HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1921-7-21, Page 71101.1 10111 111 040101114. alrl Ili Ilk% MII ala ar ilia' ail► VOW.
if, HEALTH ,C
.EDU A.
�ION
BY DR. J. J. MIDDLETON
' Provincial Board of Health, Ontario
ar ilk, M i ton will 6 'ad. o.a s or a
id9 a 1 9 6+.. t.. A w, Quaittonp on Public) Health mai
tens through this colupin. M4reali hila at the.l'arttament Biclgit,
41/1 Toronto.
Milovsa,ms, lz ► =k olu vies Sm. VOW. We V& VS net levees. via psi in
Growing children need plenty" of:
good nourishing food. To have this
food• asellniluted properly the child
Should be taught regular hours for
Not .on school
(toe() host meal at sc 1
lyd s.a e o
improve the health anal' p'hys10a1 eon
dition of the chlldl'en, but a chance
is thereby given to teach them to ent
properly, not to belt their food down
Dating, and its stomach given a rest but to chew it well and so put no over
'between meals, Continuous -eating of work on vhe stomach in trying to pee -
candies, nuts, fruit, etc., interfere ,pare the food for digestion. There will
with the digestive processes la the also ibe an opportunity for the teacher
young, and yet the average child', if to demonstrate to the 'pupils the ed -
not trained, will eat almost anything vantage of o1eaullnces in the cooking,
he can get hold of In the way of preparing and.sereitsg of food,, and
sweetmeats. general hygienic surroundings, Food
When the child is at school there as ,should' be shown ipreterited' from flies,
less likelihood of it getting too much and why it should be so protected;
to eat In fact, through the school ohildren should also be told the most
•day the tendency is in the other direr- important food products, and why one
tion. Sometimes !breakfast is rather kind of food is more valuable then
hastily eaten in the Mornings, espe- another front a standpoint of nour-
eially if the child lives in the country ishment, Little facts can be brought
and has some distance to go to school. ]tome to children much• more easily
'There is not enough time at the noon and readily than to adults --for the.
recess to let the child go home for young brain is receptivo, and has not
dinar, so its lunch is sent with it, yet developed any of those prejudices
and eaten at the school building, This that often 'aro -unreasonably formed
is not a good plan, for several reasons. Into in life. .
In the first place there is seldom a At the mid-day school meal also, a
suitable place provided in country word or,two could be told the children
schools for the children to eat their about vitatnines, those essential but
lunches, and the surroundings are veiny small elements in natural foods
'often not hygienic. L have just read that keep people of all ages well
n recommendation from the Medical These vitant•ines are contained in fresh
'Officer of Health of a rural district foods such as fresh milk, fruits, etc
for hand -basins, soap, towels, etc., for It is easy to see what good results
the use of the pupils during the laid- could be expected from such a mid-
day recess, The M.O.B. states that as day ureal and little talks to the chit•
-nearly every one of the pupils bring dren at the finish. This feature should
i+heir lunch to school, these facilities ,ae as much a necessity in rural schools
:for washing aro -badly needed. It is as the blackboard and chalk, and. no
not entirely, hcwsever, because there is school however far back in the coon
is lade of facilities for eating that the try should be without it.
raid -day cold lunch is objectionable. Too often the question• of what to
A warns' meal freshly cooked is much eat, and how to eat, is neglected in
more nourishing and sustaining to a the home circle. Many a fancily there
little schoolboy or girl .than a cold is in the eoutltry where the mother,
lunch could ,be. Children need a --hot hot •onfrhes to .attend to the children
meal at•mid-day, because they •assinu- and the ihousework but .she also •cooks
late food quieker than grown-ups; and food for the dive stock, feeds:. and
'must be fed oftener,. It is too long a tends' the • chickens- sad many of -the
time between breakfast and the after- other 'small but necessary jabs that
noon meal when the school children have to be done at a farm.
