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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1934-01-04, Page 7,k. ' THURS., JAN. 4y,1934 ' THE CLINTON NEWS.ItECONII PAGE 7 Health, Cooking, Care of Children PAG INTEFIEST Edited By Lebam Hakeber Krale Quality Has No Substitute TEA "Fresh from the Gardens". 007 calla ScM� OF Tilt i (! tzabtrttedthat Agattrta_fcrrn and Life Insurance Companies in Canada. ' Editedby • GRANT 1 LEMING. M.D., Associate Secretary DON'T ly, swallow, then drink. It is an accepted principle that Do not eat iregularly, Experience -teaching should be positive, not neg= has s 'town that regular meals pro. ative. It is more effective to be note health. The digestive system told what to DO rather than what r e q -u i r e s periods o f rest, NOT to do. • This is a matter of and this rest is secured through practical importance in the training taking food at such intervals as give of children. The child should be en- time for complete digestion and rest •couraged and directed by positive before more food is taken. Irregular •teaehing; not discouraged and in- meals and the odd snack interfere --hibited by "don'ts." with this desirable routine. However, there are a few things Do not eat when tired. It is bet- • about the habits of eating that seem ter to rest before meals than after. to be stronger' when expressed as Tlie tired body is not in condition to "don'ts", 'so an exception is made digest a meal. An unhurried break - with the hope that the reader may be fast is one of the most enjoyable and .. encouraged to react in a positive way readily digested meals because the to these negative suggestions. body is rested at breakfast time. Do not overeat. Overindulgence Do not eat when upset. There is "in food or drink is harmful in many a very definite connection between -ways. The stomach is overburdened, poor digestion and mental upsets. and may, with justice, rebel. The Mea1 time is the worst time for a -whole digestive system is overtaxed quarrel; Worry causes digestive trous by overeating. The body becomes ov- bles, - erweight, and this, after forty, is a More "don'ts" might be added, but • definite physical handicap. these perhaps cover the most coin - Do not bolt food. To secure good mon of the bad eating habits which digestion, food should be chewed lead to digestive upsets and which `'thoroughly. `Rising a few minutes are at the root of many cases of so - earlier in the morning, gives time to called indigestion. A little thought, • eat breakfast properly, instead of a little care, a little time are all that swallowing it in a gulp or two. It is are needed to secure freedom from better to eat less and chew properly them, and to replace them by the de- • if time is really limited. suable habits which are the "dos" Do not wash food down with fluid, that are the opposite to the "dont's." `' There is no objection to drinking, in Questions concerning Health, ad moderation at meals. Most of our dressed to the Canadian Medical As- ' foods ane made up largely of water. sedation, 184 College Street, Toron- A simplerule is not to drink while to, will be answered personally by food is in the mouth. Chew thorough, [atter. WHAT OTHER NEWSPAPERS ARE SAYING It is the privilege of both the seetative of red Wren? ]home and the school to lay the foun- .--,Toronto Globe, dation of character. Sound diameter is the nation's most valuable asset, It is based on high ideals and whole- Newspapers do not shun all good some habits and these are acquired deeds in order to "play up" stories from earliest years. of crime. Not by any means. We --+Listowel Banner. admit there has been column upon column of spaee devoted to stories of graft in government circles, particu- larly across the border •line, but 'tip here in Canada many newspapers are telling of another grafting story. A British Columbia titan has succeeded hi grafting on two trees six kinds of cherry, three kinds of apple and four kinds of pear. . —Hanover Post. SALE OF TOY PISTOLS In !England the sale of toy pistol known as "pencil pistol" has been pro- - hibited. It would be well if the sale of all toy pistols where prohibited. It may seem a little thing, but the • young mind is influenced to a great extent by what playthings aro placed in his halide. Sixnilatly this applier ' to the moving picture show, which should Ile more closely censored, Since writing the above Hints come over the air that Mrs. Roosevelt, wife of the United States president, ex- presses herself in similar manner sr regards the selection of children's toys, especially condemning the toy ristol.