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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1930-10-30, Page 3Are They Lost to Canada? freeeethree Those seyen motherless children who sailed in the Aucltor-Donaldsorre liner "Alhenia"'•to join their relate/es in Sootland, are all members of the Wilson family Whose mother died ;in February and whose father employed in the_Cauadian Timber Limits, finds it impossible to give them the time and attention necessary. • Tile children are in charge of etiolate oe the Author -Donaldson. Line who will look after then until they asrlie at GlasgowV where they 'rill be turned' over to their Grandparents. It is to be hoped that they will all return later to take maa't in, the future development of Canada. •r • Tavern Halved is the pear and the mugs are ' full, Steamed is the board and the bird's breast white: ' On leather, my friend, and the finest wool, Sit thee down with thy friend to- night! ( Thy friend of the yarn and the sil- ence. after; Thy friend for the toast and the talk of trails. trim the arm -in -arm and the throaty laughter— Sit three down till the long East pales! 'Crushed is the peach and the wine is red, Charcoaled tho lump and the young corn gold; C'riend of my head, till thy cares are shed,. Sle thee down as of old on old! • 'Banish pain with Minard's Liniment. Little Squirt Young Grapefruit: "Yon nasty sour Fold thing!" Lemon:: "Get out, you little squirt!" ATE N List of "Wanted Inventions" and Full information Sent Free on Request. THE RAIIRSAY CO., Dept. W, 273 Bank St., Ottawa, Ont. ELCOME, t� NEW YORK and, c7AitHOTEL VERNOR 3P, S7 AN. 7rw.AVE. ppposlfc PENNA.R.R.STAT!ON1 1200 Rooms leach with Bath andel Servidoi ROOM 808 BATH • 3°.° UP( lirettliffea Baby Sea Elephant ' Brutish Art Leads Melts.Itself in Ice world, Says Duveen How a baby seaaelephant on frigid, blizzard -swept Bouvet Island; near a shelter agaiust the storm by the the Antarctic Continent, made itself In I�jew Boole - He Scores Theory that Brutality and Strength Constitute Beauty sirnple device of lying stili and allow - Ing the heat 'of its body'to melt down through the lee a hole like a shallow well, is described by Captain Hjalmar Rilsemleersen in. a report on ills Ant -i British art to -day is the best in. arctic explorations in, the Norwegian the world, Sir Joseph Duveen, inter - steamship "Norvegia', in 1929 and national art dealer and authority, as - 1930. Like other seals, the sea ole- 'serts in his book 'Thirty Years of phant is an air -breathing, warm.' British Art," recently published in blooded mammal, the ancestors of New Yorfc acid in Loudon. whicht 1 to the water long ago in'I ,In subject as well.as in treatment, evolution, as did the ancestors of the Sir Joseph asserts, "British ,pictures whales, but which still retains all its are generally better and more attrac- mammalian characteristics. In ordi-, tine than contemporary Continental nary Antarctic weather the thick Products. The' cult of the ugly, "seal skin" coats of these creatures. though not unknown in Loudon, has keep 111031i reasonably warm,. aided by' never been carried to the lengths that the layer of fat or "blubber" just un- it has in Paris and puniest" - derneath the satin. The severe blit -i Sir Joseph declares that be" has no zards for which the AT,taretie is ram-- sympathy whatever with the Con- ous sometimes prove too much, how- tlnental school whose argument it is ever, even for these fur and fat clad that brutality is strength, and that seals or sea elephants. Thus it was strength is beauty. Brutal subjects that the baby observed by Captain and brutal methods may fled approval Rilser-Larsen melted itself, either by fu ceitalu Continental cliques, but I design or by happy accident, into the am quite sure they will never suit protecting holo in which the explorers. the taste of the 13rltise and American found it. Antarctic seals, Captain public." Reser-Larson reports, show when at -Says British Art Needs Publicity tacked by enemies, Habits very differ -I British art needs only publicity t0 eel from those of Arctic seals, Ia obtain merited support, Sir Joseph as - the Arctic the chief enemies of the serts, The "supply" of British art, seals are Polar bear's, which do not he asserts, "is excellent, but at pros - exist In the Antarctic. Arctfc seals oat the demand is much less than it in danger take to the