get home. The children must obviously be neg-
In some schools in the province hot locted when such a state of affairs ex -
mid -day meals are prepared for the ists, and it often exists 'because the
children, but to make the scheme a work 'has to be done and there is no-
•doeided .success the teachers who body but the mother to de it. Every
undertake the cooking should have a father of a family in the country
certificate showing that they have should be urged to provide leisure for
taken a course in dietetics. Assis- his wife to attend to the proper cook-
tance could be given by some of the ing and choice of meals for the an -
senior pupils. This arrangement is dren. These meals are often prepared
excellent, for it not only provides ad- hurriedly, .and. with no thought as to
ditional help in attending to the serv- their nutritional value; it is purely a
ing of the food, ;bat also teaches the question of expediency, so mucin other
bigger girls holy to cook and prepare drudgery has to be done. This con- 1
dmany lcinds of dishes. Thus they are inion of things should not be. Every
ortified with actual first-hand exper- attention should be given to the chil- c
Mute in one of the most important dren'c feeding up till they are five
features of housekeeping:, before they years of age, and ready to start school,
leave school at all, A mother, should regard the feeding
In many rural seati.gps, however, of hor children asone of, if not the p
there are no such mid-day i eale pro- most important tasks in her daily
Tided by the school staff for the eltii- round of work, and nothing else should
dren, and it is to encourage the salmi she allow to interfere with it.
trustees and people in ,:every rural The way a child. is fed in the first
district to urge the necessity for this five years of life has a large bearing
much-needed feature in school life, on its physical condition in years to
that this article is written. come.
'THREE NEW SECRETS
ABOUT HUMAN FOUP
EY A CEL EERI TED 'ENG-
LISH PHYSICIAN, •
Mysterious Food Elements Es -
.a
seratial to Our Well -Being,
Very Easily Overlooked.
Nature has jtint yielded up to eelence
three new aeecrets. about the food we
eat,
These aeorets are vital. Tltoy re-
volutionize all aur ideas about food,
and thoy make it probable that we
stall soon be able to avoid maty of
the dangers and diseases Wilke nave
troubled us during past years,
As is usually the way with scientific
discaverles, the secrets• have been
given rather unappetising names,
They"are called "Vitamin() A, Vita -
mine 13, and Vitamin& 0." Moreover,
though we know now that these curi-
ous things exist, we de not, as yet,
know what they are. Na one has' ever
seen them; no ono has ever tasted
them. ' All—absolutely all—ghat 'is•
known about then, is that they are
essential to health. For if an animal
or a man Is fed on food which lacks
them, disease and death follow,
Traced, But Not Seen.
They were not ny ,.asking,
They were found by that kind of
guesswork which is really not guess-
work at all, but a process- of deduc-
tion from things known to things• un-
known, the method which Sherlock
Holmes; employed ate brilliantly.
Medical men noticed that. some
kinds of food—for example, butter—
made healthy children when given in
one form, and failed tomake healthy
children when glveu in another forst—
for example, margarine, with no ant -
mai fat in 1t, It was. fair to snppose
that the change in the form of the
food had taken away from it some-
thing vital to lite. That something is
a• "Vitamine,"
It was taught In the old days that
there were:' four ;absolutely•essential
.elements• In-3turnam food—flesh ele-
ments, starch.elentents•, and fat -and
salts. ' But experiment` shtowed that
youn'g,anintais fed on these four ele-
ments 1n, a carefully -purified state did
not grow, and indeed wasted away. So
that there remained a fifth element
which was present in unverified food,
but might be absent in the purified.
A little, a very little, light has been
cast on this subject ub
j t i ss far-off days by
the discovery that sailors who gat no
fresh vegetables developed scurvy.
Thus it was ordered by the Board of
Trade that every ship should carry a
supply of line -juice, and that sailors
should have this• or fresh vegetables
their diet. It had also been sug-
gested in connection with a disease
ailed beri-bort., a curious kind of
wasting paralyses very co•ntmou in the
East, that it arose in consequence of
eating polished rice—that la, rice de-
rived of its husks,
What "Vita" Are.
•
Famous Feralds Recovered
by India.
Gem collectors are stil1 regretting
the fact that by all act of the Govern-
ment of India two famous emeralds
rich in history were not included in
the recent' sato. by Cbristie!s• of the
jewel collection of the late Herbert
Maxwell' Stuart, says a .uonclen des-
patch. The emeralds originally were
in the royal treasure at Lahore, to-
gether with the great lioh-1-poor dia-
mond, now in the British Imperial re-
galia, when the Punjab was annexed
in 1849.
These emeralds, each carved from a
single stone, represented a bow ring
and a cup, and were made for the Em-
peror Shall Jebau. The Governor -Gen -
oral at the period of annexation was
permitted to. purchase these curious
at0u8 .
