The Clinton News Record, 1930-09-04, Page 3STYLES AND CUSTOMS CHANGEa a BUT , W
fundamentally, human nature never changes . , , neither
does the cigar smoker's preference for Wilson's Bachelor.
They were smoked and enjoyed 25 "years ago. They are
smoked and enjoyed in increasing numbers today—because•
`'Y•rlson's Bachelor cigars are 100% Havana filler with the
added advantage of the foil wrapper, -
individtinny
foil wrapped
IMP
and in pocket,
pucks of five
i LS4N'S
BACK
Still most for the
0MIZIWINda
Doctor Says "Go Slow"
In Use
Over -Use of Pepper and Must
Stomach
Prance is the land of the flavor and
the sauce. Pew articles of food are
there regarded as sufficient unto them-
selves,
Writers lit other lands, jealous,
doubtless, of the well-deserved repu-
'
tation of the French for toothsome
cookery, have slyly suggested that this
is beoaltse the foodstuffs of that land, I
flavorless to themselves, require out-
side
utside aid.
However this may be, it is interest-
ing to find that a French physician,
Dr. I(aoui Blonder, writing in L'Echo
de Paris, is careful to discriminate
among his country's flavors, and es-
pecially condemns the use of the "hot"
`ones, such as pepper and mustard.
We need the outside flavors, he ad-
mits; but he bids us be careful with
them --one may become the slave of
mustard, he says, as truly as of alco-
hol. He writes;
"Our appetites would soon flag if
we should eat only unseasoned food.
Salt and sugar are Estill our simplest
flavors and,our"Commonest. They are
also the only ones that play a legit"•
mate physiological part. All others are
only artificial ingredients, intended to
excite the appetite by stimulating the
mucous coattug of the stomach and by
pleasing the taste. They may become
dangerous by abuse, which habit
Quakes too easy. In any case ,when the
stomach membrane or the liver do not
worst properly, the first thing that the
physician has to do is to cut out con-
diments pitilessly.
"The list of these is a long one, but
they may be studied hi groups. First
are the acids,representod by vinegar
and lemons, Vinegar owes its proper-
ties to acetic acid, but it also has a
flavor that varies with its source, Good
wine vinegar is the best, Besides 6
Der Cent. of pure acetic acid, it con-
tains also, eream of tartar;_ and keeps
something of the vinous flavor. Vine-
gar from older or beer is of the second
class. Vinegar used in the industries,
made direetiy from alcohol, has a
brutal acidity without flavor, There
are also, unhappily, falsification inade
with sulfuric and other acids. •
"The acid taste Is not unnatural in
our food; nature itself supplies it la
certain fruits and vegetables. It fa-
vors the secretion of saliva by i'eflex
action, which is useful in the mouth.
digestion. of starches; it also . stimu-
lates the flow of gastric juice, it thus
aids in pro'vokiug the appetite, and 'it
also increases the contractions of the
stomach. 'it -accompanies ordinarily
(taps even for some ulcer of the stom-
' aoh or duodenum, whose consequences
of Condiments' can not be foreseen.- In any case,
and Acts as Severe Irritant on
and Liver
certain vegetables that are eaten raw,
whose cellulose is digested with some
tiiteeulty, as in salad.
"But this artificial irritation of the
gastrin mucous is not without limotl•
venience, especially if It is great and
occurs daily, although a good salad
is seasoned also with salt and pepper,
and with oft --a valuable corrective,
stili, dyspeptics would do well to avoid
it,
"Lemon juice may advantageously
replace vinegar here, as citric acid is
tolerated better than any other or-
ganic acid, Lemonade never did any
one any hart..
"Pickles and the like have all the
iucouvenieucea of vinegar. They
should be used in moderation. It Is
better not to give them to children,
who get She taste for them too easily,
and thus injure their stomachs..
"Next come the irritant condiments
--pepper, mustard, etc. Even more
than vinegar they lie a revulsive ac-
tion on the mucous surfaces—ntouth,
throat, stomach, and intestines. Mus•
tard has the same effect ot. the stom-
ach as a mustard -plaster does on` the
skin. Its action is rather injurious
iluut otherwise. We should recognize
the fact that condiments of this class
are perfectly useless, at least la our
climate, In the tropics they are used
—and abused --under the pretext 02
stimulating She appetite, which gener-
ally fails in a hot, moist climate. The
result is a supplementary cause of ir-
ritation to the intestinal passages,
bringing on dysentery, and to the liver,
already often weakened by malaria,"
It is the essential oils, Dr. Biondel
reminds its, that give to all these pro -
duets their caustic power; added to
these, as with Pepper, are certain
stimulant alkaloids. These essences,
like all bodies of this elass, exert a
certain antiseptic action. He does not
deny this advantage, but urges that
it may 1)e obtained by less dangerous
means. These substances, he says,
are like alcohol, which is incontest-
ably a food, from the purely therm -
chemical view-point—but the organism
pays a heavy price for it. He pro-
ceeds:
"Use of this sort of condiments
must, therefore, be 'very moderate.