water where ottgltt to be. Other governments re- tie bears cannot follow. Antarctic cognize that the art products of their scala take to the ice instead, tho Country are an important asset in the water being the chief Antarctic dam- total et that country's wealth, and ger zone because of the flesh -eating accordingly they give a great deal of seal tailed the sea -leopard. encouragement to their artists. Not The Dream Girl - She simple was and all divine, Icer eyes a liquid blue, As sweet and soft as pansies flue A -dripping with the dew; Tier Cheek, a rose leaf passing fair And pink as bloom of peach, A mass of gold her shining hair, ' Her ears a seashell each. "He can not spend half his Weenie." "How so?" "Half of it goes for alimony." Use Minard's Liniment for Toothache, People used to search their family trees for their aucestors: nowadays add to the Prestige of a nation they search them for their offspring, "These facts are well known and only do they buy far more than the States does in Great Britain, but they give their artists facilities on nominal terms for exhibiting both at home and abroad. Thus they increase not only their sales at home, but also their sales abroad "In some countries, notably in France," Sir Joseph continues, "tile export of works of alt by living art- ists is fostered and cared for by the public, authorities in every possible way, These exports, amounting to many thousands of pounds each year, are regarded as being just as import- ant mportant a source of wealth as any other productions, More so, 'Mcleod, for while all mantifaotured exports in- crease a country's wealth, contempor- ary works of art are in addition evi- dence of a country's culture and so appreciated on the Continent,' Sir r -• Joseph continues, "but they are see dom realized in our own country: The English Government has never' yet backed our own artists as other gov- t minim have done and we have TO EMPLOYERS OF LABOR Attention having been directed to the scarcity of work in this City at the present time, employers of labor are ask- ed to try and help- to relieve the situation by engaging only bona fide residents of Toronto on any available work, NON-RESIDENTS Notice is hereby given that no assistance or relief will be given to non-residents of the City of Toronto. on account of their 'being out of employment. BERT S. WEMP, Mayor's Office, Mayor. Toronto, October 24th, 1930. 4„,d �,r I v ..rt` tlTM the common cause of Pairs and discomfort after eating-- GET ating-- GET RID of your dread, of pain after eating. Eat without fear of "indigestion,' sour stomach, disagreeable gas or headaches. When your food ferments, "disagrees,” lies like a lump in your stomach, it's a sign of too much aid, You need not resort to crude methods—take instead an anti -acid that will correct the condition. Phillips' Milk of Magnesia. A spoonful of this pleasant -tasting; soothe ing fluid neutralizes many times its volume of acid. It restores the proper alkaline balance to an acid -soaked stomach and - bowels—assists these organs to function as they should, Phillips' Milk of Magnesia is what you need when a bad breath, coated tongue, headaches, nausea or biliousness indicates an over -acid Condition. Take a spoonful today and for several days,and see how it 'sweetens the system. You won't be nearly so liable.to colds or sickness, All drug- stores—hi 50e bottles. souse 9 For Troubles due k' Acid INDIGESTI,N SOUK ADMAOH NegarpT(O GAS,NAUSEA Genuine Milk of Mag- nesia is always a liquid —never a tablet, L0011 for the name Phil(ips'oa wrapper and bottle. e , grown accustomed to relying on pri- vate efforts fee all endeavors to push British art in national and interna- tional markets. Wo have allowed foreign'rtists not only to get ahead of us in the international markets of the world, but even to invade our own home markets and thus derive British artists of -.some of the support they" should receive on their own doorstep." Deplores indifference of Public Sir Joseph cleplores the ignorance of the average Englishman regarding contemporary English art as compar- ed to the knowledge of the French- man regarding French art. "Once we leave the relatively small circle of people keenly interested in modern art," he says, "it is amazing what ignorance exists iu England concern- ingartists whose work is held' in the highest esteem, both by the fellow - artists