They wore carried off by Nadir Shah
after tho sacic of Delhi in 1739. In
1813 they were restored to India by
the fugitive Shah, Sujah, surrendering
them to ltanjlt Sing at Lahore. They
were found there with the ICoh-i-noon
on the torminatic:l of the second Silch
war in 1849 and purchased by Lord
Dalhousie, then Governor-cleterai. Tho
bow ring was used by the Great. Mo-
gul to protect the joint and ball of his
lett thumb when the drawn bow string
was used as a patch box by 0110 0f his
fair ladies,
The emeralds were an. loan exhibi-
tion at the Victoria and Albert Mti-
senm when the war broke out and
with other treasures were buried as
is safeguard against unloolced for
eventualities, After the war the fami-
ly to which they be1•ongod found it
necesaa.ry to dlsose Of these jewels
aid arrangements• were made for their.
sal° at Christie's, but the Indian Gov-
ernment heard about it and decided
that tiro jewels rightly belonged to
1------4-= rft by the
experience ofothers
—which has taught thousands
that Instant Psi tum. is better'
for 11,z�
ma
c%
health >ti
than
tearr
�fx a;
r
POSTU,2. has a Cla Hrt;; z.'
similar
t.
coffee, 1
tans nothing that can d "��.,.
health arid, comfort. .
.N__.
1
n
that country and began to negotiate
for their purchase.
The offer which was made was ac-
ceptable to Christie's client and be-
fore long the historic jewels will be
back 111 their old home, much to the
regret of wealthy collectors who had
liad their oyes• on them for some time
pest.
Tanned Truth.
A tanned complexion snakes the
plain person good-looking, • and tete
good-looking better looping. We. all
like to be sun -burned, but not all of us
know how the tan comes,
The truth is that thousands of the
These two discoveries really opened
the way to the new work, but their full
importance was not at first under-
stood.
We may pass over the history of the
experiment's and come to the secrets
themselves. ''Vitantinc A is also called
"Fat-Soluable A," because it la pre-
sent in eome kinds of fat. The richest
stores of it are in butter and the yolk
of eggs, but it is also present in varl-
ous animal oils. It la not present in
much abundance in1•vegetable one, and
so margarine made Prom vegetable
and not from animal fats will contain
little or none—an important matter in
'these days',
Lard, too, contains very little of it,
Animals which are riot getting enough
P at-Soluable A do not grow, and be -
me weak and liable to disee,ee, es -
Molly of tite'eyes. They may be -
me almost totally blind, and soma
e diseases in men aro now traced
wrong kinds of (Ilea
The second s Onat is spoken of as
Water Soluable 13," because the nn -
own ,substance 'dissolves -in water,
us water in which a cabbage has
en boiled will contain it, and yet the
bbage. itself, after boiling, will not,
Is is the substance the absence of
bclt from the rice -grain causes berl-
ri. It is present in vartcnit grains,
well as in many vegetables.
Thus bread made of white -meal is
Relent, while whale -meal bread con-
na the Vitamine, The "19" sub -
anon is also found In peas and len-
and beans., and in eggs and yeast,
at is rather deficient Int ft, and so
milk, fish, and cheese,
he final secret, "C," IS the sub -
neo the, lack of which produces
rvy. The substances which contain
s element in the largest amount are
sit vegetables, raw cabbage leaves,
fur
juice, and the juices of lemons•
c1 oraugea The potato is; lass effec-
e, and cooked foods are much less
ful than raw ones, Dried vege-
les• are useless, and milk and meat
of great utility,
ore recent work has suggested
t rickets is. also a so-called "de-
ercy" disease, and some doctors
o gong the length of saying that
habit of rising tinned and frozen.
1 15 a bad one, because these arti-
may contain leas of the ntysteri-
elements than fresh rood, But the
tome oat this point is far from eon-
ive,
stat does stent to be certain ie• that
over
shotfid\alm at a "well -bal-
es" dietary, That is to' easy, we•
t to' vary our rood ae much as
hie, tryling to include, In our diet
Y different elements, The war
e
this dlRlmnit, and go now do the
prices. Yet the dilftetiittaa� are •
really great. If butter cannot be
ht, margarine may be obtained,
lr has in It a proportfou, of animal
°,g„ milk or oroam, Also drip -
cam be tared as a aubs•titute. This
roe enough of the "A" 010feeint,
co
pe
co
etiny bloodvessels beneath the skin i to
have to be ruptured before we can tan.
The heat rays of the sun first inflame �'•
and then rupture Seem. The skin can- an
not then resist the heat. The cooling Th
shield beneath tho skin hos gone, and
browning tykes place.
