HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1932-08-25, Page 7. ` TYY6J Seg AUGUST 25, 1932
Health, Cooking
Care of Children
GRANT FLEW! ING,
CONCTS
T
A
In discussing the communicable
:diseases the term "contacts" is fre-
quently used, and'. is desirable that
there should he a general under -
:standing ' of : • the meaning of the
term. •
The communicable diseases are
caused 1y germs:.. Eas h disease :has
•• its own particular germ. Most oE:
the communicable diseases are spread
in a f airly direct wanner, by trans-
fer of such `secretions as saliva,
',from the sick to the well. The
_spread, of the disease requires that
there be sufficiently intimate • con-
tact between the sick person and
other to allow for the transference
of germ laden sercetions. Those
who
"have been close to the sick person,
• such as the •-members of the family,
-are known as"contacts."
x
os•
enep
be
contacts have e
Because coma
- ed to' the disease, they are as a rule'
quarantined for that period of time
- which the disease takes to 'develop.
'This period is the incubation period"
of the disease, and varies for the
different communicable diseases;
-therefore the period of quarantine
OF Tilt
Qbisat ,Ngonciation
a,u1,
Faito
ASSOCIATE SECRETARY
such typical symptoms as a rash. A
notable example of this is measles,
Before the rash appears the pat)
fent has what 'seems to be .a cold in
the head. During the time the nose
is running, and the patient is eough-
ing and 'sneezing, he spreads the dis-
ease; -indeed, the disease •is spread
moist frequently at: 'this time—bee.
fore the rash appears. •
•
• Tuberculosis is a disease in which
the contacts receive a great deal' of
attention. It is amongst the con-
tacts—tate children and adults who
have been living with the case.—that
one looles for new' and unsuspected
eases._ Tuberculosis is a chronic dis-
ease and usually develops slowly,. so
it is that the contacts of tuberenloeis
should be under medical supervision
s
ear .
•a
sever 1
Y
for
Obviously one should avoid becom-
ing a "contact'; this is another way
of saying that one should avoid ex- 1'!
paaure to • disease: The t:oota
et
Practically free from danger if pro-
per 'precautions are taken. It is
carelessness, .or ignorance, or con-
tact with unknown cases that is
chiefly responsible for the spread of
communicable diseases.
Health,
ad -
CONTACTS • 'n H
ea
er
m
one g
c
Questions
p.. •
THE .CLINTON NEWS-RECORYI
Edited By Lebam Hakeber K.ra1e
he generally comes out best. F.or
examples' I one day took a cab at
Paddington for Victoria Station, and
on my arriyal I tendered' the cabby
two shillings, which was-denble his
legal. fare. Had I given him an ex-
tra'sixpence, he would most probab-
ly have said "Thank you Sir" an•1
thriven -off. But the double fare,
coupled with my grip that savoured
of transatlantic climes, made him
instantly thithinkthere might be more
obtainable. So reaching over, he de-
ferentially suggested "A little more,
please -Sir." I then burst out on
him, told him he- was , the kind of a
mai who stopped people treating a
cabby- decently. I imparted. the
further information that he was,
barking up the wrong tree, that he
evidently took me for a green Anel_orient, whereas I knew • ,...ondon ae
well as he did,. and concluded by
Saying, "if' you -.open year mouth a-
gain, I'll call a •policeman and give
you into custody" Instantly • hire.
whole demeanour changed, and toil h-
ing his hat most apologetically,
he
said, "Beg pardon Sir, but hits my
birthday" Occasionally, the cabby
will ease his injured feelings by ut-
terances distinctly tinged with sar-
casm. For instance, a `stout lady told
me one day, she, took a cab in the
•. todrive to
]
city, and'told the driver dri
her house inthe suburbs... On arrival
she tendered him his legal fare,, mo
more. He looked at it for some mum -
opts in a contemplative mood,
then
carefully eyeing her figure up . and
down,'as tho' engaged in a rapid cal-
culation of her weight, lie said in a
seemingly commending tone of
voice "Well Mum. I must say as
will be featured by a large globe. It
will. slowly turn on its axis and wil,
be set as .part of a display . emphas-
izing the world wide service offered
by the National Telegraph System.