and by professional art critics. Ask the average Englishman to give you the names of a dozen living Brit- ish painters and a dozen living British c, iy and I most think of trio present." sculptors, and he is 111{e1y to be hard' put to it to complete the 11sts." • Sir Joseph cites three factors which ,', lyla))agel— I rn afraid you're Niece he ceasiders vital to the artist in seil- lug his paintings. "`these three Ing our efficiency system, Smith," things are size, subject and price, It Smith—"Perhaps so sir, but some - is better to sell six pictures for low body ]las got to get, the work done,' prices than to sell one for a high One thing about a kleptomaniac is' plaice and kept five hanging for months oryears in a studio, that 110 takes things Eo easily: . "With 'regard to size, the wise painter- will bear in mind the dimen- sions of inmen-sions-of the ordinary middle-class sit- •'ting -room, and till hisposition is secure and his reputation established —and perhaps even then --he will re: freer' from painting monster -size cam vases which could only be apeoi1iu01- ated iii a municipal art ga'.l,)ry or the palace of milliona.ire, Evoltition is M,.. king G More Like Men, Says Expert That•tho, African gorilla is becom- Osborn, of New York City. Only a short ing nolo fake man ,than it once was, tine atter this original CDR. into a an example of converging instead of Monkey seem and a mon andeepe stein; diverging, evolutlou so that the simi- ,the latter stem split again into one laxities of man wad gorilla'of which line which became that of man's an- many- evolutionists? make emelt may cestry and another lineWhich led to be partly accidental, is a conclusion the three man risco apes --the gorilla, which may be drawn from a new dig the chimpanzee, and the orangutan: grana of man's family tree published Tho creatures belonging to this knees- in tho anthropological review, Human tial stein of man' were characterized :Biology, by Dr. Adolph H. Schultz,' of from the beginning, Dr. Schultz be- eches Hopkins University, m Bel*, Heves, by living on the groundand by more, as a result of many detailed walking- on two feet The ape stem, studies so the body forms of roan afld on the other hand, included creatures his closer relatives among apes and ;partly tree-iiving and 'walking on four monkeys. The : evolutionary stenfeet. The modern habit of gorillas, at which was to lead to man split off least at trines, to walk on two feet from the main stem of the apes and -much as men. do Dr. Schultz apparent - monkeys, Dr. Schultz' diagram as- .ly regards as one of the characterist- sutnes, very long ago; in which con- acs in cesic3 some obscure evolution °lesion the Baltimore anatomist an- ary force is mot 'ng these largest of parentlyagrees with the widely- apes into more and more man -like quoted ,views of 'I)r. henry Fairfield form. UTTERLY ORN OUT Women Weakened by Worry. Whipping Posts ,'mt ` ,., Again 4 e "I don'twant to worry, but I can't The suggestion of George W. Wick - help it;' said a woman recently when ersham, chairman of President •Hoov- told to take things; easy and not woo- ee's Law Enforcement Commission, of ry.. This the duty 01 every Woman to the tree of floggliig'in the . war against - save her strength; If she finers herself • banditry and -racketeering recalls the getting -depressed; if she feels utterly 'days when this method of punishing worn out; worries over tellies and criminals' was Snidely .eniPigyod, It frequently has 110100us headaches, she was .prescribed as .a punishment for: will' be wise to realize her nervous crime in the efosaic.law under the system needs attention, doctrine of "an eye, for • an eye, a tooth Starved nerves mean a Diens{down, for a•tooth," and was used quite gen- To feed the nerves eon must build up orally until about the beginning of the the blood. To do this there is nothing nineteenth century. to equal Dr, Williams' PInk Pills. About teat- time imprisonment be - These Pills not r ly enrich the blood gau to be gradually substituted for but actually create new blood which whipping. In this country Delaware feeds and strengthens the 'nerves and still employs flogging as a punishment banishes the cause of nervous disco, for about twenty -flys offences, while dors.. in Maryland it is used on wife-beat- Rromen cannot always rest wlien ers. Flogging is still employed in they should, but every