Loading...
The Seaforth News, 1930-07-10, Page 7College Students j DO YOU VALUE Work in Summer vim UV A r �u7 Astray item in a small town news- paper conveyed the information the egior day that James Washington Clark (rho same is entirely fictitious) had arrived home from .college to spend the summer vacation. The brevity did not indicate just what Tames' Washington intended to do withhis spare t.time-whether he `ex- pected to chauffeur: the family, car, sample exciting novels in a hammock, become the official supervisor of .all the strawberry festivals and.. golf tournaments in the neighborhood, or turn' his attention. to more serious) pursuits. As a matter of fact, lolling "under' �tllre shade of the'old apple tree" is • of es popular as it used to be as.al pastime for unoocuied college stu-1 dents, if a census were, taken of summer occupations, it would be' des -I covered that youth to -day fe direct -1 lug its energies into many useful and original channels, certain ' of theml, highly remunerative. Smile of ,these young persons will doubtless go on holiday, but the larger number will take summer jobs in line with their special interests and .enthusiasms, work which affords them a practical application of .tile theories discussed, in classrooms. Closing of schools in early, sunnier, formerly permitted rural youths to em- ploy their energies in work about the farm, but that contingency le no long- er an important factor throughout the country. There seems to be no good reason why native aptitudes and in- tellectual curiosity should be allowed to slumber when the warns weather. arrives; instead, summer should of -I for such change of employment that ambitions are re -enforced and. frestl Impetus is given to the happy habit of work. There is -probably •nothing. more uninteresting and unproductive than aimless loafing, Monsoon beholder of nature's beauties, but Wet et Monsoon B$ in s She wraps him up and is careful pound b the reel discerning, the r {( that he does not lie in a draught, et y y g, Relief to India he often suffers from a bad cold. She magnificent scenery of the ancient i If your health is poor; if you are pale, nervous and easily tired; if you suffer from.. headaches and'backaclies; it your digestion' is bad you may de- pend -upon it that these symptoms come ,from an impoverished state of the blood, That unless' this condition is remedied 'a complete breakdown may follow'. Dr.. Williams' Pink Pills are a perfectmedicineforany one in this condition. They enrich and purify the'biood and thus promote health and strength: Mrs. G. M. Andrews, Halifax, N.S:, writes;—"I always keep Dr. Williams' Pink Pills in the house. When I was a young,. anaemic girlthey complete- ly restored my health. After marriage my health broke down and once more these pills brought me back to health. My friends all toll me how well I look and for this Dr. Williams' Pink Pills deserve all credit.!' You can get these pill' at all medi- cine dealers or by mail at 50 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Out. Kisses Dangerous Doctors Declare Babies Catch Cold from Kisses N f — of •ronl Fresh Air development of the tourist traffic, and increasing, business activity, the link is really now in the forging. Gradual- ly the mode of fife to the iaterior is changing. Many of Abe old settlers will netlike it. Big treks with mobs. of cattle, will go,, but much' of the routine cannot be altered yet awhile, Rraveney Station, which is 250 miles tioln the nearest railway in : Queens- land, is' where Mrs. Annie Schaffer lives. One of the heroines of, the bush, she not long ago visited Ade- laide with. ,a consigninent of cattle, but she was glad, to get back to the silence of, the spaces, "I cannot tolerate the ceaseless noise of the city," she said. But the lure of the bush was also inher heart: When Mrs, Schaffer is at home she works on a cattle run, doing exactly what -a neap toes—riding hard, brand- ing calves,.. .ending up, and mobiliz- ing cattle. She is as expert as the -Wilma Brink, born and. reared near Kansas State penitentiary is said to come naturally by her gun -handling propensities, and is chosen to head' co-ed sharpshooters'' team of Kansas., English .`Oyez, Oyez, Oyez' Artists Compete for Town Crier's Crown London.