Tho Motel system of the Canadian
National Railways , will be pictured
by a reproduction of the main (lin-
ing rooms of The Chateau Laurier,
at Ottawa; while the Express De-
partment will also be featured by.and
exhibit shewiug'•tlte varied facilities
of
for the safe and prompt handling
exprees shipments. .
The Canadian, National Steam-
ships' •seriices to .the West Indies,
will be featured by. a large glass
o the route covered. by the
map£
"Lady" steamers. On each side will
by decorative panels suggestive of
the territory served and in, front will
be real coral sand' from Bermuda,
with scene of the finest specimens of
coral formations.—IW. B. Thompson)
of contacts varies accordmg ae i
disease. The contacts are quaran-dressed to the Canadian Mechem l As
tined because; if they are develop- sociatinn, 184 -College Street, Toren-
ing the disease, they may pass it or; to, will be answered personally by
'to others before the appearance of letter.
London's
Streets
CORRYMEELA
Over here in England I'm • helpin)
wi' the hay, -
An' I wisht'1 was in Ireland the live-
long day; hay, an'
Weary on the English
sorra take' the wheat!
Och. Corrymeela, an' the blue ksy
. over it.
U MEN
HUSBAND. IN TOILS
•
A charge of '"vagrancy," nothing
more, is now laid against Dan Mal-
one, whose wife (ABOVE) first
heard he was a "Sinn Feiner" when
Tortont° police first woke them last
Monday morning.
There's a deep dumb river flown'
by beyont the heavy trees,
This livin' air is moitheerd wi' the
,
bunnnin' o' the bees;
I wisht I'd hear the Claddagh burn
go runnin' through the heat
Past Corrymeela, tvi' the blue sky
over it.
'ow you do know 'ow to lay howl
•v b
est
ad-
vantage.
werry e
o e
is mon Y, t
you
Another of the same frat-
ernity on arriving at his destination
was handed his fare by the lady oc-
cupant of his cab, in small change.
She thought itnninake o eleoma
l
by the cabby
she also at the same time wanted to
get rid of it: Weighing it up and
dawn in his hand for a few moments,
he looked at her, then at the little
pile of small silver in the palm of
his hand, then back to her, and said,
"Might I harsh{ you Alum, how long
ave you been a savin lnup for this
little treat?"
—JOHN RANSFORD.
(Continued front page 3)
was seam on his arm and he
for crepe
look out (which be frequently is) f crepe tied to his whip.
a human skull to snack, is positively rnot lad a and a most w of
look on his face,
eeunknowned London. They "Say, Jim, said my driver, if your
even ,armed with revolvers, except
1 lecial occasions, held missis his dead, I would not look
on vej y s like a whole bloomin' funeral. If I
The bus driver will next claim our was yru. You're hoverdoin' it Jim,
attention. Ile is, or I suppose more ..lightly. "• On another occasion thee
correctly, was a character. I 'raw! bus on which I was riding, gpt
to the driver of the horse bus, now up by the crush of traffic, and had
ermne to a standstill. Noticing the
rapidly being supplanted by the mot-
, or bus. He was a gentleman, usu- conductor on the rear of the bus
ally of a rubicantl hue of connten- immediately in front of out's as an
aequnintance, be deftly tied a now(
weather
to exposure to all kind; c
weather and an inborn contempt and on tho lash of his whip, and reach-
.open`hostility to anything savouring ing forward he dangled it close to
•of total abstinence, He generally the 'face of the conductor. Ther
i
re -
wore an old shiny plug hat, his legs suit was a stream of profanity K
were protected by folds of old horse would have rnoveti a bargee to envy.
blanketting, and he was secured to Asking my driver the reason of this
ha strong leather 'stray ebullition of anger, he smilingly re -
....fastened
perch toby p trouble
.,,,fastened to the iron rail at his lied, Taint nothing Sir,
with that bloke is a aint got no sense
'back at both ends. His fund. of Con- )ars'
versation and information was mar{
vellous. Veritably a peramttlatinf
encyclopedia. He knew every house
of importance, and the history of
each occupant all along his route.