woman eau Great Britain, Canada and some Con - maintain her strength by the.hele et timental and Asiatic countries. Dr, Williams' Plnl:.Pilis. Start 'Whipping as a punishment for crime ing these Pills now and see how soon talc - was legalized in Delaware in 1717, innprovement will show by increased Ear -estopping also went alongwithit. energy, keen appetite, strong, steady In 1739 a man convicted of felonous nerves and robust health. These Pills assault seas sentenced to stand in the are sold by inediciue dealers or by Pillory for four hours with both ears mail, postpaid, at 50 cents a box from nailed to it, and "before he be taken The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brocic- down .from the same he shall have vine, Out. bout his ears cut off close to his head,' At that time also prisoners who had been whipped were branded. Owl Laffs In ancient Rome a citizen could not be scourged, 'it .being considered an infamous form of punishment, though Nothing Is original but original silt. slaves were beaten with rods. In medieval England, in the sante way, A small boy was walking home from the whip could not be used 011 the a music lesson with his violin under freenlall, but was reserved for the 11 - his arm when a thief crept up behind lain. Al tate Saxon period whipping slim, snatched the instrument and lin- was the ordinary punishment for of - mediately disappeared. It sounds like a dream come true. Afillious of small boys like to imagine such a theft while practicing on the piano at home, but it almost never happens. Alphonse—"Did you say site has poise?" Gaston—"Yes, avoirdupois," fences, great or small. In the reign of Henry TIIL was pasted—iu 1530— tho famous whipping alt, directing that vagrants be carried to some mar- ket town or other Place "and there tied 'to the end of cart naked and beaten with whips throughout such market town till the body -shall be bloody," Flogging was legally prohibited In Abe Martin: Ionia, the little trough- Scotland in 1902, and though It was ter of Airs, Leghorn Tharp, president never formally abolished in England of the Colonial Bridge Club, W113 seri- it eves greatly reduced through the Dusty crashed to -day when a stack of method of fixing speci$c penalties to unwashed dishes toppled over on her, speeitic crimes by acts of Parliament. Man "At the circus. there was a girl W11.0 rode beneath the horse, on KEEPING the horse's neck, and almost on its 1gft�p [sp17 �Xiq'A�aq�ns�)73gntt7 WELL taIIis Neighbor—"That's nothing, I ir+l i��st i it AND p y tl elLtHd did all that the first time I' ever got on one," Neighbor — "Does you wife know anything about cooking?" Grootn—"Well, I beard her telephone a°13' fy a a,® I L a'C.�ti OM. ammo13e � eMIN .1 tla °' .1 IC®1: .Mi. %W M'dere Generation Are Lazy Thinkers Professors Says Country Chil- dren Have More Thorough Knowledge Than City Children Sloppy knowledge and lazy think- ing were scored by Professor C. T. Currelly as dangers of the present given recently before the Toronto Professor Currelly trete—illustrated from his experience of people the fact Classified Advertising ABBY. RELIABLE M ATR.1MOSi1 TTL DDoper mailed free. Address 1 rlendsblp A4agaslue, Medina, NeW Yoril, �^t r,l:3131Er.ING AND D511'ECTIVIS A7 speech corrected in -flue creeks' t•ourse, Miss M. D, London, lister, arpeciul- fol, P.O, 13ox 022, London, Ontario, tt3 A\TPD— THOUSAND 1;RrrXSH- i' ERS to get -prices for sendtnl apples Overseas for Christmas, N'rtte 'Tile Man From ]Cent,".Dormer A, Bur- lington, Ont. $2,00 FOE ONE NONE'S WORE. AST, INTE$[15TSNG, L'1:OL`IT- llay in an address on "The Relation 'Agee]. 'War Ut i of the Museum to the Public School," Homo and School sent i.here. , t . that home environment was the ma- trix which 11s1d together knowledge gained from academic training. After reviewing the interest to col- lections of the world's best art and 1i h followed the connoisseurship that had after security in material things had been brought, the speaker pointed the importance of both broader culture and exactness of knowledge In enjoy- — ment of life or accomplishing of flue WHY SUFFER things. He recalled the interest in e 0a• ga0. )' aaa emwer direct factory tn'Ices make sales eesy- 1luild up a bank arco'unt selling Lipa Locknit 81111 IJngerio and Hosiery. Sam),1e silk stookings and bloemore, s•2, Our 100rantee—sat(sfaetlon or mener refunded. Write tot' ru11 detalts. 