Those unfortunate folk whose com-
plexion0 chonge to a vivid rod insten.d
et an attractive brown have, contrary
to the popular notice, tough, thick
skins. 7'hc latter resist the rays, and
there is surface inflammation instead
of browning.
Those whose noses peel have skins.
in winioh the perspiration duets are
clogged, Thus there is nothing to
"olil" the dein, and it peels because it
is dry
Finally—this' will be news to many
—only the white races tan, scorch, peel
or blister from the action of the sun,
A blade man will get much hotter than
a white man, because black skins ab-
sorb the heat and pass it beneath the.
skin, It has no external effect.
Freckles• are but tan in patches, due
to a varying thickaness• of the skin,
More than 100,000 ,pounds of snails
are enten every day by the residents
of Paris,
ii ere'• l a T1„c+ 4 r 1,,,
For ) +
Sold. bygrocers ette. -where
agen-
be
ca
Th
tot
be
10
tea
tai
sta
Me
are
T
s•ta
ecu
tit
Inc
fu
an
tiv
use
tab
not
M
tha
fief
hay
0111
foe
ales
oats
evil
clue
VV
atm
eugh
toss
pian
,n
ad
high
1101
tenni,
wine
fat—
rang
soca
bent Forget the Prelt.
Tile "13" element con be obtainet by
eating brown breadstand r
" o r
"standard."
bread instead Of tato white Variety,
and 1ny being peas and lentils, Flttetl-
ly, fee* fruit, Oratrgas for examj)le,.
01311 be added 0a0aSienally to the diet,
In 0113 wily We shall enadre .ouraelvwoo
anti oiif children enough p9 the subtle
elemoltte-11Poe wltloli, it would oppear,
health and et0 tiigtit ea largely dePet5d,
The way theee, eubstafteee were
preyed to exist 'Wes this. Pimples anti
other cele iia were; fed on 8•ay, vege•
table niarg'anine, They became Crean
Icily weaker, Then a little annual fat,
eV nlflk at' batter, Wile' added t0 their
fed. ,At once they became well and
(trcng again, It .wasclear that the
animal fat contained time vital sub,
Canoe not pr5apmt in the vegetable
fat, That substance Was too Small 10
cfee, but it oertalnly did exist, It was
called "A," Ana iso with the others.
a
Personal Effort.
"Tito b2st thing to give to your ene-
my to fo/givenees; to an Opl0cnent,
tolerance; to a friend, you• heart; to
your child, a good example; to e fath-
er, deference; to your mother, con-
duct that will make her proud of you;
to yourself, respect; to all , men,
charity."-13alfour,
We often hear the remark: "This
o1 that person has. a wonderful brain,"
It is assumed that it is comparatively
easy for them to do big things in the
business world, to ornate marvelous•
inventions far the benefit of mankind,
to make wonclerfnt scientific discover-
ies, and to produce works of art that
endure through many generations,
The masses conclude that these tic.
eomplishncn s, are easy for these
people because •they naturally are so
gifted and talented. Iinowledge and
wisdom never come to any man or
woman as a free gift. Sometime,
somewhere, .they have given personal
effort, and in accordance with immut-
able and ever operative laws' of nature
they have received :their reward in per-
manent soul acquisition, and, incident-
ally, temporary, material benefits• for
themselves.
No achievement is possible, ne un-
foldment of the soul Is possible with-
out labor, without effort, indeed there
would be more justice ane equity in
economics if labor could be establish-
ed as the measure of all values,
He who has acquired knowledge,
and wisdom, and power, 19 under a
personal obligation rightly to use and
disseminate them. These acquisitions'
cannot be used for • the highest good,
and to attain souid unfoldment.
• Thus we see we oannat deplete oar'
stock • of knowledge and wisdom, for
the more we give the more we receive.
The man who is always striving to
take advantage of his' neighbor Is•
never a benefactor t0 the race, how,
ever much he may advertise his chari-
ties.
CHOLERA -
INEANTUl
Cholera infantum is one of the fatal
ailments. of childhood- It is a trouble
that comes on suddenly, especially
during the summer mouths, and nn -
less prompt action is taken the little
one may soon be beyond aid. Baby's
Own Tablets are an ideal medicine in
warding off this trouble, They regu-
late the bowele and sweeten the stom-
ach and time. prevent all the dreaded
summer- complaints. Concerning them
Mrs. Fred Rose, of South Bay, Ont„
says: "I Leel Baby's Own Tablets
saved the life of our baby whoa she
had cholera infantum and I would not
be without them." The Tablets are
sold by medicine dealere or by mail
at 25 cents a box from The Dr, Wil.
trams' Medicine Ca, Brookville, Ont.
