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Fordwich Record, 1935-03-06, Page 5ARE YOU MISERABLE ? Mrs. A. Cluckie of 79 Charles St., Hamilton, Ont., said: "When grow. tug into womanhood I be- me pale and thin, bad not much appetite, suf. fired frorn headaches, pains in my back, and D Mother gave me Dr. Pierces Favorite Prescription. Soon my appetite disappeaz d." All betZt;isalor and New size, tablets 50 cts., liquid 51,00, SCOUTING (( Here There Everywhere ) A brother to every other Scout, unthout regard to race or creed CHEST COLDS Relieves Congestion —Does Not Blister At first sign of a cold on the chest apply allegro Poultice with the addition of mustard. The warmth In combination with marvellous healing properties of Alec. Ointment w51 give quick relief. Fall directions in each package: 38 Issue No. 7—'35 "The upward movement after a slump comes largely through new activity in the 'construction and buil- ding industries."—Sir Arthur Salter. "Neither national boundaries nor salt water change- the plain rules of aritlunetic."—Samuel Crowther. ASK YOUR DOCTOR FIRST, MOTHER Before You Give Your Child an Unknown Remedy to Take Every day. unthinkingly. mothers take the advice of unqualified persons — instead of their doctors' — on remedies for their children. If they knew what the scientists know. they would never take , this chance. Doctors Say PHILLIPS' For Your Child When it comes to the frequently-used "milk of magnesia,' doctors, for over 50 years, have. said "PHILLIPS' Milk of Magnesia — the safe remedy for your child." Remember this — And A turays Say " When You Buy. Your child deserves it;'.for your own peace of mind, see that you get it — Gen-uine Phillips' Milk of Magnesia. Also in Tablet Form; Phillips' Milk of Magnesia Tab- - lets are now on sale at all drug stores everywhere. Each tiny tab- let isthe equivalent of :- _iteflsh11;74rAirch oz. PHILLIPS' eimarte.- O.K. BY ME "Fresh and mellow, lasting, too, // Dixie Plug is the smoke for you. I've tried them all and I'll agree That Dixie Plug's O.K. by me 1" LARGE PLUG 20c DIXIE PLUG SMOKING TOBACCO The "Lift" and Energy of Cod Liver Oil I PIGHTGERN15,' PLUS DAY! rM viTAMIN PEOPLE NEED eta EVERY GREATER EFFICIENCY Vitamins A and D, abundantly found in Scott's Emulsion, bolster up tired, Winter-worn bodies, restoring vitality and strength. But Scott's Emulsion gives you mores Emulsification—the minute breaking up of the particles—making for quicker assimilation, easier digestibility. Yet none of the virtues of pure cod liver oil are lost. One of the PLUS values you get only in Scott', Emulsion- SCOTT'S EMULSION THE COD LIVER OIL WITH THE PLUS VALUE For Sale by Your Druggist $A I BUILD BONES, r ri VITAMIN 0. NeatTNIWPRENGIN 055E80 ON ME! At the annual meeting of the Scout Association of New Bruns- wick, a Medal of Merit was present- ed to the Rt. Rev. E. A. LeBlanc, D.D.. Bishop of Saint John. The medal was a recognition of his promotion of Scouting in the church- es of his diocese, and arranging for the attendance of student priests at the Gilwell Scout training camps. • • • The 11,000 Scouts who participat- ed in the' Australian Jamboree, com- prised boys from twenty-three dif- • * * and Hungary. The East sent Scouts from India, Ceylon, Malaya, Dutch East Indies and Japan. The West was represented by Scouts from Can- ada and the United States. • * • The Boy Scouts of Portugal, have awarded the Cross of Merit to Mr. Hubert Martin, C.V.O., C.B.E., Dir- ector of the Boy Scouts' Internation- al Bureau, London, in recognition of his services to Porthguese Scouts, especially the Scouts of Madeira. ' After all, what is the efficiency of the green leaf—nature's miraculous mechanism for converting the gases of the air into wheat, apples, po- tatoes, sugar and beans? Also not' more than 1 or 2 per cent. All our by an exquisite piece of machin- ery, still largely a mystery, which does its work with units (leaves) each utilizing about the millionth part of a watt—not enough to drive the buzzing apparatus of a mosquito. For her own good reason Nature distributes her photoelectric cells over a vast area. The thousands of leaves on an oak are parts of an astonishing engineering design. If you are ever to drive the kitchen refrigerator by sunlight it will have to be with the aid of hundreds of cells spread out over a wide area. Despite the work of Bally and others in producing sugar from nothing but gas on which ultraviolet rays fall, Dr. Inman holds that we shall never be able to dispense with nature's vegetation. We need food, and the only commercially feasible way of getting it is to let sunlight synthesize sugars and starches and protiens in plants. Swift was right when he pointed out in "Gulliver's Travels" that the green cucumber stores