Those who get the habit of using them
mite: f become its slaves, and find all
foods tasteless that have not been
drenched with pepper and muatard.
They are laying the ground for dys-
pepsia, which will compel then. to
give up such injurious practises—per•
doYmk
PIfiLLIPS-
1,p�M9FOTTrOttbleSe
AOh _W
afsie to, Acid:
mustoesr,on
AHCAnrfUR"cto ,
)HEADACHE,
,oAsse.tl&Usai.
Sixc0ss acid is the common cause of
indigestion. It results in pati and sour-
ness about two hours after eating.
,The quick corrective is an alkali
Which. neutralizes acid. The "best coy;
1'eotive is Phillips' Milk of Magnesia.
It has remained standard with Phys!
clans in the 50 years since its inven-
tion. •
Ono spoonful of Philips' Miik of
Magnesia neutralized instantly malty
tithes its volume in acid. It is harm-
less and tasteless and its action 15
quick, You will never rely on crude
methods, never continue to suffer;
when you learn how quidkly, how
pleasantly Chit premier method acts,
Please let it show you now.
Be sure to get the genuine Phillips'
milk of Magnesia prescribed by physi-
clans for 50 years in correcting excess
acids. Each bottle contains full direc-
tione—any drugstore, ,
they bring ou premature fatigue of the
liver, leading to the hepatic com-
plaints slow ea common and so diffi-
cult to cure.
"Besides—another serious result --
these people`' pervert their sense of
taste. Howcan the flavor of food be
appreciated when it is mashed by that
of such violent condiments?
"There remain the aromatics, pro-
perly so called, tate herbs of cuisine;
owing their properties to essential
oils—thyme, estragon, laurel, pimper-
nel, and saffron. Their strong flavors,
especially in oily sauces, prevent us
from using them in great quantity.
They have n rather favorable effect on
the stomach.
"We must add vanilla, a good nerve
tonic, used to flavor pnddlugs and
cakes. The natural vanilla is prefer-
able to synthetic vanillin, often used
instead Of it.
"Finally, a word about the onion
family. Onion is a valuable diuretic,
used for this purpose too seldom. It
should not be fried too long; if so, it
Is hard to digest, and loses its diuretic
properties,ernes being then almost entirely
Y
transformed into caramel
"And garlic, to which has been as-
signed antiseptic virtues for chronic
Iung trouble—ata0• value as a vermi-
Fuge. Tile stomach does not tolerate
it easily in too great quantities, and in
its most celebrated dishes It is the
most Indigestible food in the world.
Let us not speak of its odor, which
might get us into trouble with Our
neighbors, both north and south! Real-
ly, tile only garlic that is objectionable
is that eaten by other people! With
a good supply 0f egotism and la an en•
vironrnent where everybody eats ft, it
becomes quite supportable."
Milk Diet Aids Hens
Amon, the wide variety of feeds
which comprise the poultry ration of
today, noun compares with milk in
oucotu'aging fowls to keep hard at
their egg -laying dirties during the hot
weather of Sumpter, in the opinion 01
Professor Cr S. Platt, assistant poultry
husbandman for the New Jersey Ag-
ricultural Experiment Station, who as-
serts that the poultryman "cannot af-
ford to leave milk out of the ration et
this season."
He explains that the appetite of lay-
ing birds, normally at its best during
the Spring mouths, is likely to weaken
with the approach of warm weather.
This falling_ oft in feed consumption,
and especially of dry mash, forces the
bird to ciirtati its egg production or
lose body weight.
"Wel!-bred birds wilt continue .lay -
Ing even at the expense of body
weight," Professor Platt states, "but
birds of inferior breeding will quit,
Iaying and moult. However, this stop -
Ping of egg production can, to a large
extent, be delayed until later fn the
season if the fowls are fed a proper
amount of milk. '
Guessing the Time
• At Wirksworth County Coutst a man"
was told y the judge to stand still
and saywhen. two minutes had ex -
pined. He called "Tithe" when no
more than seven seconds had elapsed!