The Will to Work.
It is strange to find the belief ear-
vlving anywhere that those who eft in
the shade, twiddling their thumbs, and
twaddling with their tongues, deserve
pay for it, as though they worked and
produced.
The rule of labor its the underpin-
ming of the universe. The Creator
himself set the example. He tolled
and He rested. He is the "Master of
every trade." Man, made in His,
image, can hardly expect divhne favor
to rest upon sloth.
On every hand, however, we see,
people trying tc crawl under or over
or around that uncomfortable prescrip-
tion about earning one's bread in the
sweat of one's brow. On the dance -
floor the two-step and tha one-step
may conte and go; but in the work-
shop the sidestep and the sidostepper
are always with us,
Young meal are hunting for short
cuts to wealth. The ,shortest cut is
the straight line of responsibility and
duty and good faith with one's etnploy-
81'.
If your employer happens to be your
owtt self, theme are certain things. you
owe yourself just as much as tisougdt
somebody else hired you, You owe it
to yourself to report for the day's
work fit to do It. You owe it to your-
self to keep your appointments at the
trine set far •them.. You owe it to your-
self to be steadily industrious, You
cannot in self-respect take money that
you have not Darned nor demand a
fabulous income for a fiotitfous effort,
Creation's• ory goes• up on high •
From age to cheated ago;
Send us the men who do the work
For which they draw the wage!
There are men, out ofemployment
this morning' who are the victim•3 of
0oenomic trial -erase and readjustment,
They tiiave been caught betwixt grind-
ing millstones, of oirelunatatnce They
deserve sympathy and a hearing and
an opportunity. That opportunity is
likely to conte, coon and audd'eitly, if
they hold on;
But there are others who deserve no
sympathy. They deliberately elected
to he sills. They defied God's, law---,
they condemned likewise ail concilia-
tion and consideration that were not
of their own selfish ,and greedy dic-
tatorship.
Certainly the chance; to carat a lin-
ing—which is the greatest Magic bless.
11(1 that is vouchsafed lnatilrind--ought
to go to those who have the will t0
work and neat the desire to -stir up in+
snt'rectiotlary diecanteni and make
trouble its the peace -loving, 1aw,abid-
Ing ranlrs• of the inclustrietin who
"know of 'toil and the end of toll; they
latent Gods law ds 1118111,"
Linen enfabltca flaw been beau.
found
1
d n
tombs bhoueattds sof genre old,
Minerd'a Liniment fel Dandruff,
'MU ,fjjAlg`jl Y 111,11
HIS THE J►ESt11 CiJANrCE
rt
SAJW9W03 Vu11 of Life, and
.E'aaflrgy~ aflurefi Aro Weak
1091(1 Jiloadler3s,
Some mets seen to have 811 the. luck,
If there are any good things going
these Iona seem to get them. If they
are b l
IIanO,•a Mem they are Al1CL'De'aflll;
11 they are worts -nen they get the fore-
man's job, They 11nvo .the power of
influencing people.
The same •]s true of women, Sonne
have the charm that makes men seek
then Out; others are neglected. But
this lo; not luolc, It ie due to a pertness
al gift --vitality. Men and women of
this sort are never wea''lc, puny In-
vallis. They may 'not bo big, but they
aro full of life and energy, Tho whole
thing is a matter 01 good blood, good
nerves and good health. Everyone
would wish to bo like this and the
qualitice that make for vitality and
energy are purely a matter of health.
By building up the blood and nerves,
sleetrl'ess.uess, want of energy, weak-
ness of the. back, headaches and the
imeflaetual port at presence whtch real-
ly comes front weakness can be -got
rid of, Dr, Williams' Pink Pille have
wade many weak, tined mon, vigorous,
and many pale dejected girls and wo-
men•, rosy and attractive, by huproy-
Ing their blood and toning up their'
nerves. If you are weak, 10 '-spirited
or unhealthy, try Dr, Williams' Pink
Pies' and note -their beneficial effect.
You can get these pills through any
medicine dealer or by mail at 50 cents
a box or six boxes for $2,50 from Tho
Dr, Williams' Medicine Co., Brookville,
Out,
}
Gray Hued Germany.