light from the sun and that the light becomes visible by burning the pickle. He might have added that if the cucumber had been fed to a firefly the sun's light would have been released in another way. Thus considered the cow is a fine solar engine as it munches grass in a mea- dow. A photoelectric cell is a device SKIN BLEMISHES that converts ordinary light directly Vanish Before Physician's into electricity. Let the sun pour, Prescription down on a collection of cells numer.1 Those spots or pimples on your face our enough, and visions arise of ' —why let them go on tormenting you? trolley cars driven by sunbeams, of Like millions of others have done, you cities with electric lamps that ra In gwetorrid of your skin trouble through diate solar energy, of industry gear- Dr.D.Di'.Deinnlis.gb7toV;YlIpcianii; ed to the sun. The electrical en- Lion—known in many countries as gineer may not despair of realizing D.D.D. and now manufactured by such dreams. Still he is discourag- ed. An efficiency of not more than 2 per cent. in thus converting light into electricity is nothing to cheer about, Dr. 0. L. Inman, director of the Campana's Italian Balm chemists-- will bring you relief at once, and quick- ly restore your skin to health. All druggists sell D.D.),Trial size BSc Guaranteed to give instant relief or money refunded. SHE PLAYS ORGAN AT 75 YEARS Takes Kruschen to Keep Rheumatism Away Writing to tell how she keeps her activity, this wondttful old woman states: "My hands were becoming so crippled that I had to give up piano and organ playing—and almost en- tirely gave up knitting. I have been using Kruschen Salts for nearly two years, and am very pleased with the result. Last August 1 played two church services on the organ, and hope to do so again this August. My fingers are nearly straight, and quite supple, and I am 70. .1 have recommended Kruschen Salts to many people."—A. A. C. The six mineral salts of Kruschen have a direct effect upon the whole bloodstream, neutralizing uric acid, Which is the recognised cause of rheumatism. They also restore the eliminating organs to proper work- ing order, and so prevent constipa- tion, thereby checking the further formation of uric acid and other body poisons which undermine the health. An impromptu debate on the ques ion, "Resolved, that a fathom line is of greater use than the Seim stave," proved the feature of a so i al evening of the 1st Niagara- on-the-Lake Troop, held in historic old Navy Hall. Six Sea Scouts argu d, and 'the "fathom line" won by a point. * • A- mothers' Nnight was made a big event by the 118th Toronto (Eglington United Church) Troop- The mothers were shown just what happens at a Scout meeting, and to such good effect that later a Mothers' Auxiliary was organized. • • • The presentation of 40 Scout Pro- ficiency Badges by Ontario Provin- cial Commissioner W. J. Cairns, marked the annual banquet of the 107th Toronto (Grace Church-on- Hill) Troop. • • • A telephone rally scheme of the 5th Hamilton Troop, brings the boys together for any emergency in a very short time. Patrol Leaders are the key men. • • • The Humane Society of Edmon- ton, Alta., has offered to train Schuts in the care of animals. Those passing an examination will qualify for the Scout "Friend to Animals" Proficiency Badge. • • • Some 700 persons sat down to the annual banquet of the Toronto Scout Association, and heard an ad- dress by ex-Mayor W. J. Stewart. Mr. W. H. J. Tisdale was elected President of the association for 1935. • * • When Scout Alex Gordon of Sask- atoon, broke his arm, while hiking, Scout Kenneth Campbell set it in a temporary splint. The doctor later declared the setting to be the best example of amateur first aid he had ever seen. • • • Uniformed Scout ushers for the recent Zionist convention in To- WAR A NECESSITY English Scientist Holds Man Is Not .Naturally Warlike It is part of the militaristic and Fascist creeds that man is a fighting animal fundamentally no different from any savage, a creature whose natural combativeness must find an outlet in war. Heredity being what it is, it follows that to civilized man of today war is a biological and psychological necessity. Flow sound is this logic? The world is still full of savages. They ought to exhibit all the pugnacity and aggressiveness inseparable from a civilized nation striving by force of arms to achieve what its leaders conceive to be its manifest destiny. Dr. Gregory Bateson of St. John's College, Cambridge, England, holds that it is time for us to study the psychology of primitive, existing tribes and to discover if possible whether or not our ancestors were forever on the warpath, or, for that matter, especially savage. The Ara- penis of New Guinea, the Sulka, the - Zuni of Mexico are "almost