1,10 811111 MILLS, 1611 St. Cutllerine 1'. ees .Por Tender 67si3ss Cireik. NPR Wan -piing 'Stir It Freely Lethor.ing Med/eh:al & Emollient such matters after the Romans had' brought security into Europe, .at the time of the Rennaissauce and after the conquests of Napoleon. In earlier `Tears this had been the privilege of the few but with the later 1Sth cen- tury public museums had been estab-i fished. As a result of the collectlon.e de- veloped by Napoleon, the French peo- ple had become familiar whit art in workmanship. Later the world, stall to turn to France for the finest pro- ductions in many lines. So apparent 1 was this after the great exhibition oeganized by Victoria and Albert, that the South Kensington Museum move- ment had been eagerly pushed to bring England similar advantage., "Only by seeing fine things peep," — 9 i1 FAT tr „E learn to 111x1{(> asst] appreciate them,' �,16�i1�y the streaker said. FROM YOU LIVER? Why be Mel .ped with unsightly blotches on the tis,-, eyes with yellow tinge and that tired and languid feel- ing? This indicates a torpid liver Headache, Dizziness and Biliousness surely follow. You must stimulate t with Caour rter'sCLittlert the Liverhile Pills,owing They also act as a mild laxative purely vegetable, free from calomel and poisonous drugs, small, easy to swallow, and not habit forming. They are not a purgative that cramps or Pains, unpleasant after effect follow- ing, on the contrary a good tonic, A11 Druggists 25c and 75c red pkgs. The Germans had gone farther by bringing this twork before their chil- dren, and by stressing exachlese, with- out, which enjoyment of art is limited. .._ In showing the volae of exactness, and scoring a tolerance of inaccuracy, the speaker questioned whether stud- ents reading literature with only a sloppy knowledge of the references in its words Mil not lose the meaning and beauty of it, It is a tragedy in eduention to lead children through Some babies thrive from the hour l poetry or htstory of a' period without such knowle1gn. Professor Currelly , al ti ear birth while others make so allowed, little progress as to be the eauee of fihe spear{en commented on how 11111011 anxiety. As a rule it is the (1i- many, nllegecily educated people kuety gestiolm that is at fault with these nothing really well. Country chil- dren grow up to know soma things definitely but city children, unless the broad, exact aspect of their education. were stuessed, . missed this germine enjoyment. In becoming familiar with teusennis the student was saved from lazy thinking since he learned that thing: did not just happen. That- trio very furniture with which they were sur- rounded was evolved through ten- turles of worl{mansbip and art. "A pretty gide at the shore sate to l STAY FAT Ing her mother, inquiring if she had backward ones and they start to go to use soft water for sort -boiled eggs I ahead directly Baby's Owl} Tablets are and hard water for hard-boiled eggs,' macre the corrective of their stomach null bowel troubles. Baby's Own Tablets are specially designed for the use of babies and little children, They are absolutely safe and the mother can feel perfect- ly secure in giving then to even the 041 Brow—"I'rn going to Pea Ridge most delicate child. 'They are a mild to moil a letter, Tho postmaster at but thorough laxative which banish Brun Ale won't buy 1117 eggs so I Won't mail my letters in his box," A poor joke isn't improved by re' petition. Amos Task—"Where are you go- ing?" Constipation and indigestion; brealc up colds and simple fevers and allay the pains which' accompany the cuts FhstBurglar—"Let's get out of this, ting oP teethe They aro sold by'medi- We've broken into the house of the eine dealers or by mail `at 25 cents a heavyweight champion,' box from The Dr. "Williams' Medicine Second Burglar—"PIe never figllts co.; Brockville, Ont. - for, less than a million dollars." Magistrate—"You are accused of having broken into a bank and stolen $200,000." Drown your slices of 'bread in the Prisoner --"I'm sorry to say I'm not oven and let them c117 like rusks, then guilty" break the requited amount into yo00 pudding- dish and pour in enough cold Thoillas A, Edison has an• ' milk to soften the bread. Let this nc,' .ecl that he is very fond of babies. viand rang enough Ito YOU feel no hard AIr•. Edison by th way, is very deaf. Pieces. Then add :near, raisins, salt Sampson Pudding A bread pudding that is dark brown: and spine to taste,)) eggs. This pud- Uncle—' ably boy, thins{ of the fn- cling was baked in r..aleets pot in shape thee,' no a flower pot , ..1 was cooled in Youth -"I can't, It's my girl's birth- a slow open for sl`: hours. We ate it, sliced cold with s ,sweet hot sauce poured over it. . ' sure to have enough milk, for 11, long baking re - (Wires it, and put a t ,ver over pot during tate cooking'. Milord's Liniment refreshes the scalp. The Last cf the Three CRs" To the rising generation as to the old, multiplication is n11paPsqtly still Customer—"Gimme a marooning vexation and the rule at throe the iron and a bottle of carbolic acid." • school's chief perillzelty. ]Moro pupils Clel'k—"What. do you want that failed in mathematics in the New eel'?" York high schools daring 1929 than in Customer—"Gonna curt up and die,"- any other sublect, according to a re- — - port redently issued, In one solicits] Gentlemen frequently- marry brun- more :than half of the pupils failed ettes before they begin preferring the . first -term algebra, while failures en' blondes, - high school -mathematics as a whole totaled 20,9 per cent, Oa the other hand, loss than 5 per A Civil War veteran had spout 8 trent, tailed in music anti domestic week at'a New York hotel. When he science and 13 per cent, in English, went to pay his bill the clerk asked: though foreign languages demanded a "What was your rank?" "011, just a student toll seoond only to matlte- piivate," - the old soldier replied, inatics. eane—"Why did you decide to mar= Ty Silly instead of Jim?" Philippa "I found i loved Billy best, You see, he proposed,!' October The mouth when flaming 'leaves ate Sere And nature grows more sober, Should be the gayest of the year— No Month is like October. Fast following on fair harvest's heels "Well, I won't charge you anything, Comes Hallowe'en You are the fleet private I over met. no hitches - Will halt the whirl of frolic's wheels, Nor stopetbe sport of Switches. For Dry. Skin—Mltiare's Liniment, "The trouble with me, and T guess this applies to 99 out of every 100 men tvho are putting on weight, I didn't have the energy or "pep" to keep it off. Lost all interest in any ]healthy activity and just lazed around accumulating the old pounds, until I got that "IC1110111001 feeling." Start taking Krusehen Salts—tha[:'a the common-sense sway to reduce --but don't lake them with the idea that they possess reducing dualities in themselves. This is what they do—lien clean out the impurities in your blood by keeping the bowels, kidneys and liver in splen- did working shape, and fill you with vigor and tireless energy. As n result, instead of planting yourself in an easy chair every free moment and letting flabby fat Accumu- late, you feel nn urge for activity that keeps you moving around doing the things you've all ays wanted to do and needed to do to !seep you in good condition. hrusdlen Salts are the up-to-date Foulntain of Youth. Take ono -half teaspoon in a glass of hot water to -morrow morning and every morning —be careful of the foods you eat --take regular nx ideratc exercise—then watch the pounds slide off. her mother, "Jack says I'm the nicest — girl he ever suet; sha11 I asst ]rim to call?" "lo," replied the mother, "why not let the poor chap keep on thinking so?" LACKH 1L -.A °D Get two ounces pf peroxlne Downer from Your druggist. Sprinkle on a bot, wet dots) and rub time face bwiskly. Every blackhead wi11 be dissolved, The one safe, sure and simple way to remewe blackheads. Satisfaction guaranteed or money. refunded. P. W. SCARE & co. Quads, Suri Relief to BILIOUSNESS SLUGGISHNESS CONSTIPATION T t' -i Foe tokjiltit keQJffrOW 1G<1;�\ "THEY WORK WHIZ.=. YOU SL€i3P" Nervous Hes:. daehes clue to over work, are quickly dis- pelted by Minard's. First heat the Liniment then inhale it for a few' inffnites. It bas- a speedy cura- tive effect, - "1 haw. _..1sevaral bottles of Lydia L. P ink hzm's Vege- table Connrotin:i and find it helps me tvo(, 0rfully, espe- cially before ch' Ibirth. 1 have five lovely e'_,ild en, After my last baby came 1 latl a misera- ble pain in my 'r side so 1 bought another nottle of the Compound ands feel fine now. 1 work outside during the fruit season in addition to my housework."— Mrs.. Charles Slingeriand, R.R, #4, St. Calk. eines, Ontario, ZSSU> No. -4 —'30