--Glencoe Transcript. e JUST SAY "SAND" For the second time 'within resent days a correspondent of this paper has resorted to the use of the word "guts" to denote courage. We would much prefer that in future they say "intestinal stamina."—Stratford Bea- con -Herald. The Sun suggests that "sand", would sound much better in polite controversy than reference to those. internal organs of the human ana tomy. —Milverton Sun, Rumor has it that a former Indian "Chief will be appointed to one of the vacancies in •the;Senate. This May tend to liven up, the proceedings; and, nodoubt many of the older members will claim they knew the Chief's grandfather somewhere in the wilder- ness. And isn't the Red 'Chamber e proper place, anyway, for ,a repro... eessnalaeret • THAT INNATE URGE Everyone probably has nursed a pet longing to perform some foolish ae- tion, like, for instance, sticking his finger into his neighbor's cup of tea at a swell dinner to see if the tea is still warm. The ideas vary from the insane to the freakish, but almost everyone is bothered from time to time with a de;. sire to do something which would bring on hits the shocked stares of bystanders. One Lindsay Liman once told the writer that he discontinued sitting in the gallery of a local clinch .because after the sermon had been going for five or ten minutes, he had a longing to run down the aisle, put afoot on the rail, and leap over into spaee in hopes of grabbing the ,hig chandelier that swings from the ceiling.. The desire to do this had seized him so often that he decided it was better to change his seat so that he would get some peace of mind and he able to listen to the sermon. -Lindsay Post. THE CROONERS A, test conducted by the Literary Digest, shows that popular dislike for crooners amounts almost to hat-, red, because there were only 64 votes * in their favor and 9,686 against them. I * * * * * * r. But by almost two to one they ex WOMEN Household Economies 11 pressed approval of Rudy Vallee, HURON ELECTIONS whom they have evidently forgiven for his early meanings, (Continued from page 6) —Mail and Empire. utas Webb and 'one more tobe elect- ed. AS ,SHE IS' SPOKE Lord Aberdeen tells a story about. a friend of his who "thought that a woman he heard talking in the train was a Roura'nian. She turned out, on inquiry, to be . talking "Dundee Scotch." I etestialasee COMPETITION A giant ray recently landed off the coast of New -Jersey is the larg, est fish ever caught, being 20 feet long and weighing 6,000 lbs, I knew that sooner or later the Atnericans would try to make our Loch -Ness look small. monster c a INDUCEMENT Vice -Admiral W. Munro Kerr, C. iB., C.B.E„ commanding the reserve fleet, addressing the boys of the St. Vincent, at the conclusion of th. inter -divisional boxing finals last night said: •"Lf you are .fortunate enough to die while on active service itprovides you with a beautiful fun- eral, headed by a :wonderful band." --{From the British Papers teeEttMlea HIMSELF TO BLAME When a man commits a crime and his name collies out in the paper, he hasn't the newspaper to blame; but himself. Ile sh ould take due note of the publicity angle of it before he in- dulges in the misdemeanor, —eRegina Leader -Post. PERSONNEL POR 1934 COUNCIL IN HURON -, Ashfield — Murdock Matheson, Richard Johnston. (Blyth—George McNeil. Colborne -4A. J. !Goldthorpe. !Goderich Tp.—Wihnot Haacke. Grey—John *Nab, Oliver IIain- mingway. iiay—•Alfred Melick. Howiek—J. W. Gamble, L. Dern. erling. Hullett--J. A. Leiper. McKillop --J. M. Eckert. Morris—L. E. Cardiff. Stanley--+1Vfervin Manley. Stephen—Win. Sweitzer, C. Mac Whinney. Tuckersmith--,'W'. R. Archibald. Turnberry—ISAAC Wright. Usborne—Tamps Ballantyne, E. Wawanosh—.•Peter W. Scott. W. Wawanosh—W. J. Stewart. Goderich—C. IVIunnings, Robert Turner. Seaforth—W. W. Crozier. Wingbam—F. L. Davidson, !Brussels—R. J. Bowman. Exeter—W. D. Sanders. •Clinton --•George H. Elliott. Ilonsall- J. Jones. Dashwood Trustees axe Ed. Nadiger, Addison Tiernan and Thomas Kiumpp. Centralia Trustees are: Joshua Pollard, Wil- liam Willer' and Thomas Boyce. • Crediton Pollee village trustees for Credi- ton: George .Mawhinney, Henry J. Kuhn, James T. Woodall, S tephen Township , Election results for Stephen Town- ship were as follows: z 1 of•neve i li x Wlam, Sweitzer; d - e feated It Beaver. Deputy reeve—(Chester Mawhinney (acclamation). ' Council--�E'dwin. Lamport, Alonzo 14fcCann, Roy Rate. Hay Township Hay Township council was elected as follows today: 'George Armstrong, 543 votes; Max. Turnbull, 508; Wil Kam Haugh, 500; Edward Walper, 291; Alfred Melick