Some people •have the time eieuse,
but the vast majority : of the human
rade is sadly deficient in this faculty.
But many of the lower animals pos
sess an extraordinarily keen time
sense, Note the way in which a dog
Walks into the dining room a few min-
.utes before a meal, or gets ready for
his daily wails at the exact hour each
day,
Rorses and poultry know exactly the
times they are due to be fed. Ducks
are particularly clever in this way,
and they will raise a small riot if
bheir evening meal does not arrive to
the minute.
ti
inhale Minard's Linimel,i for Asthma,
Air Liner and Sea Liner
When the R-100 giant'British dirig-
i�le;. flew above Montreal recently she
Passed over the new Harbor Bridge,
one of the largest structures -6f its
kind on the continent. Justclearing
the bridge, there is seen the Canadian
Pacific liner Duchess of Bedford, ar-
riving in Moutreal from overseas. The
two great ships are pointed in the
same direction and both were travel-
ling , at slow' speed in passing the
bi'idge. As will.be seen„tile R-100 is
about one-sixth longer than the
Duchess, which gives a good idea of
the huge size of the great dirigible. '
At Ninety,
I am no longer tossed and torn and
killed
]3y loneliness and tortured humbled
pride;
I am content. My life is sweetly filled
With little joys that once I cast
Each day brings me its tune, its
violet;
I shake with laughter at old' jests I
knew,
Why worry over things that I forget?
The sun is warm. I have a dog
pal too.
My heart is keen for joy, but numb
to grief,
I garner each uew springtime that
I see,
The molten glory of the autumn leaf
Is mine—the glad reach of an age.
ing tree.
But what is age? I am not growing
old,
I have but paused to count my coin
of lore,
Halted a moment, proudly to behold
The wealth of friendship that I
. have in store.
The young” whirl past me like wild
petals blown
Cin one wind 01 desire for what is
dear;
They, seep the joY that only age has
known,
They cannot guess that happiness
waits here.
With tiny mast -light dipping to the
gales,
I drop my anchor" in God's peace
and ride,
Ready to hoist undaunted crimson
sails,
And catch the gentle, last outgo-
ing tide.
—137 Carotin Falter.
When Your Child
Is Feverish
Give Hint Baby's Own Tablets.
The health of babies and little child
ren is subject to rapid changes. Thus
the mother must be on her guard. At
the first sign of feverishness Baby's
Own Tablets should be given—this
tray avert a serious illness.
Concerning the Tablets Mtn, Nor.
man Lee, Uxbridge, Ont., says: "My
little boy, now three years old, was not
at MI well. }Ie was feverish and had
no appetite. I gave him Baby's Own
Tablets and' lie was soon well again,
5 would not be without the Tablets as
Jong as there are young children in the
house."
Baby's Own Tablets are sold by
medicine dealers or by mail at 25
cents a box from The Dr, Williams'
Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont.
Spain Has As Many
Beggars As Lawyers
Madrid, --There are as many beg.
gars as lawyers in Spain, according to
the classification of occupations in the
kiugdont printed by the weekly finan-
cial magazine La Sainatte Financiera.
The number of • mendicants, unclassi-
fled by age or sex, is 22,128, and the
count of lawyers shows 22,478.
It is impossibie to sit at a table in a
sidewalk cafe without being approach-
ed by four or five beggars. Begging is
not a dishonored avocation in Spain,
and the blind, crippled and needy who
live by -this means usually manage to
eke out some. kind of existence,
Minard's Liniment for Foot Ailments.
Traffic Expert Lauds
Berlin on Traffic
Berlin.—"We shall soon see better
traffic control in Berlin than in any
other metropolis,' William 'Phelps
Eno, American traffic expert, predict-
ed recently following a three-day study
of Berlin's traffic arrangements.
The Gorman authorities, he said,
were tackling' the problem in a highly
scientific manner and at their present
rate of progress would soon be able
to show the other big cites some now
tricks in the art of preventing ..pedes.
Ulan and automobiles from colliding.
"I have ,been especiallyy impressed
with Berlin's traffic museum and the
training school in which -not only the
local police but also those of the big
provincial, cities receive practical in-
struction," Mr, Eno said.
