSIOr tiny Old '
. lfirnp or lantern *lieu .ytitt •
...teikile it On a new Cole-
man. This Meant. you kat
..fieW Coleinali. "-beenAar '
-s3:95t (Stiodo.eictroo.• .•
eaVing On 'Cole -Pan -Lan-
ten*, tool 866 yotie
.04u Dealer, Trade today!
*AMP analiOvt eta
lit,,X9PQ100110
•
• Fisk cenaprehended 'nothing at
first except the,' ;harp admonition .
for silence, that was all his brain ,
compass
"The Change came an hour ago.,
She has a chence.''lleaven only.
knows What happene&--L", '
There' was a breathless pause
,while Donald' Fiskslowly groped
hi *gyup out of utter blackness,'
In the Silence c,ould he heard that
Same faint monotene. It., sound- '
ed like the distress signal of sone
distant liner, the :whiStle rope of •
• which , had' been tied down. „
was a miracle; •Mr. . Fisk
'the, nurse . piously. asserted.
"Strength ea/he to her out of, no-
• Where. She began to breathe more
easily; her heart' grew • Strong-
•' "It was' the well! She was
wait-
ing—waitng. It carne in an n,Our
• ago! Don't you hear it?"
4v'Qt_iut iettitlo.,Itioutskaatiorilleuvbd,a,'s' ,c1,.. to
"eatttion. "Her ' Soul was .waiting,
hovering—s e *wouldn't leave Me
. ac os nlvoungi oarla. r a ec r ee ,d was sh0401_---sota'keA0
iLlc
figure. "Hernesteke came in like
a lion, like a' thousand hins,
ons roar-
ing, belching -m-:" His voice broke,
he choked'. "It's the bivest 'well
inthe country! Twenty thousand
barrels a dos Or More, My he:4(ra
splitting from - the • noise. •ft
drowned niedeafened 'the t Viih,Ari
, I saw it, was oil I—I cursed, 0;4r,
' The speaker turned, lurched ,blind-
:ly to - the Wall,and, • resting ' hs
head in...his hands, • e an to sob,
like n little boy, .`I , s 'tied:there
With my' fa`!'c e- tothe: Sli'Y're d purged
• •Towards morning Gloria stirred,
opened her eyes'listened, ' then .
smiled contentedly at her lms4
„bend. ' He had to hey:, his head,
close to catch her , whispered'
words: ."Our boat! I was so tired!
I thought I couldn't wait any long-
er. Then—l• heard it coming it—
our ship!"
"Yes, dear." He , pressed his.
...hungry lips to her cheek. "Yew
: waited, and our ship came, in." -
,
'THE END
• .4
• Frenzied Tennierance
ArPolish husband spent 15c on ,
, Vodka. This so infuriated his wife'
• and -sister-in-lew ,that they bound .
him ba-nd and foot, put him into a
wheelbarrow;.took him te....the rivet
near their' house, and threw him in..
He was drowned; they are in jail,'
Laura Wheeler Cross Stitch Bluebirds Will Zing you
. Good Luck
A
••• - 44.
0 r
al:A.1631RD LINENS PATTERN, 1,829
What a lucky find !—Colorful bluebird' and posy 'motifs for scarf;
tea cloth Or pine*. And in the simplest stitches! Use them for those
Fair donations, .Pattern 1829 contains a transfer pattern of ten motifs
ranging :from 9 X 10 inches to 2% x 31/4, inches;., color. schemes; illus-
trations of atitches;" inaterials required. • • . . '
Patterns 20C eaph. For, No. 1829 write to Wilson Pattern Dept.,F
,
13 West Adelaide St:,, Toronto. *
Household Hints
Fold a towel Or a cloth togeth-
er several timer And 'place it nti-
•-. der the ,cake bowl while you Mix
un • the cake batter, The cake
bowl can't "run away" then *hen
you beat the ingredients together.
•
Children 'often hike, banana •
‘4boats"..'filled•-with frozen foods or
•-•-fresh fruits. Split litnaeas in.