—"Oyez, oyez, oyez!' cane the cries resounding through the air of the peaceful little North Devonshire town' of Torrington when the Town • the Torrington fottball field when each contestant In turn made his cry Prom a platform beneath one set of goal- posts, while the Judges sat out of Criers Championship 'of Britain was sight in a tent atthe other end of staged there recently during the an- the field. The order of crying was nual May Pair. settled by lot and after a very close This year's contest created great ex- fight'the championship fell to W. Ab - Doctors are continually telling us citement, and local patriotism was bott of Lyme Regis, Dorset, who ob- that kissing is one of the elite causes roused to its highest pitch, for Ernest tabled 9 points out of a possible 100. of colds, and insist that mothers of Baker, the home crier, was defending Mr. Baker cried himself into second small children should not allow little his title against 17 challengers from place with 93 points, and though his Mies to be kissed, all parts of England and Wales. At supporters must have been disappoint - Baby suffers, much more from the a luncheon before the competition ed at his failure to retain his title yet evil effects of kissing than his older each entrant was presented with a the crowd gave him a fine ovation as brothers and sisters. Admiring silver match box bearing the borough runner-up. The winner received a friends, fond relations, and adoring arms as '' -a souvenir of the occasion handsome silver bell and three 'strangers are all eager to kiss baby The following announcement formed guineas. the test piece: Following the competition each crier "Oyez oyez oyez! Lost to the care- had the o Y ortuntt of ivin •f and the mother is usually flattered that her childehould receive such at- tention. forgets that colds are caught from derful panorama bestowed by nature 'germs, not from fresh air. The ad- with a lavish band and unrivaled even Sun Breaks High Pressure miring grown-up is often a source of Bidetoi•d, Devon, capably advertised Starting 6 -Month Period danger to baby's health, if not to his tit the fair county of Devon. God save g life, the King." Bideford Regatta as the "Henley of of Rairi The raise mother should not allow' About 300 people were present on the West of England." borough of Great Torrington, a won - his own selection, and local patriotism was much in evidence. The Barnstable crier, W. Hari., seized the chance of boosting the millinery of England's oldest borough, while W. H. Small of Recent news dispatches announce any stranger to kiss her child. The the beginning of the great .annual stranger may only be suffering from a , monsoon in India. This event will slight cold, but this, 12 pnsseci on to put a stop to the Indian civil disobedi- baby, might pave the way for much enee canipaigu oll manufacturing salt more serious complaints, from sea water, for the torrents of rain will turn the salt deposit areas Into mud and slime. The North American continent has and delicious light sweet. Crombie no phenomenon lilce the India mon- three or four stale sponge -carica in e soon, which recurs with seansoual rea - gularity like the annual floods of the booth- Pour over thein half a teacup Nile. During the whiter there de- fur of boiling milk and beat thoroughly velops over southern Asia a groat with a fork.' Leave standing until peak of high barometric pressure. It cold, then stir in cue tablespoonful of ee it were of rock instead of air, one flour. Beat the yolks and whites of would -see a huge mountain whose two eggs separately, Stir the yolks base extended across southern Asia.I into the sponge -cake mixture and beat 'including the great Hitnlaya Moun-1 well again. Iain rouge and all of .India. Add a few currants, or if you pre - Lasts for Six Months fele a few chopped raisins, and lastly This great storm witch brings to a the stiffly -beaten whites of egg. Have creally in a frying -pan some very )lot lose the drought caused by the win- lard, drop the mixture in from a table- spoon, and fry until cicely browned. Drain well, pile on a paper doyley, sprinkle castor sugar over and serve break away, but the ,wind: continues 0.1 once. to ,blow steadily and freshly from the southwest, bringing .frequent rains during the entire wet monsoon -period, Which lasts for six months. Sponge Cake Fritters This is an easily -prepared, unusual ter or dry monsoon is known as the wet nrona0om For about three weeks the stormcontinues without apprecia- ble abatemeut Atter that the clouds No Handsome Giants Declare Doctors .Abnormally tall persons are not usually strong for their size, according to. Jean Lecoq, writing in Le Petit Journal (Paris). They are, on the con- trary„ generally weak, deformed, and diseased. He writes: "Many person.; admire giants, per- haps envy thein, and imagine that they are examples of a superior bu- anity. A. complete error; ter gigan- tism' is an anomaly, a monstrosity, as much so as dwarfism. "It is really a disease. The work of anthropologists has shown that the giant is a man that is still a child, in ,whose case growth does not stop at hage when normally he ought to ave ceased to grow• The giant to rarely well-proportioned; his hands hnd feet are almost always too large, his face Is generally distorted. . ate ; "Physicians who haverestudied gian- tisln say that giants are all diabetic. Professor Landouzy says also that al - 1 most all of them are candidates for -. tuberculosis. They aro subjects' to all sorts of other morbid troubles; "they tire,sooner thaurnormal persons; they are unfit for all vi 1cut •labor, their muscles are weak in spite of their size, thair nerves lack resistance, stance, and they aro often affected with neuras- thenia. Handsome giants' are rare." "We 'hope we deserved all this," wrote a Manchester firm, enclosing a Nigerian customera letter, which runs as follows: Dear Sir,Kindly send me one of your Illustrated Catalogues of news goods and materials. Please if you are send it to me I shall he very r� glad, because I heard 02 you what you aro the one of ttio lionosty and faith- fuluess man in the world. Please sir, send it to me next mail it -it is impos- sible. I delight to say you will send it to me withoutdoubt, Yours faithful saverant, The Weathermatr was the only Toronaonian t0 give the Shriners ` a cool reception.. ..e, Half a dozen rataflas crumbled with the sponge -cakes give a specially deli- cious flavor to the fritters. Service Constitutes Greatness -Not Riches A man may become wealthy, he may become very wealthy, in the sense of acquiring money. He may become a millionaire, and oven many times over, by working for it directly. But very common men have done that. Indeed, many of a low type have done it. We .now have sense enough not 20 call these great men. Careful analysis will show, in every cease, that it requires service for One's fellow men to consti- tute a great man. The man who is working for greatness alone is the man who ordinarily never achieves it. —Ralph Waldo Trine, Limited Time? ' Some inmates of the Kiugston peni- tentiary ars writing their in s,tricula- tion examinations, though as a dia. patch says, they aro liandicapped by limited time for stluly, It will puzzle the ordinary teacher to understand how this 1landicall could operate in a peniteutiatiy. Certainly we can imag- ine no better way in which inmates. could spend their hours than in study that will help make them self"support ing and self-respecting members of the community ou their release. "The nation 'hi• which utilizes most ful- ly the individual gifts of each citizen will have the greatest measure of wealth contentment and. happiness." —Colonel E. M. House.. Most men grow a moustache 'by in etalnients, says a barber. They start with so much down. Nurses Wanted The Toronto Hospital. for Incurs/lea, in affiliation with Bellevue and Allard aroepitals, New Cork city, offers a Three Year's Course of Training to Young Women, having' the required education, and :desirous or becoming nurser/. This Hospital has adopted the eight-hour sjetent. The .pupils receive uniforms of the .School, a monthly allowance and travelling eapeuses. to and from - New York. For further particulars write or apply to the Sutterlutenaent. -- BACKWARD BABIES Thrive After Use of Baby's Own Tablets. Derangements of the digestive or- gans are responsible for most of the ailments which afflict young children and keep them backward iu develop- ment. Baby's Own Tablets regulate the stomach and bowels, restoring them td normal action and this is all thea is necessary to set the little suf- ferer safely on the road to health and happiness. Baby's Own Tablets are specially designed to correct indigestion, con- stipation, colic; break Up colds and simple fevers and to allay teething pains. They are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. Grace Without Meat God of the grape 'whose bubbles are taught To make flesh of the sun. Lord of the olive tree whose thought Brings oil out of the stone. Father of fig and orange trees That laugh to bear their load, Forgive us all our trespasses On thy too -tempting road; And though thy children will be fed On what the Lord decrees, Give us this day our daily bread- And wine and fruit and cheese. —Louis Untermeyer in the Saturday Review of Literature. "Why do they call a bell boy in a hotel 'Buttons'?" ' "Because; he's always off when you need him most, I guess." Mads in r Di'ives Away the Headache. Reflections on Life Pride Is a sign of the worst poverty --ignorance. g no ce. Who is richt He who Is satisfied with his lot. With the pious ,God is strict, even to a hair's breadth. Commit a sin twice, and you will think it perfectly allowable, Mali is generally, led the way which he is inclined ued to go. Do not confine your children to your own learning, for they were born in another time. - —From the Talmud. Every telephone call to America which comes from Europe—Stook- holm, Paris, or :)3ertin — Passes through an exchange in Queen Vic- toria Street, London. C. Australia Owes Big Debt to Women Women Bring. Comfort and Home Life to Vast Wilderness Adelaide, 5, Aust.