Give bine a cigar, sit next him, and
"he would entertain you the whole of
your drive. Full of anecdote,
rare powers of repartee, it was a
- treat to be in his company. As an
example: Noticing a friend of his
passing driving another bus, to be in
1 .thin addressed him;
ensu m que his life may,
rein so deep it almost coo- tion of continual wrangle, m which titled ,`From the Tropics to the Arc-
" it in a brief way,
Household
Economics
PAGE '7
THIS MODEST T CORNER. I5- DEDICATED
TO THE POETS
Here They Will Sing You Their Songs—Sometimes
Gas', Sometimes Sad- :Ili; Always Helpful
and Ins'lliring•
°• THE FLOWERS
I
, MY GARDEN
A Garden is. a lovesome thing, God
wou!
Rose plot, •
Fringed ofpool, p
Ferried grot
The veriest school
01 pease; end yet the fool
Contends that God is not -
Not _,God! in gardens! w.{en the eve
is cool? /-
Nay, but I have a sign; .
'Tis very sure God walks in mine. -
-T. E. Brown.
BANKERS TO IT
U. S.
JASPER NATIONAL PARK
Winnipeg, August 20th: Bankers
and
is
Philadelphia York,P n
New
from
other cities of the eastern United
States will arive here 'September 20
to begin a tour of western Canada.
The visit is a feature ofDtheir tri}
Convent= o
n
n
nal
Go
58th Annual to
the
the American Bankers Association,
which will be held in Los Angeles,
October 3 to 6.
About one hundred convention del-
egates are expected to make up the
They.
Canada. Y.
visit C
an
will
group that
will leave here by special Canadian
National train for Saskatoon and
Calgary. Next on their itinerary are
Lake Louise, Banff and Edmonton.
The bankers will reach Jasper Na-
tional Park September 23 and will
spend two days there. An extensive
programme of sports, sightseeing
and social entertainment, centering
around Jasper Park Lodge, will mark
their visit and they will take an
automobile trip to Mount Edith Cav-
ell.
Vancouver and Victoria will greet
the party September 25. Following
a short stay in the British Columbia
cities, they will visit Seattle, Port-
land and various California
towns
before reaching Los Angeels.
The people that's in England is
richer nor the Jews, ` oss-
un
There's not the smallest young g
oon but thravcls in his shoes!
I'd give the pipe between me teeth to
see a,barefut child,
Och! Corrymeela an' the low south
wind. e •
Here's hands so full 0' money an'
hearts so full o' care,
By the luck o' leve! I'd still go light
for all I did go bare.
"God save ye, colleen dhas," I said:
the girl she thought me wild.
Far Corrymeela, an' the low south•
wind.
D'ye mind me now, the song at night
is mortial bard to raise,
The girls are heavy gcin' here, tlic
boys are ill to plase;
When onest I'm out this workin'
hive, 't].; I'll be back again—
Ay, Corrymeela, in the same sof!
rain.
The puff o' smoke from one ottkl
roof before an English town!
For a shaugh wid Andy Feelan here
I'd give a silver crown,
For a curl o' hair like Mollie's yell
aslc the like in vain,
Sweet Corrymeela, an' the same
soft rain.
Buy my Hngiish posies.
Kent and Surrey • may—
Violets of the lindercliff
Wet with Channel spray;'.
Cowslips from a Devon comber--
Midland furze afire—
Buy My English .posies
And I'll sell your heart's desire!
Buy, my English posies.
You that scorn the May, 'home
Wont you greet a friend from
Half the world away?
Green against the draggled drift,
Faint and frail and first-.
Buy my Northern blood -root
And I'll know where .you were
nursed.• .
Robin down the logging -road whistles
"Conte to me!"
Spring has found the maple -grove,
the sap is running free;
All the winds of Canada call the
rain.
•hip
plu
e g
g
Take the flower and turn the hour,
and kiss your love again!
THE MOON
Thy beauty haunts me heart and"
soul,
Oh thou fair Moon, o close and
bright;
Thy beauty makes me like the child,
That cries aloud to own thy' light:
child that lifts each arm
The
little
� To press thee to her bosom warm.
C.N.R. EXHIBIT AT C.N.E.