' half, lengthwise. Remove the cerv:•,,
'ires carefully, Sprinkle. the .ban-
anas with a little lent( n or grape-
fruit jUice-Lto prevent the 'fruit..
.from darkening. Then staff' them
with the selected mixture. ,
' ' I
,
When re -coating is ,being- dime
paint is often 'splashed on wood
floors or linoleum. It can be 're-
moved completely if it is Wiped off
witha rag •soaked in. turpentine.
It Should be klone before it has
therinighlydriedor, it ,will take
twice as 'Ong to get off.
Do net add 'dressing to, tomato ,
sal:4-d • until just' ready to serve.
The salt arid Vinegar :or lemon '••
juice in the dressing„ tends to
s draw the juice from the sliced to
:niatOek, giving them a wilted ap-
pearance. —
' 'Saucepan burned? Till with cold.,
water, add a handful' of salt.
Leaves one day, then bring to beil.
Scrub:. out With hard brush, And
•WaSh with clean, water. ,
Add -tt..liandftil of salt, to the
Wa.ter when washing patterned ina-
'teriel. •It will. keep 'the colors
front running.
Lady Baden-Powell has given
pennies. to the 8edot Valid
in.Priglahd, penny a day for all
the .Years she ,has been derinected
*With the moVentent,•
,,
Skin Is Grafted
On Girl's Eyelid
Unusual Operation Is Perform -
!ed In LOadlon, Hospital
. .
. An unusual operation-; of skin..
grafting was performed in . St. ;TO=
eph HOSPital, • in London Ont.; in .
an ffort to overcoine an eye in.
jury suffered by PiereneeSwalm, .
14,year-old daugnter of".Mr, and
Mrs . Peter Swaim, Of '4enaaili eight;
years age, ..„
. When.' six years 'old,. Floiences
S,Walni fell against •a.hat,SteVe and
;
• Waii terribly burned about • her Ores:
One eyelid ha,.§:,.been •seriously 'af-'
.fecte'criinee. Reeentlyshe has been
haVitig 'mach troah1e. with the eye.
. and surgeont..dedided. On •the iinus
ual 'Operation: ' •
Was Burned • By Stove :
. • 4 section' 01 skin was 'ternoved
from behind her 43Te: and grafted'
int() the aftected pe' t.of the lower
atibri- wilt prove, a 'permanent end :
ot"thedlfflculty'
• It) '
The.-giri- after -the p.eretion per,
YOrmed by. a' LOriden eye speeialiat:
• was ,Able to leave hospital.' to a few
days end Is 'new at her honie in ,
where high. hope of a Per,
e.rnentiit 'recover'y 18 held.j •
'Bonus For Babies ,
ego' Duet Mussolini -
grow alarmed at the shortage Of
Vaseists find the 'decree went.
ortl, "Mere •babies" ratherof
Thrgc fainilieS Were Offered -Cash ;
• bonus&
8o ;far, the seherne hes-worked
...WO) tor 'latest 'reports She* a
'popula.tion inereese, eVen in towns
• ,lOrtnerly'hackWd, "And! the libt-
' chriqUer lie§ bald oUt'S2,500,:099.:
•
ashington
13 E
When is E4'. cake net 4 cake?
Perhaps, you haven't time to
bother With riddles IRA it Will be
worth 'your while to give the right
ails`ffer to this one. The answer is
Washington Pie which Will' solYe. A ,
riddle the .nekt,time you are trY--
ing to clegide• Whet to have for, a
dessert •
caSe youwonder why a:thin,
two layer Paltc is called a• Pie,here
-is the story.,• During.: the 2cAvi1
'War in the -'States, food in the
.city of. Washington was At A •prein- •
',,nrin. and fresh .things ,for pie Oil,
',ings were "impogsilile• • to •obtain.