—If it were not for the women, the occupation and development of Central Australia—or what little there is of It—would hard- ly have been feasible. Women have made settlement possible by insur- ing just sufficient of the domestic amenities to enable the men to slay. They have bridged the difference, that Is, between .practically uncivil- ized• isolation and meager comforts. The railway, so far as it has gone, has improved matters and enabled the settlers to push a little further gout into the empty spaces. When the transcontinental passes through the center' of the continent, as is con- templated, a large part of the problem will have been solved. There would .then be not only transport facilities, but cheaper freights; and where now only rough homes—a bit of niud and a few gum houghs—are seen, timber and brick structures will appear. Already there is almost a fashion- able note at Alice Springs, the press ent head ofthe line, The only hotel there has an advertisement in the Adelaide dailies inviting tourists at a reasonable tariff, and even hinting at delicacies. This is really revolution- ary hospitality. The big spaces of Australia are, of course, gradually being broken down by means of rail, air and motor travel, In the middle of the desert plain on the route of the east -west air service at Christmas there was a wonderful surprise for passengers. When they stepped out of the lines on the Nul- larbor Plain—just a wide immensity or unrelieved, stunted bush—they found In the hostel (where the night on the journey going and coming is always spent, a Christmas meuu of iced asparagus, oysters in the shell,. roast turkey, pudding and iced drinks. Motion pictures and a Christmas tree. added their part. The experience' nearly took away the passengers' breaths. .here in the very heart of the desert was a party almost as bril- liant as any that could have been organized In the city. The City's s Noise It will not be long before Alice rWith 'the Springs has an air service. W King Bug Killer The Better Insecticide, Fungicide and Fertilizer A Quick and Sure Death to the Insect Prevents Blight Stimulates' the Plant Through the Leaf Guarante_d AT YOUR DEALERS Write us for Literature KING CALCIUM PRODUCTS a CAMPi:'ELLVILLE, ONT. Box C best of them. There Is camping out at night under the stars wlleu' the bush is in its most beautiful mood, a mood soft and caressing and full of tlu4lls. Where Blacks Drive Motorcars The country in which Mrs, Schaffer lives is hilly and scrubby. The cat- tle feed on-.mulga and water comes from bores and wells. The homestead is 60 miles from the nearest township, but that is only a flick of the riding whip as distance is measured in these places. The stores are delivered by motor lorry from the railway, andthe mail comes once a week in the normal season. But there are times when the river is to flood, and six or eight weeks niay elapse before any news is received from the outside world. Howson in the Antarctic was closer to civilizaation with his wireless than many of the settlers in Central Aus-! tralia. The picturesque feature of life in the outback in these days is' to see the blacks driving their .owe motorcars. They have become aristo- crats of the bush, Some of the old settlers will not use a motor. Neith- ed will Mrs. Schaffer. "I prefer a horse ally day," she says. "There is nothing romantic: in rushing about the country in a dull,I inanimate vehicle." On Waveney Station they have hot weather for eight months of the year. Sometimes the temperature • reaches 1 over 120 degrees in the shade; but, amid difiicultis and discomforts, Mrs. Ihaffer insists that the life is full of delights which she would not ex- change for the artificial pleasures of the city, and strange sights. "I am trying to reverse the posi- tron," remarked Mrs. Sager during a"chat in Adelaide. "What a sensa- tion :one of our northern camel trains would cause winding its way through your streets. People would stare, wouldn't they?" People are apt to sympathize with these far -away bush dwellers, but Mrs. Schaffer commiserates city folk. She thinks" they are to be pitied for what they miss, the spicy air the un- matched glitter of the evening skies, the ample freedom, the wonderful birds in their gay tropic plumage, and the indefinable charm 01 a self-con- tained life. "I'm to a hurry to get back," she said. And so soon as the cattle mar- kets were over, Mrs. Schaffer, the real lover oP the bush, was Off. Mr. Dabbs—"It takes ycu women a long time to seo a thing in Its true light." MTS. Tabbs—"Yes; and that lo the reason why so many of you men are able to get married." DO YOU SUFFER FROM CONSTIPATION ? Countless remedies are advertised for constipation. Many relieve for the moment but they are habit form- ing and must be continued. Others contain calomel and dangerous min- eral drugs, which remain in the sys- tem, settle in the joints and cause aches and pains. Some are harsh purgatives which cramp and gripe and leave a depressed after effect. Avoid lubricating oils which only grease the intestines and encourage nature's machinery to become lazy. A purely vegetable laxative such as Carter's'Little Liver Pills, gently touches the liver, bile starts .toflow, the bowels move gently, the intestines are thoroughly cleanser{ and constipa- tion poisons pass away. The