previously was elected reeve by acclamation. Bayfield Mrs. Thomas Bailey, with 84 votes, headed the polls in today's voting for three trustees of Bayfield Police Vil- lage. Others elected: Samuel Hous, ton, 81; Murdock Ross, 60. The de- feated candidate was Lewis Thomp- son, with 51 votes. Ile was a mem- ber of the 1933 board along with Mr. Ross and W. J. McLeod, who did not contest a seat this year. • At the an- nual school meeting John R. Camey, on was re-aprointed trustee for a tln'ee-year term. DULY ENDORSED A woman went to the bank to cash a cheque. `"Just endorse it, please," directed the cashier. "I don't quite understand," site said. "You see, my husband is away, and sent this to me. He always taker care of these things." "That's all sight," said the cashier, "Just sign your name exactly as you would on your letters and I'll give you the money." "I think I understand," said the lady. So she carefully wrote on the back of the cheque: "four loving Edith." CREDITON MOTORIST KILLED IN COLLISION Dundas Man. Injured in Srnash in Fog Near Caledonia Caledonia, Jan. 1.—Milton Fink- bener, 27, of Crediton, Ont., was kil, led almost instantly, and Leonard Kelday, 22, of 92 Sydenham Street, __ Dundee, suffered injuries to his knee and possibly a broken jaw bone, when WHAT HE THOUGHT the car in which they were riding. driven by Kelday, ]collided head-on While standing on a raihvay bridge . with another car driven by P. D. a boy was astonished to see two; Lindabury of Simcoe, in a heavy fog goods trains running on the same 1 about two miles north of Caledonia line in opposite directions. He stood on No. 6 highway at 4 o'clock this and witnessed the smash. Later,' morning, some officials, learning that there 1 Coroner Dr, A. E. Roszell and Dr. had been an' eyewitness, found the H• Mawof Caledonia. attended ,the injureat h lad and reproached him for not try injured the erne: of Norman haw- ing to warn the drivers, thorns, near where the accident oct "What were you thinking about curred. - Coroner Roszeli stated that when you saw the trains about to an inquest would be held on Jan. 9. crash head-on " asked one of the Finkbener died in a few minutes men. i from Ioss of blood caused by his jug, "'Well," the bo answered, slowly, vein having been severed, Kel- t' "I thought it was a rotten way to run+ray is at the hone 01 Mr. 1 Haw- arailway," thorn. Lindabury sustained a fractured 1cheek bone and shock. Miss Pearl "' Pringle nurse at the Norfolk. General * * * *. ,, 4, i, ,i, t, * * 4, * * * * hospital, Simcoe, also occupied the * Lindabury car. She suffered bruises and possibly a fractured ankle. Both THE NEWS -RECORD * were taken home by friends. THE NEW -RECORD IS • * AN ALL-AROUND FAMILY * * NEWSPAPER, WITH SOME- * MAKING PROGRESS * THING OF INTEREST. FOR " Teacher—Tommy, * EVERY MEMBER OP THE * can you give me * FAMILY: r an example of a paradox * ARE YOU A REGULAR..• ! TonunyYes, Bir. Aman walking SUBSCRIBER.' IF NOT, a utile, and only nxovng two feet. WHY NOT? * * THE NEWS -RECORD VIS- * • ITS Y 0 U REGULARLY * THE OBSTINATE ENGLISH * EACH WEEK 0•F THE FIF- • TY -TWO IN THE YEAR * Here is a simple story from Kil. * AND OOSTS T,ESS THAN • dare: * THREE CENTS PER WEEK.. • He asked a Dublin roaclman how * YOU CANNOT GET MORE • things Nese with hint. "Well, sorr," * FOR YOUR 1Vii0'NEY ANY- ,* 'v'as the reply, "when I used to dig a * WHERE. COME IN OR SEND • car out. of a ditch ; they gave the a * IN YOUR SUBSCRIPTION *'. sovereign, and nog' they give me ` a * POR THE CLINTON NEWS- * -shilling. It's these -English leaving * ere CORD ONLY $ 1.50 FOR * the ,country 1 blame_." * 1983. w "But you drove them out," protest- * ed the visitor, THIS MODEST CORNER IS DEDICATED TO THE POETS Here They Will Sing You Their Songs—Sometimes Gay, Sometimes, Sad— But Always Helpful and Ins piling. THE BIRDS' ' :-„ And the sun, and the moon, and the When Jesus Christ was four years moon's salt tide; , old, And the earth turns too The angels brought Him toys of gold As flies on the rim of a wheel we ride Which no man ever had bought or From age round to age; sold. And the .dreams and the toys which make our pride And yet with these He would not Are an old heritage, play. Worn properties from scene primeval Hex Wadeim H small fowl out of clay' stage a And blessed le e d them till they flew away All curtained now from view .. Tu creasti, Dourine. Whatever the year brings, he 'brings nothing o rn new. Jesus Christ, Ch xst T o h u child so wise, Bless mine hands and fill mine eyes, Go th rough the door. And bring my soul to Paradise. You shall : find nothing that has not