However, people still wanted pie,
and some clever cook got the idea
of baking' a thin cake batter" in
two round shallow. 'tins, and
-spreading jelly or jam between
the two layers. This cake Was
• never frosted, but the , top ,' was
dusted with powdered sugar, afd
sometimes the *Agar was sifted -
from a paper ' cornucopia in lines,
to ;represent a lattice of narrow,
strips of pastry. Though We don't
. • •
consider this an emergency meek-
• ure in spite of the current'rumors
of war:, we do think You :will like -
it'for a change from puddings and.
s pies for dessert. .
• wASHINGTON PIE
eppa. sifted cake flour 1,
1. p
2 teaspoons baking ipowde7
' 4 tdaspoon an ,
1 Cup ,sugar ,
'2 eggs, well beaten
tOlespogn butter or ether'
shortening (melted) •
• % "cut; hot muik,
1 teaspoon vanilla.
Sift flour once, add baking
powder and salt, an'd sift together
three times. Beat sugar gradual-
ly .into eggs: Add butter; then
' flour, alternately with milk, a
small ;amount at a .time. Beat af-
ter each addition,until smooth..
' Add:'„ flavoring. • Bake ;ir two
greased 9 -inch layer pans in mod-
erate oven (350 degrees F.) 25
minutes. Put raspberry jelrY • or
• jam between layers and sprinkle
.top with 'powdered *Agar.
If .baked in square 8 x 8 x 2 .
pan, bake 40 minutes it 350 de-
grees, '.
BUTTERSCOTCH
1 tup Bee Hive Golden. Corn
• Syrun
• cup' white sugar
• 1*, clip bitter
Mix, all ingredientand stir un-
til it s boils' over low heat'. Boil
untilit fOrMs, a hard ball in col&-:
watgr. Pour into buttered Pen
and when almost •cold mark into
squares..
Children's Toys
WI* Important
.Six-Year=.01d Needs Playthings
ss Muth as Youth Needs
College Education.
• A..six-year-olt1 needs good to as
Much as. a •29-yearldd:•needi.e eollege edueation Dr Lloyd W-'"
Row.
land; .associate professor •ot psy-
Chdlagy:rat the IfniVersity of Tulsa,
'contends., .. " " ' •
He asked school Child psychology
students to bring to Class their own
designs' fpr toys :.for sv year old
'children.. One Of the best, presented,'
he believes,' was a marble sorter in
whichAriarbles'• are,' .made to roll:.
'
down a gradually widening: chute;
, Until, they drop into compartments
^ 'according to Size. ,
•
Toys That Teach
Other toys Included a Wooden'sal-,
ad' spoon' arid)' a cube Of 'art grim;
both •painted 'red,for playing a 'soli.
,Plified fermi, of 'tennis' or •liadmin-
ton; a loosely jointed doll on -.-the 4
'end of a stiCk-7.-for teaching, the
' child ,rhythm , While making it
cle,nce;'a wooden paddlewith a faee
painted on it and a small wirP hook •
for a nose On which the Child is
supposed to catch a Siriall ring AV
. fixed. to the handle by a cord.:: .
, •
Hera dry
•How Record of Genealogies h
• / A
Kept
,
The Art et heraldry, �r. arMotiry„
'as the Old :writers •called itreonSists
in blaconing the' grins; and telling
.
the deaceof ,and • history' of fainillek
.by certain pietOrial',signs Thila
from age to age -in .'aiithentiaateti
egiater of genealogies has , ben ,
'kept and handed. MA, 'train genera
-
thin. td'.generatiOM
The COMpiling, of thes.erecerda
has alwa,ys been the ,sPed.fal ;duty,
:Of ,' a duly appointed herald. Per
haps -YMA-tiiink that eipialiatio'n of
heraldry Seurida ',rather'. 'dull,' but '
Ion' Will .seciii ditetiVer that:A
deal of intereatilig and AlOtiking
things . are the
Study' of arinpriel• bearings si �u
get a' god book on the Subjedt,
An • linera tit* t� .11Y- hetWeeri
•Looden and OleigoW,. Seotierld, in
thie'h�ui,;15triltititeS.