Ide gave higli praise to Major Sey-
earth, who conducted him around 13er-
Iin and who has been largely instru-
mental in perfecting the capital's traf-
fic control, following the American
and. London systems,
Some men saving up for a rainy day
,meet the bootlegger and spend it all
on a wet night,
•
Bright Eyes,
Rosy Cheeks
The Birthright of Every Girl.,
Dull eyes mean misery and weal-
ness—a sure sign of a bloodless,cou-
dition, Anaemic girls and women
have dull, heavy eyes with dark lines
underneath,. The bright eyed girl or
woman is always happy and well,
There is one way to make the eyes
bright—to bring the glow of health to
pale cheeks—that is to i, vigorate the
body with new blood—rich, red health -
giving blood. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills
do this and they do it well. Concern -
Ing them Mrs: Robert Devitt, Broug-
ham, Out., says: "My daughter be-
came So ill and nervous we had to
take her out of school, She was bale
and thin; her eyes were dull and the
least exertion upset her. I began giv-
ing her Dr. Williams' Pink Pills and
in less titan six months you would not
know her. She gained in weight and
strength and is now the picture of
health"
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are sold by
medicine dealers or by mail at 50
cents a box fro.. The Dr, Williams'
Medicine Co„ Brockville, Ont.
A rown Owl's
Fancy
Ar
11
To ate, a Pack of Brownies is a col-
lection of violins—violins of every
description, good, bad and indifferent;
some highly strung and some hardly
strung at all --ranging in tone from
the common ordinary fiddle to the
rare old violin of a great master.
The Brown Owl is the musician, whose
aim and ambition it should be to
bring forth all the harmony that snag
be stored within each violin.
While anyone who has an ear for
music and has received the necessary
instruction • can play a violin, not
everyone can bring out the music that
Is pent ftp within ltet' instrument,
The would-be musicians range in an
infinite gradation from the one who
is content merely to play a simple
lo
little tune to the more ambitious soul
who Iongs to bring out the wonderful
symphony of sound that site feels
must be just within reach.
The uninspired player amuses her.
self and harms nobobdy. The over-
zealous player works strenuously in
her futile struggle to release tate har-
mony she knows and feels but canne
reach; while her poor little iustru•
meut—racked and raged upon and
given no chance to vibrate—is forced
into a 1?rotesting and painful discord.
Iii between these two extremes
range the real musicians, with here
and there a master—the .taster vie.
lhiist—who, •by means of perfect tech-
nique and absolute control, is enabled
to bring forth all that is in the in-
strument its Ills hands.
It .any be this is only a common
„fiddle. Yet will he coax some music
from it. Should it, by some happy
chance be one of the rare old violins
filled with the music of the ages, the
resulting harmony is "a tiling Of
beacty and a joy forever." i -ie, the
!taster musician, will bring forth
some music frons each and every lu-
stre melt t.
ustremeltt.
Even though the master. violinists
are exceedingly rare, we enn alt be
true musicians and release at least
south of the music that is pout up In.
side of our instruments—the Brownies.
There is soiuetiting within each
one of them just needing the naces-
sary encouragement—happy environ-
ment and opportunity—to burst forth
into a self-expression that might
otherwise lie dormant for years—
maybe, forever. The instruments are
Many; the players only are wanting.
—Isabel Campbell. Brown Owl.
1st New Westminster Park of Brown.
les. •
meersegamcganneastotheassistageregnall
BUTTER & EGGS
Qct Our Quotations Before Shipping
LINES LIMITED
St. Lawrence Market, Toronto 2
Harvesters
You'll find Minard's a certain re-
lief for stiff or strained muscles.
- Rub it in and the pain disappears,
: ..e �.c�.�ua,r r., •sat:tSEa
1whini
R -w * !:
y ® a
A fair Offer
The instructor was addressing a
number of flying cadets on the uses of
the parachute.
Now, then," he said, "if_ anything
goes wrong with your plane, jump out,
count three as you are falling, so that
You are free of the plane, and then
pull the ring," He paused for his words
to sink in. "You will then find that,
the parachute will open and you'll
come down as lightly as a leather."
"But supposing. it "doesn't open?"
asked one of Itis listeners.
"Bring it back, and.I'11 give you an-
other," replied the instructor.—Ans-
wers,
' ti
Doctor's Orders
She was shown into the doctor's of-
fice, and he soon noticed that she was
looking worried about something.
"What is It,,Mrs. Potts?" asked the
man.
"It's Fred, my Hubby," returned the
woman. "I want you to allow him to
have. His beer after supper." '
"Why?" questioned the medico,
rather puzzled.
"Since 700 said that he was not to
drink beer after supperhe won't have
any supper at all," carne the reply.
Answers.
A Bad Blunder
She had just returned to her home
elicit' three years abroad, and happen-
ed to meet the shy young man.
"Why, I never thought you would I
remember ate," she said brightly.