Hillaire Belloc,been before, Nothing so bitter it will not be once. •ernmte more. All this our sad estate was known of yore, In old worlds red with pain, Borne by hearts sullen and sick as ours, through Desperate, forgotten, other winters, when Tears fell, and hopes, and men, And crowns, and cities, and blood, on a trampled plain, And nations, and honour, and God, and always rain... And honour and hope and God rose up again, And like trees nations grew. Whatever the year brings, he brings nothing new. NEW YEAR'S EVE, 1913 • 0, Cartmel bells ring soft to -night, And Cartmel bells ring clear, But I lie far away to -night, Listening,; with my dear; Listening in a frosty land Where all the bells are still, And the small -windowed bell -towers stand. Dark under heath and hill I thought that, with each dying year, As long as life should last The bells of Cartmel I should hear Ring out an aged past: The plunging, mingling sounds in- crease Darness's depth and height, , , The hollow valley gains more peace And ancientness to -night: The loveliness, the fruitfulness, The power of life lived there Return, revive, more closely press Upon that midnight air. But many deaths have place in men !Before they come to die; Joys must be used and spent, and then Abandoned and passed by. Earth is not ours; no cherished space Can hold us from life's flow, That bears us thither and thence by, -ways We knew not we should go. 0, Cartmel bells ring loud, ring clear, Through midnight deep and hoar, A year new-born, and I shall hear The Cartmel bells no more. —Gordon Bottomley. NEW YEAR 1918 Whatever the year brings, he brings nothing new, For time, caught on the ancient wheal of change, Spins round, and round, and round; and nothing is strange Or shall amaze Mankind, in whom the heritage of all days Stirs suddenly, as dreams half re- membered do. Whatever the year brings, he brings nothing new, Should some yea r suddenly bring something new, We ah ould grope as Iost children, without a clue, We s hould drift all amazed through such a queer And unimagined year, Riding uncharted seas; a derelict crew, Whistling in vain for the old winds that blew From the old skies, we should seek far and near • Some mark by which to steer, And some known port, that we might sail thereto. Black nightmare and blind fear Shall seize and hold hint who In some year suddenly finds some- thing new. CHRISTMAS A' boy was born at Bethlehem that knew the haunts of Galilee. He wandered on Moutit Lebanon, and learned to love each forest tree. But I was bore at Marlborough, and love the homely faces there; and for all other men besides 'tis little love I have to spare. I s hould not mind to die for thein, my own dear downs, my comrades true. But that great heart of Bethlehem, he died for men he never knew. And yet, I think, at Golgotha, as Jesus' eyes were closed in death. they saw with love most passionate the village street at Nazareth. -E. Hilton Young. teentras Pale, pale he stands, GIFTS OF THE YEAR Carrying world -old gifts in his cold hands— Can you not tarry awhile. Winds, and the sky's keen blue, Oh year, so near your reposing.? 'Woods, and the wild cuckoo, 1, w ho have loved you long, Lovers, and loveliness, and death, and .Would have you linger in closing; life. Linger that I night recall,false to assume that it is 85 per Does he hold Peace, the derelict babe 'Hess in the twilight alone, I cent. of normal. Yet in the face of of strife With a tinge of regret for bygone M the pessimism now prevalent it And of wan penury? things . • might be tempting Providence to as - Will she ride in on the wash of the The glorious days 1 have known. sort just what would constitute nor, storming sea, mai, or oven to believe that nations - you not stay your course Be d rapped at last by its ebb on the is national' ,m and new experiments trampled sands, Oh year, with my heart in your• its social Control may not so ear in To lie there helplessly? kee p g' change the basis of normality that War's orphan, she, 1 w ouid not sadden your way such estimates would be likely to And ixngrown mother of wars yet to be,With vain regret or with weeping, prove valueless. I would but offer you thanks She smiles and croons for a space For the golden gifts that you brought between these two. KNEW HIS SIZE Whatever the year brings he brings And for guiding my faltering steps To the happiness that I sought. A colored woman went into a nothing new. store to buy a collar for her husband, Dreams and desires and hopes does For these, before you depart, "What size " asked the cleric. Oh year, would I give you praise, "I done forget the size" the year hold. g replied the Bad and good, tinsel and golds Telling them over again woman, "but Ah kin jes' manage to Lying and true, Like a rosary of days; reach around his throat with bo One and all they are old, so old For your gracious gift of the spring, hands." 