• ,r
•
Racial CPrgn
Of Canadians
British Stock in Canada Now
Only" 51 Per Cent. of
The Whole
More than i;•4p ‘(1.11Eqtek , Of the
whole. population Of Canada be,
• longs to the .F„rench-Canadian
.p%r;.14:p?I'lt*:,itshaY-74s tfiSh139TWiiTilgrfiin..°:48AI
.4 few of these came.frAnn .the U.
:Cthaenadgar,eater POrtiott 'w40
• born in . Between thein, British,. and
•Yreoch' stock :are. predOMina,11:t ,stn.
.o.,he extent of over 30 per cent.
.the ,remaining
1159 are of'Ehropean origin,With '
Asiatics, Indians, Negroes and Es-
kimos only a small remainder.
• 4.55 Per Cent..‘German
Thel largest' European group is
7.-i7the German, -which stands at 4,55.
per Cent. Scandinavie,nsfollow
with 2.20 per cent :arid , the
'Ukraine 'Alas -provided the 134elc-
:ground for the next largest grow,
at 2417 per cent.
• When the previous census was
taken, the English 'origins
• numbered the French but within a
,decade this has been reversed.
Of particular interest to .
minS will be the fact that• the
Ukrainians : are. now the largest`
group in the dominion,„ and Are.
the :second largest, non -Anglo and ,
'non -French !:group.......
.
Majority 7 Born Here
Of the total, population 77,76
per •• cent. Were' born in "Canada,'
3.22' ,per Cent. bente from the
States,and the other .20 per cent.
are foreign, born.
Edcial.'origins; of course, are '
Misleading. ManY of -the Gerintrn
group, for instarice, haVe'been
Canada for as •meny. as---fOur gen-
erations and .hy far the 'largest
proportion. for ,at least ,three. •
• Origin of • birth gives . a more
dirt;inetlieeon'ciaiing.yra.eiacpreblems
omay
bfa
Press Secretary
•
Nearly Every Woman's' Orga-
nazahon Hast.
, • • .
—Tips On
How TO Carry Out Work'
• '.
t.ificiently and interestingly
, : •
• Now, When: Women's organiza,
:
tions are getting' into the fall iouJ
tine of autumn ,work;' ma y we draw
Attention .5), the attributes of . the
efficient press, Secretary upon"
whom depends much. of .the public
interest in her society.. '
. First of all, the good press tecre7
tary sees that.. her report is in on
time. That means ne later than
. the , motning o.f, the day after the
:Meeting. If she .cannot get doifii: to
: the office With it; she telephones,
it.'in., Late news reports lose their .
-news 'v,Clue arid areoften shoved',
Out of their rightful Place by iteriaa
: of fresher interest.
• Names Spelled Right
•' Then, the 'good, press., 'fieiltary
pays attentieii to the 'correct snel7
•
Iing of 'lathes; and •gives corect in „
itials: The report is .of interestto
'
more than the members' Of the ''so-
ciety Concerned, and other 'readers- k
like to know ."which 'Mrs. Smith"
•
is
The good press secretary under.;„
Stands that changes are 'often ne
ceisary :in order that the report
May. nde seem like a repetition of
somebody elsers repOri.••Shelearns.
how to put the most important
item Of, the •ineeting first, andfol.'
ley it -with the .more 'ordinerY •ev.
• Crowns, of Hats
Varyjn Height
, Reports from Paris Say that hat
; many
trsza:,taednycwoh,neeoirenfrpoems, :one
oulr
to se ,oinehe§: 'height,. with.
•
pointed cones: and 'tvientitits Of
models with. high CroWns intricate, •
ly pleated and folded., "
: Feather and ribbon trmni
outshine fruit and flower„ theme• s.
Ostrich feathers are, giVen. great
prominence. • . „
. Color_lahig..Oewsp_ v,tith bright
'.shades of purple,"various 'greens,
many.biues, rust, rich redS, grays ,
and grayish lavenders pink § and
blues', bolding ' their own with`
Spectaeles: tested by dropPing
• steel hall oh thein from :a 'height
of si feet e been .on iohh
MINERAI.S—Aid THreOUNDATION4F.11 ALfil
•
IF you are sullaring with Rheurnallsm, •
, .