entirely non-aggressive." In fact, Dr. Bate- son finds that most savage peoples have amalgamated war with their culture, so that fighting is governed by a series of rules like those of a football game. The Zulus and the Lae Wamba of New Guinea are among the very few savages known struggle and without knowing whether the milk will go to strength- en a charming and virtuous human being oh a vile rogue. Then electricity will give its gentle but unmistakable reminder that the world's work must be carried on. Human beings are continually roused from their reveries by elec- tricity, and there is a patent sense in which the telephone is but an- other form of electric tickler, and farming by the melancholy and vague eyes of,cows? The townsman, whose vote is so numerous, is easily led into thttiking farmers must be slow- witted and obstinate because they hob-nob so much with cows and sheep, whose expressions do not inspire con- fidence. If the stock farm animals had been more resolute and active in mien, the long sacrifice of agriculture might never have been so commonly accepted. No one again can measure, though docile research students across the Atlantic. will probably be sent to try, how far the new respect for agri- culture owes its rise to the new the culpable—who have made pop- ular, through their powerful medium, a view of country life which does not inspire politicans with sufficient awe. If the countryside is allowed to look in print as a rather jolly and easy-going and slow-moving place, to which city dwellers repair to refresh their energies for their daily contests with each other, few people are- like- ly to be properly preoccupied with its real needs. It meat be shown to be a stern a factory as any, losing no titre in roundabout or zigzag walks from field to dairy or from orchard to sty, with everybody intent on his job, chewing the cud to the latest rhythm pattern of which psychology approves And a beginning is being made with electric ticklers, which are now established in Germany tinder the auspices of the Kindness to An- imals Movement there. These tickl- ers are highly recommended for cows; but there is a discreet silence about their effect upon bulls. Farm- ing is a- skilled calling. POWER FROM SUNLIGHT Photoelectric Cells May Make It Available To Men C. F. Kettering Foundation for the Study of Chlorophyl and Photosyn- thesis in Antioch College, regards this argument with complacency. Winnipeg Housing Body Profit $11,453 Winnipeg. — Despite unfavorable conditions, the Winnipeg Housing Commission made a net profit of $11,453 in 1934, it was shown re- cently at the annual meeting. The Commission urged a public policy of loaning money for rehabilitation purposes, which now is being con- sidered by the civic housing com- mittee. Classified Advertising PATENTS A N OFFER TO EVERY INVENTOR. .ist of wanted inventions and full lioornation sera free. The n:,msay Company, World Patent A ltOrl c5t- 413 Bank Street, Ottawa. Canada 'UNITE WYANDOTTES F A MOUS Superior Fischel Strain. Closely feathered for severe eath- er. Yellow skin early broiler: Brown egg: Neuhausers, Chatham, Ontario. $ $ I FOE NOUN OLD GOLD 0 your llTA1.^.,,L id. 1, the highest or pr vicin nufmor. Deal direct with too largest refiners of precious metal' svraP in Canada. The Williams Gold Refining Cu., Ltd., Assayers. Smelters and Refiners. Box 219A. Fort Elle. North. (1111. is SITUATION VACANT—MALE ON'T be a job hunter.—Start your own business on our oapital. No hard tittles; no lay-offs: always your own boss. Hundreds average $3,000 to $5,000 annual sales year after .year. We supply stacks, equipment on erewt. 200 home necessities. Selling experience unnecessary. Wonderful opportunity to own Preasant, dignified profitable busi- ness backed by world wIdg industry. Write Rawleigh, Dept, 1000, 41105 Richelieu, Montreal, P.Q. Artists' and Authors' Service Send a three cent stamped en- velope for information on our MONTHLY BULLETIN SER- VICE to Artists and Authors, listing • up-to-date information "WHERE AND WHAT ' TO SELL Canadian and International Art and Literary Contests Yearly subscription, One Dollar Sample Sheet, Ten Cents GIFF BAKER 39 LEE AVENUE TORONTO, ONT to ethnology who fight somewhat after the -European fashion. Culture and Warfare From all this Dr. Bateson con- cludes that "we hannot ascribe Eu- ropean warfare directly to man's inhate aggressiveness." He sees some cultural factor at work "which effectively determines whether a community shall habitually fight and what sort of fighting it shall have." How far behavior patterns are in- herited no one knows. It is certain that our savage ancestors were both assertive and submissive. No one cart tell which of these two urges, or instincts, is dominant in peace or