stomach, liver and bowels are now active and the system enjoys a real tonic effect. All druggists 25c and 75c red pkgs. This is the price at which you can nw buy RED LABEL ED TEki A Great Soldier Classified Advertising FOB SALE Alexander the Great died 2,288 years ago and divine honors were paid to him in Egypt and other countires, He was more than a conqueror—he taught the language and civilization' of Greece wherever he conquered and! he planted Greek kingdoms in Asia that flourished for centuries. He was devising plans for marsh draining around Babylon when be died; he has become one 01 the most romantic of historical figures—a sup- porter of learning and civilization as well as a great soldier. The Eyeball "In the newly born infant the eye- ball is about two-thirds the size of the fully grown globe; though an In- fant will multiply its weight at birth some sixteen times by the time adult 1 life Is reached, the size of its eyes increases by only some 50 per cent." —Mr. J. Herbert Fisher, MIL B.S.,F.R.C.S., at the Royal College of Sur- geons of England. To clean a carpet quickly, sweep briskly with hot bran. MInard's for Falling Mair. FOR :FIFTY VIDAKS Cuticiira Soap a nd Ointment ha,. aaOM.d she poresq ewe0Ieel and moxa code. 4.4004 mmbod or oartag for 4be skin and he4. A�y 1IAI;Y UHIUICS—wM HA'1'CIII:U .Il 216,000 last rear In Ener veils• tics Write for fres catalegpe A FL Swllzer Grunion, Ont FOR SALL"-200 ACRES 0001) C'L.IY 1.' loam, 26 acres bush, balance all till- able, excellent farm for grainildings, and stoclr, Ne11 fenced. Cleat class buwater In tiaras and 110005, one mile from .04001 and chur041, will sell all Inbloc' or each hundred separate. Good reasons for sell- ing. Apply Morley lieath..Shanty Env. AGENTS WANTED A1b11?' TS EARN 0002) 111 ON NY sellingthebest fruit trees,' shrubs. 1lues.- el00000en1, roses, etc.; town or country: selling outfit 5upllIied. er 0ry help given' enrlmisslons paid weekly.: E. O. Smith & lone. Ltd. 'Vin ,n, Farb:). 600 acres fruit and -nurse -v stoelt. Many a man in Genndom 1h:i hes level to tell the tale has lived becauro he hadn't told it, writes Mr. M. Mc0rtbur. Thousands' say coastipa- Hon liver trouble, indi- gestion, gas end overnight went"Fruit-a-0ves; Nerves quiet. Get "Fruit-a-tives" from druggist today. Ends in 1 Minute "Ended burn, itch and pain of piles int minute with 'Scotia -Salva', 'writes L.1'. Scars. 'Bleeding stopped. Piles Got instant results toiaydd 4 operation. ru Hoo. Y ggists, Failing Hair Use Minard's before It's toe late. It checks falling hair and stimu- betes new growth as well Apply persistently to scalp four times a week. The man who would never walk again. Who could imagine a more poignant story than this t .A champion athlete—bedridden. Told that he could never walk again .. • .1 Aga then he took iiruschen. "My doctor told my landlady that I could never wally again. I had rheumatism sob la about Christmas -time, and was confined to bed for two months. I -am nearly sixty years dap. After taking ale bottles I ant starting to ,work next week.. Up till two years ago I had heroa.ohne. pion Pacing Cyclist. I have wen a prim every 041418 I have ridden. Being au athlete. but a poor scholar, it would take me a week to write the facts about ifrllsohoa Salto." —W. 11. A Original letter A101810, Ia,lwohon. Emotion Salta Is obtainable at drug .and department stoma In Canada at 710. a bottle. A bottle contains enough to last for 4 or G mouths—good health for half -a -cent a day, 00Nel00 PHILLIPS rm �•outhtem due to Acid le neeesreee Aero STOMACH 1 ASTSYRN {ACCli@ OAsps t1Ap66A. indhgestj0 What Meet people call iudlgestiou is. usually excess acid in the stomach. The food has soured. The instant i eaedy is a, ij Miall which ngge�r,t alines aside. But don t u o Pli e'helps. Use What your doctor would .advise. The best help is Phillips' Milk of 1Vlagnesia. For the 50 years since its invention it bee remained standard With physicaus. You will find nothing else so quick in its effect, so, harmless, so efficient. One tasteless spoonful in water neu- tralizes many times its volume in acid. The results are immediate, with no bad atter effects. Once you learn this fact, You will never deal with excess acid in the crude ways. Go learn— now—why this method is supreme. Be surd to get the genuine Phillips' Milk of Magnesia prescribed by physi- cians for' 50 years iu correcting exeess acids, Each bottle contains full direc- tions—any drugstore. ```I was very weak after an op- y' eration. My nerves were so bad would it I s down and cr and my husband would not go e and lea ve m ai _fie. ow m ne Feg "ri a much better, thanks fn o ae booklet that was left under the door. LydiaE ' ydl E. Ptnk- ham's Vegetable Compound surely put me on my feet. I haul: 'taken nhe hntrloa, o rty. .Era 1•ds to me b rtohm� iVly sister has taken this medicine too." -Mrs: Annie Walton, 67 Stanley St., Kingston, Ontario. - ISSUE No, 26-7:;.30