' Neuriti, Stertinch •trophie Inneyt,
Nerves, edzehia; rf:ffintti
aliments, FlUndown, 'etc,, your tysteri
is lacking Sorne• Of the Vital miner",
Which Nature 'Pomander., Lono'fi n.
tent hat bi•outilit' new health and
vi-
taflty to thousands after' yearn .of
'suffering, Write. for free Informe::ch.
LANG'S MINERAL REMEDIES`
946 0066011 ST. VANCOUVIER•
• Ouirerikig.herVea can niake you old mci
haggard looking, cranky and hull to Live .
• with -tan keep you awake nights and •
" gob you of good health, good tines and
3
, .What'you i31341114 try is a pfirticularl
good woman's tonic-anii could you as
iCly anything whose benefits are better
proved than,thatwerld-famous Lydia E.
Einkham'e Vegetable 'Compound?. Let
its wholesome herbs and rtiot,s help
Nature calm your shrieking nerves, tone
up your system giye pore energy and, , •
tnaloe.,lite worthily/mg again.
More than a million women have re.
ported benefit -why -not let Pinkham's
Compoupd help 1C01.3; too, to go .
thrtt '•trying times, like it has oat",
grateful women for the past 3 genera,;'
tions? IT MUST 13E GC10131
Prairie Projects
.Employ ThOusaitidi
"• Water Development. and Com-
munity Pasture Schemes Are'
'Now.Usider Way:
, First sod Was "'turned last week .• •
In. the :Prairie Farm Rehabilitation
Pi eject to Carry : water ,70 niiles
• from the Saskatchewan ', River.: to
, Caren Spiings 'for Moose.JeW'S' aa
ter supPlY. Preparationswere made
to:Starr:work On ,the firSt, 20 utiles
• of:the. ditch' to carry the Water.: '
Otorge !Spence,,,birectbr of Re.
habilitation', said it, was estitriated •
einployment W9uid be provided; di-
.•rectly• or indirectly, for about -10,- •
909 men 'n water dei/elope-lent and
Community:pasture projects under
P,F.R.A., before end Of the 'pre,scht
• season. • • .
29 Projects In, View
Twenty-nine cominunity and (Mg- •
01':water, „developme.ni- Projeeis
ha,ve been '• coniPleted 'tinder
'P Ri;at a coat ,of $5.00,000, in
-
chiding the„ irrigation projects:. .at
„Val marie and Eestend, w total
•.storage capacity 6f. 38.006 acre feet, ;
.of water.
.Prt4eeta •nos. tinder_ co,ustruetioh
pr for 'Which •tenders-cioSed by Aug, '
uSti 31, iovelve an:esti.mated expen-
, diture •ot, $1.050,000,, said".Mr.7 Spence
and Will have 'total .Sternge.capudity
of aPprOximately--1L's.3,700 acre, feet
• rig iyale!. • °•'• "' •
Zanzibar Men Take
Over :Wornen's.Ta.iks
The 'native men of Zanzibar
nave usurped their Women folks!
most Womanly : occupation--4-ntind-'
ing the baby—the 1937 rePort on
the Protectorate reyeels..
"boniestic serVite, is Perforrn‘d
by inales,..e few ,Wiirnen,1 being etn- •
ptoYed. as nursemaids, although .
the service is usually performed
by melee the report says..
'The extent to 'whichfemale
labor is employed ,is .best convey.:
ed •in • expression that `eve. the
washor7women
ate
• i•
A reception and ceilidth,
;d1t1or1a1Ian gathering; 'were 'held
in Clasgew,'Scotlaad, to celebrate
' the arrial from the' United States
;of the 'MacNeil of MacNeil,' ezhei•-
•wise Robert L.. Me'Neil, to„reClaim'
his lands, Which have been out of
the clan's poiessiori for' 1.00•"'•
years: ••
I found
sweetening,
my morning
• cereal with
BEE,HFIE Synip
ar.cis
digestion.
• tattle No.
•
7