war. Or, as Dr. Bateson puts it: "In peacetime either or both of these may be expressed in digging potatoes or in selling stocks and shares; and in the World War there were as many men whose submiss- iveness, willingness to die gamely, led them to the business of killing as there were men whose assertive- -ness led them to the business of be- ing killed." Yet Bateson is no pacifist. He thinks that children should be pro- tected from fear.. "But how are we to achieve this if we behave as if we were afraid, ourselves, of pre- paring for war?" Electric Tickler Speeds Up Cows (London Times) The day has gone by for hitting cows resounding thwacks on their large plane surfaces. These relics of pastoral man are all very well in comic strips and synthetic animals films; but in real life it is beneath the dignity of the modern organized farmer, and far beneath his good nature, to strike these fairly dumb animals instead of making use of the latest improvements of science. The farm of tomorrow will. have no sticks, but it will have the elec- tric tickler—for use when a cow stays overlong by a gate in pensive mood, wondering if she is morally justified in yielding milk without a The number of hogs graded in Canada during the first week of 1935 was 40,863 an increase of 2,- 443 over the corresponding week of 1914. Relieved/ Mrs. Edward James' baby had two teeth when less than three mouths old. She writes: "He has 18 now and I can truthfully say that giving him Baby's Own Tab- lets while cutting his teeth kept him fit and well". Teething is a restless feverish tires for babies but the little one ran always be soothed and the fever reduced by giving sweet, safe Baby's Own Tablets. Very easy to take, no after effects. Price 25i:everywhere. BABY'S OWN 'TABLETS 126 British Empire. Europe was repres- Visitors who see dairies in which ented by contingents from England, the machinery is not only compli-Scotland, Ireland, Belgium, France cated but electrical and so perhaps lethal, go away in a chastened and less arrogant frame of mind, prepar- ed to believe that the farm has the makings of a factory and so deserves legislative encouragement and re- spect. We may expect, on the analogy of what happens elsewhere, to see the Oxford Book of English Verse call- ed in by the National Farmers' Un- ion, with censure of their Oxfordshire Branch, because of the detrimental influence of the pastoral poets--Mil- ton, himself, the townsman, among ferent countries or parts of the mechanization of the farm. ronto, were supplied by the 59th To- so are sit bells. route (Hebrew) Scout Troop. It has been excellently observed that nothing would astonish the early Selected Patrol_ Leaders will as Victorians more than to have been usual act as ushers-at the opening told that a few decades would see of the Ontario went. - Provincial par /i n. their sons or grandsons, whatever , their wealth and importance, running • • • - to answer bells, even in the middle The Cubs and Scouts of the 74th of their, meals, like footmen; and yet Toronto Group (Chalmer's Presby- the telephone has had no difficulty in terian) have been allotted a section thus levelling up humanity. of the church galley, and are en- , So there can be no question about couraged to attend services in a l treating cows in a derogatory man- body, under their Cubmaster and nor; indeed, the electric tickler will Scoutmaster. Attendance "points" , combine- many of the costly advan- are credited in the pack and troop tages of electric treatment. It will competitions. make them a little more spry, and • • • taking them all in all they could do Fijian Boy Scouts at the recent with it., Australian Jamboree presented Lord Who can tell—certainly the best Baden-Powell with a whale's tooth. statistich cannot—the harm done to Scouts from Malaya gave him a blow-pipe and a water buffalo horn. Catarrhal Deafness May Be Overcome If you have catarrhal deafness or head noises go to your druggist and get 1 oz. Parmint (double strength) and add to it pint of hot water and a little sugar. Take 1 table- spoonful four times a day. This will often bring quick relief from the distressing head noises._ Clogged nostrils should open, breath- ing become easy and the mucous • stop dropping into the throat. It is easy to prepare, costs little and is pleasant to take. Anyone who has catarrhal deafness or head noises should give this prescription a trial. Handwriting Reveals Character ! This Fascinating New Chart Shows How! Everyone should have a copy of THE GRAPHOCHART 100 Illustrations SIMPLE! — 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 . . . It is not only a very fascinating game, but it is extremely practical. Copies sent Post Free for 12c each THE GRAPHOCHART, Room 421, 73 Adelaide W., Toronto, Ont.