Toronto, Aug. 20. -Illustrating in
a pictorial way the varied opportun-
ities offered in Canada to the in-
vestor and the tourist, the Canadian
National Railways exhibit at Vie
Canadian National Exhibition, this
year, emphasizes the far flung trans-
portation fttcilities ofiered by
National System and brings to the
fore the mmnerous beauty spots and
national parks which make the Dom-
inion a paradise for visitors. The
commercial and manufacturing int -
of humour. Ts father twos ung portanee of the nation is also sums.
week, thets all there his to it." sed and some idea of the ins. us Li
gentle-
,
centres and export trade can he
Next comes the cabby. A g gleaned by special features which
man of somewlmt similar type, but are devoted to showing scenes of
peculiarities distinct -
Canada's busy ports, views of the
s essin a Canad
stillpossessing g p
n various
riot s
a
ly his own. He is an Ishmaelite. IIe West Indies, and pictures of
considers all the people who hire a cities noted for their manufacturing
cab, are against him to beat him plants,
hi hand isa` tl
t ing
that sing
' birds
them
are
Though h
g
this night
With thy white beams across their
throats,
Let my deep silence speak for me.
More than for them their sweetest
notes:
Who Worships thee till music fails
Is greater than thy nightingales.
Davies.
'. IT
. Da
W
—Moira O'Neill.
WHITE WHALES TO ABATTOIR
FOR EXPERIMENTAL PURPOSES
From the schools white whales in
Harlots Bay number of specimens
were taken to Winnipeg in an express
shipment over•, the Canadian Nation-
al. When these animals arrived the
sub -committee on fish by products of
the Industrial Development Board
turned them:over to the Harris Abat-
toir for experimental anti investiga-
tion purposes.
The mammals are rich in oil; it is
esitmated :that there are from 15 to
40 galens in each, according to size.
They weigh about 1,500 pounds. Por-
tions of the hide are said to produce
high quality leather. '
NEW PARK ON THE CYPRESS
MILLS OF SASKATCHEWAN
The motorist en the south road out
Saskatchewan,
of Maple Creek, Sas
climbs 1,500 feet to the newly creat-
ed Cypress Hills Provincial Park, an
area of eighteen square miles of
pine covered hills that lies twenty
•1 pouth of the town, Here have
clown in his fare,. and s f re I net es
gainst every man to try and extort exhibit, h
1' foxes
"'She
, RUTH
stands breast high amid the
corn"—
The harvest of her love and tears
And every pain her soul has borne
Through the fulfilling years.
She stoops amid the golden wealth
That drops around her patient feet,
Gathering her suffering and her
health—
Her spiritg ripened wheat.
She gleans, unwearied, evermore
The great ears 'of her joy and
grief, '
And binds the wonders of her store
Into a little sheaf.
!
les.
es
p
m English
Buy Y
Y
Hero's to match your
need—
Buy a tuft of royal heath,
Buy a bunch of weed
White as sand of Muysenberg
Spun before the gale—•,
Buy my heath and lilies
And I'll tell you whence you hail!
ine-
he vs
broad
t
Under hot Constantia
yards lie--• •
Throned and thorned the aching berg
' props the speckless sky—,
trails
Slow below the Wynberg
the tilted wain-
Take the flower and turn the hour,
and kiss your love again.
The outstanding feature
o of been established by the government
e
Dosed its the tves wing t reserve and game sanctuary.
from him as pinch more than his due the Railways Building, is a travel ling a
can. Consequently oma which will take its speeta- The streams are claearband and l,owe t
ahe possibly parol suited to the
eb
Leven trout fry placed in them some
years ago. As a result of the wars
between the Oros, Assiniboines and
Blackfeet this area became a "No
Man's Land," was little hunted and.
became a haven for wild life, and to
this day it. has been a. favoured spot.
the traveller is hardly aware of ap-
preaching the park, until suddenly
topping a crest of hill, there breaks
into view a beautiful scene of forest
aitd stream. It is truly an oasis of -
beauty, located in the Cypress range
of broken hills, scarredand with
deep
ravines, fantastic crags
ed
elevations.