The world is still trying to mak
Its mind about the actual Condit
In Germany. There have been
circumstantial stories.
One, German -inspired, Inas ru
the general effect that Germans
without hope or ambition, that the
den of reparations 4s crushing
that Germany is •a mere shell, war
for the. Red touch• to crumble. .
The -others story,•.inspired`br
late -enemies, •.holds'. that 'German
prosperous; is hard at work and'
she is making ready to'conquer w
markets with her exports and s
baok to "a place in the sun" as
as she can wheedle the Allies or t
them out of the reparations, in
or in part.
The exact truth is as hard to de
mine as the line thatdivides light
shadow. It lies somewhere about in
way between the two extreme rep
sentations, according to a car
analysis by Colonel Edward M. Hou
Germany is neither all black nor
white—she is gray,
Colonel House shows that Germa
is in about the same situation as of
nations of the world—only more
The ikblighting aftermath of war
world wide. It 4s a deep blight
Germany, and deepening it are
troubles that camp with losing the
;gentle gamble the Germans made
the war.
Germany did not escape from w
•hurts; she was deeply hurt. Her de
are dead and her substance was w
ted, The reparations are a burd
and an outraged, world intended th
should be.
Colonel House believes that G
many can pay the indemnity, but t
yoke of debt will be heavy, He.
Heves that she needs, first, cobra
and then a little 'help from the E
tanto. Her need' for courage is
great ars, if not greater than, her nee
for help. Germany can pay, but s
cannot 'afford' the luxury of strik
and labor upheavals while she is abo
it.
Germany has been put in bonds
for her sins, but she has certain item .m
on the credit side that are worth us
There is productive labor and' plea
of it. iShe has overcome :bolshevism
but still' shudders about it. She ha
less unemployment to -day than an
other considerable nation; food
plenty and getting cheaper, and labo
is productive and there are few strike
On the other hand, rehabilitatio
has been exaggerated. True, she hano more than 400,000 unemployed
where England and America have to
times that number. Bub she is carry
ing tens of thousands on rail an
other Government payrolls where the
are not needed, lost •some worse thin
happen,
Germany has come a long way .bac
since 1919, but has a longer way to g
'before she roaches her status of 1914
Her financial condition is desperate
well-nigh as bad as that ofi9ussta
Her great foreign trade has dwindled
to a quarter of its 1913 figures, He
Russian trade is gone; that wit
France and Poland and Austro -Hurt
gary is hardly more than a shadow.
Germany, however, is by no mean
a total loss. It is possible, even prob-
able, that she must' have help, It ma
be that the day will Some when th
Entente will see and understand this
But Germany must first allow that she
has es much of a will to work and to
pay as she once had in her will to war.
cup
ions
two
n to
are
bur-
-and
ting
her
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that
orld
tart
con
rick
whole
ter -
and
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all
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her
so.
is
in
the
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az-
ad
as -
en,
ey
er-
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.be-
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Y
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•
A Little Wisdom.
Anger ages and weary wears,
Fret over the past and you'll fail In
the future.
Be slow enough,'aud quick enough,
to be sure.
He 'who swells in prosperity will
shrink lit adversity.
Strong language is often- the prop
for a weak cause.
The only way to keep a secret is to
say nothing,
g
,
Don't let the only spur to your wo1'Ic
be your employer's' eyes.
BeWaro of too puffed up o, 011150 of
your own worth and consequence,
Minard's Liniment for Burns, etc,
Absence :fl'ofn church was a punish-
able effence in the seventeenth Oen.
they,
One-quarter of the income tux of
the Halted Kingdom, is eolteetad in
London,
Here and There 'With• t tt)
Boy Scouts.
AToronto toy, now resident In Bur.