9 The dreamt and desired. For lilting winds, and for mirth, They werery - �-r - -a and told For high clear stars at night, For the warns sweet scent of earth; By the. `nen swinging in trees by Ger' Rid of That by Strong tails,' For leisure, and:: earnest toil, •1,, ,fi� d Not till the, last ratan fails For. Co the .comfort in kindly looks, g� �, And the sun's fire pales, For health, for unending joy in life, For Only o Few esoits Shall the embers of these flaming For my boundless kingdom el books 'in these Clara when seen pansies count i''e great to helve s remedy like BUCXL Y S dreams he cold. For friends I have found with you, MlXTUttB, that banishes coughs and colas so .,ekkty first the cost is only a £sw cents, Whatever •� year brings, u0 brings 'For firelight's kindly cheer, Yet e'en as I voice the thought The chimes begin to play; Mellow and sweat and old, Half tenderly sad, half gay, While the gracious Keeper of all the years (Leads you gently away, —Molly Bevan. ere THE ROAD 0' THE YEAR High in the windy sky -trails Hark to the clamorous shout, All the bells of all the world Ringing the old year out; Peal upon .peal of gladness, Aht but the time flies fast That ushers in the new and leads The old year into the past. Oh! the road o' the year h as led us, From winter's snow to anew, By .a a peaceful meadow Where the winds of memory blow;. For what is the year but a roadway With h Wan h a milestone y set, Stones that point to the hills of joy Or the valleys of vain regret. Oh! the road o' the year behind ns held many a joy -fraught mile, Yet now we stand where the old road ends • ,I To greet the -new with a smile While:flecked with the sun and the shadow • Of laughter and hope. and tear, Into the land of remembered things Fades the winding road o' the year. --'Molly Bevan. COMPARATIVE INDUSTRIAL TRENDS (Continued from page 3) available, such information as ha3 been gleaned from accounts of cur- rent business conditions in the 'Uni- ted States indicates that the curve in that country has again turned up. ward. Supplementing these stories which are clearly indicated on the chart, it is necessary to mention some facts. concerning the !compilation of these Indices. They make allowance for seasonal fluctuation, but not for long-time trend. In a period as great as that since 1024, the year used as normal for Great Britain and the: mid -year for normal in the United States, long-time trend 3 per cent, compounded, for instance) would change the normal,, by thirty per cent. Since 1926, the base ,year for Canada, the normal would have changed by twenty per cent. While this chart shows how far production has gone toward nigaining the level achieved in the base years of the re- spective countries, it makes no pre- tence of estimating what might now be considemed normal long-time trend of expansion. In this time of falling prices and depression, the business experts who are the chief exponents of :the natural system of industrial expansion in trines of prosperity, have found special reasons for think, ing that this long-time trend has ceased to be :a factor. Yet long-time trend has manifested itself in a man- ner which can be. clearly demonstrat- ed over a period of one hundred to one hundred and fifty years. Peso simian may be the fad of the time ment, but it still seems a fair prog, nostication that it will not be many years before the volume of produc- tion in Canada and the United States in 1929 will be exceeded by substan- tial amounts. Long-time trend, the aim toward a higher standard of living, the natural expansion of bus» Mess will bring these results. While this chart shows that industrial pro- duction is 85 per cent, as large as th i the 's it wouldbe at inbase years, Ono dosof BUCKLLY S MLXTUa6 nothing new. Por love, and laughter, and oven tears ' gives nnmistaekabie reliaf. Two dos,, very Turn, turn the page! For these e I thank you 3ea,r. often knocks out a e on h or cold ld for goo d, No how long Your cough or cold bas hun on, an :Buckletwill stop i —toieki ThaPs why yne"w5atraaots 115boa,tfintob—Bnacknkgyf'as, is sold everywhere. "What 11 we did," the man replied, It turns, Wand we, and the squirrel in !Year I have loved so weIl!. sourly, "They'd' no right to 'go" his cage, I would that you could stay Advertisc.. r { ring ��vnDollars iiorto the a