Dams placed in Belanger and Lone
Pine Creeks, tributaries of the
Frenchman river which loses itself
across the Montana border, have cre-
ated two charming lakes 4,000 feet
above sea level known as Loch Lom-
ond and Loch Leven, having a water
area of approximately 200 acres. In
addition to rustic bridges
that rpunc-
tuate the •woodland p
the
new park, there will be found ac-
commode on
for the vacationist that
mourning, 1e
`the gent] soon had a 1if be described as a condi-
. tors half way arornd the wet.
•— r-- `—` -- one ecttceptimt of the greatness o
band of c tile, a band o8
eyed his
'shiny old ire l on gives,f
• Canadran Ys
Lei.' U
MOM
NAVE !r NAA
PA MEM
C iitAgir
'This summer take the trip to
the Coast you've al ff f r
promised yourself. Stop
a few days of golf at beautiful"
Minaki, in the Lake of the
Woods District. See the Prairies
at their best.
Stay awhile at
Jasper National
Park and enjoy
-the healthy,
happy recrea.
1 "
• ,provides—in fact
Obtain full
fares, reser
to VAN
VICTORIA,
CO
MA
TA
and JASPE
PARK from
Agent..
you can follow your favourite
sport rightacrossthecontinent.
See hundreds of miles of sky.
piercing mountains. Follow
the rushing, tumbling Fraser
River toVaneouver. VisitVie.
toria. Plan a trip
to Alaska.
Full information
regarding routes,
fares, etc., front
any Agento f Corin
adims National
Trailways.
r_20 Rev
nformation re
vations, etc.,
COUVER,
SEATTLE,
PORTLAND
R NATIONAL.
your nearest
}
dr
the National System as an
artery of national travel and trade
on both the land and the sea. As the
panorama slowly revolves the visit-
ors will see, in succession, large
Paintings of the British West Indies,
the Maritime Provinces, fishing in
Northern Ontario, the popular Cana-
dian National summer resort at Min -
aid, almost on the borderline of
Manitoba, Jasper Park Lodge, 1n
the heart of the Canadian Rookies,
the Pacifie Coast of British Colum-
bia, and big game hunting in North-
ern B. C, and Alaska. These scenes
travel on an endless chain and show
the highlights of each territory feat-
ured. On each side of the panorama.
will be •shown revolving exhibits tf
the trans-Atlantic and transPacifie
'arts in Canada. Halifax, Saint John,
Quebec, Montreal, Vancouver and
Prince. Rupert are realisticallyi pic-
tured
the
on these turntables, with
port of Victoria prominently, shown
on the travelling" panorama, Minia-
ture models' of one of the Canadian
National Steamships freight steam-
ers and of the Canada -British
Wesi
Indies liners will gently sway on a
most realistic imitation of the open;
sea.
Buy my English posies.
Here's your choice unsold!
Buy a blood -red myrtle -bloom,
Buy the kowllSi's gold
Flung for gift on Taupe's face,
Sign that spring is come—
Buy my clinging myrtle
And' I'll give you back your home!
Broom behind the windy town; pol-
len o' the pine— .
Bell -bird in the leafy deep where
the rates twine—.
Fern above the saddle -bow, flax upon
the plain—
Take the flower and turn true hour,
and kiss your love again!
Bruising the grain of all she is,
She kneads a little loaf of bread,
Mingling her life's strange mysteries
Loins, bosom, heart and head.
And then upon herself she feeds -
The life she loves, the lives she
bears,
Breaking her passion for their
needs,
Her pity for their cares. -
So, through her days' allotted span„
She yield; and binds and spends
Icer truth;
The woman God has given to man—
uth.
-'t• R
everlasting Tho
e a
one .