faro, N.Y where. he is n 111einbe1' 01 a
troop of the Soy Sooute of Amerloa,
recently won the ohamplonahlp tot'
bugling ' Inc Spout meet in Duff'alo, He
is Bertram G, IIarrie, aged 12, and a
grandson. of Mr, and Ml's. S, I., Taube;
of I•''turkdal.e Mans Dna, well-known
cltieens of Toronto,
On Dominion Day Oshawa, Whitby
and Thornton'a• Oernera• Trope anal a
few boyas from tine 1st ,Newcastle
Troop "rallied" et Oshawa for inspec-
tion
nspe• -tion and field dasy sports, They were
lmnpected by Mr. 11, S, MOLaugltlin,
who, with 001. Orlorso'n and Major
Alfred Made, the letter greetdont of
tite Oshawa Boy Scouts Assceia•tian,
also addressee them on their appear-
ance and their worlc,
Exeter recently had :s real ltoy Scout
church service. The members or the
1st Exeter Troop occupied the choir
loft of Cason: Prasbytert'aie Church—
and sang too. Patrol Leader Stuart
Stanbury presided at the organ and
played all tho ilymn%and accompanied
the soloists,. Three other Secrets, Bob
Gambian, Tom"lCay and I(eeeth Stan -
bury addea the strains of violins' to
the singing, while Beb Gambrel played
the offertory colo, Mr. J. G. Stenbury,
President of the Troop Committee, had
charge of the service, Field Secretary
Davison of Provincial Headquarters
Staff giving the address 00, "Citizen-
ship as Built Up by Scouting." Scout-
master Thomas Pryde was also as-
sociated with Meseta Stanbury .and
Dayison on the platforms.
A garden party recently arranged by
members of the troop and its friends
netted the 3rd St, Catharines. Troop
tneaeury a nice amount for its camp
fund.)). There was an excellent attend-
ance in spite of many counter Melee -
tierce in the city on the fright the party
was put on,
An interesting ceremony took place
on the steps of St. Paul's Anglican
Church, Stratford, a few evenings ago,
when. the troop charter wee presented
to the 1st Stratford Troop, Mayor
Gregory and Lt, -Col, J. L. Youngs,
M.C., officiated at the ceremony. Prised
were u.ieo presented to the Scouts who
made an exoelient 'record 413 the Do-
minion ride competition, They troop
1st also ' very.prolletent along many
other lines.
Ontario's two largest ' Boy 'Scout
camps are now in full swing. They are
the Selkirk Camp of the Hamilton As-
sedation clown on Lake Erie and the
Black Rapids Camp of the Ottawa As-
s0olatlon, Approximately 100 boys a
week w111 be taken care of in the form-
er, ti
, while the attendance tten
a tc
a atth
e Ot-
tawa camp fa running about 75 Scouts
per week. Both eamps. will continue
until the encs of August and will have
taken care of many hundreds of boys
before they finally close down. Be-
sides• recreational work, both camps•
are oarrying full programmes of edu-
cational feattu'es.
A training Course for Roman Cath-
olic sten intending to take up the worcic
of Scoutmasters is being conducted at
the St. John Industrial nenoal, Toren.
to, The first class consisted of a dozen
young ntentbets of the Ch'rectian
Brotherhood,
ASPIRIN
"Bayer" only is Genuine
DID 'HRR TWICE
FOR Hn RSA ,Y,
9
LETRIS ENTHUSIASTIC X11'
PRAISE OF TANL.AC.
Feels Full of Energy An'the
Tiiine Now, Ski's Hamiltoln
tt�r
1t'liQn.
"Well, I don't know what It 11), butt
utero'. sctnetiilng about Tanlao than
certainly deer the work," said A. Lett
ris,181 Queen St North, Hamilton, Ont,1
Mr, Letris is a well-known printer and
hes been with the Grimes PrintingOo,I
for nine years,
"Yes air, I can reoommena Tanlac,
for it this straightened 1130 out twice
and I believe it will help anyone glso
who trios it. Two years ago I took
the medicine and It fixed me up 1n fine
shape and 1 folt good until a little
white buck when 1 commenced to feel
randown. I got to where I just had
Lo drive myself at lay work and, as
my appetite was gone, I seemed to go
down hill all the time instead of get-
ting better,
"Well, 1 got the some Tanlac and It
wasn't long until my appetite had a
bow start 1 have just finished my.
second bottle now and I can Cat any-
thing at any time without its hurting
ate. That tired leeling is gone and
I' feel full of energy all the time. Tan-
lao is all that is claimed for it and
it certainly is the medicine for me."
Tanlac is sold by leading druggists
everywhere. Advt.
When It Pours.
There are profiteers among outer
ranks than capitalists, and during a
certain boom a particular grade of
workman was receiving very high
wages indeed.
B111 I•Ioages' returned from work one
Saturaday night, and drew a big
bundle of notes out of his pocket,
"How.mueh do you want this week.
Jane?" he asked his wife genially,
"Good gracious, 33111, give us a
chance," the wife remonstrated; "I
alert 'hardly' got started on last week's
yeti"
MONEY ORDERS
• A Dominion -Depress. Money Order
for five- dollars costs three cents.