"Ors, yes," he replied, searching for
the right thing to say. "I recognized
your hat." --Answers.
Minard's Liniment aids tired feet.
Cows Start a "Gold Rush"
Finding that cows grazing in parts'
of Washington State, U.S.A., had gold -
tinted teeth, has caused quite a minor
"gold rush" of miners in that district.
aver since 1189 there has-been a
Lord Mayor of London, England.
Montreal -London Flight
Will Be Attempted#
*entreat, — A transatlantic - flight
from Montreal to London, will be at;.
tempted by Capt. Erroll Boyd, Cana•
dian flier, in the plane Columbia, la
which Clarence Chamberlin . and
Charles A. Levine flew from New
York to Germany, it was announced
Ahg. 21. by J. A. O'Brien, represent*
tive of Captain Boyd,
The start will be made, Mr. O'Brien
said, within the next 10 days of aA
soon thereafter as weather permits.
Captain Boyd had planned a trans
atlantic flight earlier this summer
from New Yorit to Loudon.
- —Y,-- --
"Not every one can warm both
hands before the fire of life without
scorching himself in the process."—
Dean Inge.
Minard's Liniment -a household friend.
Salesman—"Yes, sir, of all our cars
this is the cue we feel confident and
justified iu pushing." Prospective
Customer—"That's uo good to me; 1
want one to ride its"
Classified Advertising
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Coble., Quebec, Stanstead County.
ASEA SLED FOR SAL'1, MODEL.
1e, with now 22 H.P. hvlm•.ude ram
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absolutely safe. splendid flnerng boat,
has special sedan tap: owner getting
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Per 511 years the standard of excellence
4 Years without
BelioneynyCatcl eI°
You Must Do Your Bit
in the war against the fly, carrier
of germs and breeder of disease.
Itis proven that AEROXON is one
of the most convenient end most
efficient moans of combating this
fly evil. It itconvenient, because
of the push•p„t It if hygienic,
flies never go away when once
caught, Each spiral gives three
weeks' perfect .orv,ca
BEWARE Or OeRTArsONs
Sold et d,og, grorcr, end ?mrdwate'torr.
1a Cie C. 0. Genet & Fits, 1,mitfe
S„CRono010R, Qe.
ace ,urn`s
J/'ic, r 7tt
1
r
.i6
tttv`', fo.
How do you deal with headaches
Do you ,just take something to deaden
the pain without getting rid of the
trouble which
MOWS'the pain
Thousands do, despite the medical
r
profession's warning cry of "DON'T!"
Suets makeshift methods simply
suppress the symptoms of headaches.
They merely numb the nerves and
leave the underlying cause to look
after itself. And it only obtains a
firmer grip. Ifcndaches can generally
be traced to a disordered stomach and
to the unsuspected retention in the
system of stagnating waste material
which poisons the blood. Remove
these poisons—prevent them forming
again—and you'll never have to worry
any more, And that is just how
Kruschen Salts bring swift and lasting
relief from headaches. Itrusciten Salta
aid Nature to cleanse your body
completely of all clogging waste
matter,
l,'or many years I suffered from
severe headstsbes almost daily. I
started taking the small dose (of
Izrusehen) a matter of four years ago,
and I can honestly say I have never
had a headache since."—(Mrs. M. VV.,
CHILL lRE
C F (•F » ID's' ---
CHILDREN hate to take medicine
•"" as a rule, but every child loves
the taste of Castoria. And this pure
vegetable preparation is just as good
as it tastes; just as bland and just as
harmless as the recipe reads.
When Baby's dry warns of colic,
a few drops of Castoria has .him
Soothed, asleep again in a jiffy. Noth-
ing is more valuable in diarrhea.
When coated tongue or bad breath
tell of constipation, invoke its gentle
aid to cleanse and regulate a child's
bowels. In colds or children's diseases,
you should use it to keep the system
troll► clogging.
Castoria is sold in every drugstore;
the genuine always bears Chas, H.
Fletcher's signature,
"Iwas very ueakafteranop
eration. Iv , terra were so bad
' 1 would sit r'.o':Jt1, -nd cry and
my husband wou'.d, not go out
and leave me atone. Now my
nerves.are much better, thanks
to a booklet that was Left
under the door. Lydia E. Pink..
ham's Vegetable Compound
surely put me on my feet. l
have taken eight bottles. My
friends tell me I look fine: My
sister has taken this medicine
too." -rs, Annie Walton, 67
Slany e St,; Kingston, Ontario.
ISSUE No. 36—'30