—MayD Y
RAILWAYS OFFER. LOW
RATES FOR LABOR DAY
With the approach of the final
long week -end holiday of the year,
Labor Day, September 5th, announce-
menu was made by C. P. Riddell,
Chairman of the Canadian Passenger
Association, that Canadian •railroads
will extend to their patr'on's the same
generous holiday fares as have pre-
vailed during other holiday periocls
this year. Return tickets, good be-
t tween all stations in Canada, will be
sold at the rate of one and one-quar-
ter times the first class one -too l
fare, the going portion e goad
front noon Friday, September'September
until noon on Monday,ept er
5th, . and the return portion e goodtem
until midnight, Tuesday, S p
beu
8th. These special fares will pro-
vide an economical arrangement fort
those desirous of taking a final out-
ing before the opening of schools and,
will also be of considerable benefit
to fishermen, many of who their
tos
the Labor Day holiday as for a few
t
chance of getting away
days during the fishing season. It
Will be noted that th is year the' go-
ing, portion of the special tickets
have been extended to permit of
their, use up to noon on 1Vionday, in-
stead of Sunday as,in previous yeast!
in order to assist those who are un-
able to stretch. their holiday over the
entire week -end but must content
themselves with a jourriey-commenc-
ing with Labor Day.
A full size mounted- buffalo, as
well as one of the finest collection
I of mounted game birds found in the
y Canadian wilds ever assembled, will
also be exhibited.'
The •Canadian National Telegraphs them.
"".6P2w3
connp
includes splendid camp sites, a six-
teen room sleeping building, and a
nearby kitchen house.
The Canadian National Exhibition
Toronto, is the world's largest annual
exposition, held from Aug. 26 to Sept
10, excluding S ndays
off
AN AFTERTHOUGHT ON APPLES
Buy my English posies!
Ye that have your own
Buy them for a brother's sake
Overseas, alone.
'Weed ye trample underfoot
Floods his heart abrim—
Bird ye never heeded,
0, she calls his dead to him.
Par and far our homes are set e -
round the Seven Seas; we that
Woe for us if we forget,
hold by these!
Unto each his mother.,beach, bloom
and bird and land—. -
Masters of the Seven Seas, oris, love
and understand!
—Rudyard Kipling.
lei
While yet unfallen apples throng the
bough,
To ripen as they cling ponder
In lieu of the lost bloom, I p
how
Myself did flower in so rough a
spring,
And was not set in grace
When the first flush was gone from
'summer's face; making
How in my tardy season,
one
Of a crude congregation, sour in sin.
I nodded like a green -clad mandarin,
Averse from all that savoured of the
San.
But now throughout these last au-
tumnal, weeks
Want skyey gales mine - arrogant
station thresh,
What sutibeall1a mellow my beshad,.
owed cheeks,
What steely storms cudgel mine ob-
durate Bob -a -cherry kisses 'neacn
flesh; '0 give me one!"
Less loth am I to see my fellows a king and
launch Thus sang'g
Forth from my side into the airs Babylon. Moore.
abyss, .— T. Sturge
i
Whose own talk is its wonted
Grown untenacious ,o¢
branch.
n
e's something in the advox-
to interest you. Read
A DUET
"Flowers nodding gaily, scent in air,
Flowers posied, flowers for the hair,
Sleepy flowers, flowers bold to stare
"0, pick me some!"
"Shells with lip, or tooth, or bleeding
gent,
Tell-tale shells,- and shells that
whisper Conte,
Shells that stammer, blush, and yet
are dumb -0
"0 let me hear!"
"Eyes so black they draw one remb-
ling. near',
Brown eyes, caverns flooded with a
tear,
Cloudless eyes, blue eyes so windy
clear—"
"0 look at me!"
"Kisses sadly brown across the sea,
Darkling kisses, kisses fair and free,
queen in
c]c
at
the
The grandstand and paddock
Canadian National Epinbition Tor -
Ther onto have a capacity of twenty-four
tisements today thousand eight hundred.
To Selimmielfell! Adtertising Your Best
And yet, O txou,
Tumble me not at last upon the sod, I smoked herring export industry o
f
Grant not my golden rind
Or, still superb above my fallen kind
in . a firmer basis, the producers
Grand Manan region, New Bruns- .
To the black starlings screaming day
I tvicl{, have formed a cooperative
the mist. and appointed agents in the British
Nay, rather on some gentle andWest Indies, whence Canadian Na -
bland talk a little 1 trona) freighters take large quan-
Give Thou Thyself my s thinsof Canadian smoked fish.
twist,
Dear Lard, and I shall fall into Thy Advertising brings a new world to
hand.... —Helen Parry
Eden. I
your
home. •
HERRING IN THE INDIES
With a view to re-establishing the