London has adopted' Verdun, as well
as several villages in the Meuse Val-
ley.
Minard's Liniment Relieves Neuralgia
There are a million and' a half Jews
in New York, es many as in ali the
rest of the United States, and a tent's
of all the Jews in the world.
Pioneer 1Yo6 Ron,ouloe
Book on
DIAD DISEASES
and How to Feed
Matted Free to any Ad.
drama by the Author,
Mt. Olay Clover Co. Ina,
119 West flet Street
New York,
COARSE SALT
LAND SALT
Bulk Carlota
TOUONTO DALT WORTOB
0. J. CLIFF • TORONTO
'Warning! Take no chances, with
substitutes• for genuine "Bayer Tab-
lets of Aspirin." Unless you see. the
name "Bayer" an package or on tab-
lets you are not getting Aspirin at ail.
In every Bayer pacicage are directions
for Collis, Headache, Neuralgia, Ritou-
matiem, Earache, Toothache, Lum-
bago and for Pain. Bandy tib boxes
of twelve tablets cost few cents.
Druggists also soli larger packages.
Made to Canada. Aspirin is' the trade
stark (registered in Canada), of Bayer
Manufacture of Moneacoticacidoster
of Sallcylicacid,
C
Truly Groat,
At a'certain military academy a new-
ly appointed commnudaut liked young
men, but not when tltey were. "fresh,"
One day he chanced to overhear a
Young 'officer refer to 111111931/ (the
cammenden't) by name without any
title,
• "Hall?" the offender had said to a
group of fellow cadets, "Hall? He's
a mighty splendid fellow,"
The commandant joined tete. group,
amidst' profound silence.
Turning to the second lieutenant, he
said sternly:
"1 think, sir, whoa you referred to
m0 you alight have dual. 'General
HalL' „
"I'm sorry, sir," stammered the de-
linquent, then brightened a tittle as ho
added: "But, sir, did you over hear
people refer to General Achilles of
General Julius Caesar?"
Let CueliraHeal Your % a
In the t1'eattnent of all skirt
troubles bathe freely with Cuti-
cura Soap and hot water, dry
gently, and apply Cuticura
Ointment to the affected parts.
Do not fail to include the
Cuticura Talcum in your toilet
preparations,
Sonp25c. Olntment2S and sea 'talcum 2Sc, Sold
througltettttheDompiniou. CanadinnDepoti
lao,eo., Li aitod, 344 St. Paul St., w., Montreal.
gCrCutieureeSoap allures without. roma.
LITER FROM
ut{��p4!®
h rr
� 011 AK
z
UN
Tells Remarkable Story of
Sickness and. Recovery.
Toronto, Ont.-- "I suffered greatly
from weakness seemed to be tired all
I
� the time, and had no
ambition to do any-
thing or go any place.
My nerves wore in
bad shape, 9 could
not sleep et night,
and then came a
breakdown. 1 read
of Lydia E. Pink -
hart's Voga1st hie
Compound in tho
newspapers and sev-
eral of my friendtt
advised me to use it,
and it sure y put new life into mo. Now
I amquite lc todo r
ab all m own work,
Y
and I would strongly advise every suf-
fering vc
r
5' _
Morin on •o r nLydiap
ham's Vegetable Com .and a trial " Ic
]Vers. Crraru,ns WAIniLite, 272 Christie
St„ Toronta, Ont.°
The melon8 of Lydia E. Pinlcham's
'Vegetable Compound have thousands of
such letters as that above—they tell the
truth, else they could -cot have been ob-
tained for lova or money. Thismedichut
is no stranger—it has stood the test for
more than forty ,year+,
If there are any complications you do
not uedersiand write to l ydi'i 11, Palk.
haze Medicine Co. (eonfid..ntial), Lynnfl,
Mass,
ISSUE NR, SO --'2i.
•
YARMOUTH, N. S.
The Original and Only Genuine
Bow roof
a Imitations sold on the
merits of
iVIRNAlZI7'S LINIMENT
Appearances Deceitful,
Soon after leaving port 0118 passen-
ger approached anot-het on board the
liner, saying:
"Wo aro getting up a tug -of -was' be-
tween a team of married MOIL mord a
toahn of efngie men, You are married,
aren't Yea?"
"No," the onion answeyala, "I'm
s0a°d'cl c that'e h
a w'Itat Y11.
'tilos rna too3t
like this,"
Mlnard'e Liniment for sale evcrywhore