HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1925-07-16, Page 2ill•N•obbb bow.
The Automobile
LAND OF E ,NGELINE LURES MANY AUTOIS7,'S.
Nova Scotia is the province down enthusiast as well are small boast said
by the sea, the Land of Evangeline, ing and canoeing.
the oldest discovered part of North And all of these things the visitor
America: It famous for its historic may enjoy in a superb summer eft
forts, its r mate; long days of sunshine and the
picturesque fishing villages; incomparable twilights of this leti-
' for wide valleys and a hundred miles tude. There is no excessive heat and
+of 'apple orchards; for literally a the nights are cool everywhere,
thousand lakes and streams. In one -^=
of the finest summer climate's in the BALLAD OF A SYINPATHETIC'
World, the visitor finds golf and tennis, MOTORIST,
fishing, hunting, yachting and surf If your car is weak and wheezy—
bathing, and the superb highways of though it used to be so breezy,
*a storied and romantic coast, There If you're having trouble climbing
are nearly two thousand miles of fine little hills; "
motor roads, half of them following If the carburetor sputters and the
the coast, which has a tale of priva- differential mutters,
teer and pirate, phantom frigate and And you do not dare repair it—for
buried treasure to iwery mile. At the bills.
eighteen tourist motor camps the visi- If you've .tried your best to trade it
for may find accommodations. and the dealers all upbraid it,
Nova Scotia has the oldest Euro -.And deny it has the value that you
pean settlement on the continent north think;
of the Gulf of Mexico. In its ruined On a night that makes you shiver
fortresses the student may retrace take it down beside the river,.
four centuries of American history.' Kiss it fondly, push it in and let•it
Here is Fort Anne and Fort Edward sink.
and Beausejour, and the desolation of
ruined masonry which was Loins- Why, you ask me, hesitating, do I
bourg Louis the .`.IV's "most splen- favor perpetrating
did city"—the mightiest stronghold of Such a crime as this, advising it be
sunk?
You remark: "You hadn't ought/sr
shove the car into the water
While there's any chance of selling.
it for junk!"
But a car is worth befriending when
its useful life is ending,
When its will to take the hill on
high has ceased;
Would you junk a friend, "I wonder,
have him torn apart, asunder?
You'd rather drown him first, to
say the least.
—Harold S. Osborne.
French power in the New World. Here
are the descend'ant's of the Highland
Scots who were "out" for Prince
Charlie in 1745, who subsequently
found refuge in this New Scotland,
and still speak their ancient Gaelic
tongue.
None of the waters in Nova Scotia
are preserved. Countless rivers,
brooks and lakes provide trout and
salmon through a long season. There
is moose and deer hunting in season;.
and the best of duck and grouse shoot-
ing; and yachting for the blue water
The Missing Wild Man.
Cicus men are always looking for
novelties to recruit that more or less
amusing collection •of "freaks," -genu-
ine and manufactured, which is called
the "side show." One morning, says Mr,
Gil Robinson in his book, Old Wagon
Show Days, the most remarkable -look
ing specimen of humanity I had ever
seen 'came to the front door and asked
for a job. His hair was at least a foot
and a half long, and his whiskers look-
ed like a haystack after a cyclone. He
was immediately hired as a "freak"
and given a dollar to bind the bargain.
John Price, conductor of the famous `"We'll eaIl you the 'Wild Man of Yonk-
Rhimney United Choir of South Wales ers,' " I told him.
which by command sang before the The fellow walked away, pleased at
King and Queen at Windsor Castle, the idea of breaking into the circus
game. About one o'clock, while I was
Tackle the Bigger Thing. in the side-show, the ticket taker call -
13o not be afraid of tackling the new ed to me. "Say, bossy he yelled,
and bigger thing. In malting a change "here's a man who claims he is the
spare no pains to make sure that you 'Wild Man of Yonkers' ;and he wants
are hooking up with a boss who knows to get in for nothing."
how to pick men and knows how to ' "Pass him in," I called.
treat thein, for then there will be ,such A gentlemanly appearing young fel-
pro was and expansion that there will low, with short hair and a clean-
be lots of promotions before one be- shaved face, came in,
comes gray-haired. Join a team which "You're not the 'Wild Man of Yonk-
knows how to play the business game ers,' " I said.
squarely and successfully, .and whose 1 "Oh, yes; I am," he grinned. -
captai'n sees to it that his team work -1 "But," I protested, "where are your
ers get freedom• to develop into star whiskers and long hair?"
players.
"Oh," he said, still grinning, "I
�---- spent the dollar you gave me for a
Henry VIII. was the first man taj share and hair cut!"
lay down hard tennis courts in Eur- He had shaved away his value to us,
ope, according to one authority. ( .
Tiny ukeleles, stringed instruments! Out of every ten Bibles sold by the
like guitars, are being introduced as British and Foreign Bible Society in
handles for parasols this summer. 1924, roughly four were sold in China.
.-�••4,arFe pnur.t,giai•!a of the Geneva Conference, taken' at the signing of
the protocol, outlawing gas warfare, to which 27 nations agreed.
MUTT AND JEFF—By Bud Fisher.
tee
seisSaSeee
eaaggt.:V4
t
egraSeediglass
The 'carillon tower, containing 23 bel',s, at Simcoe, Ont., which was un-
veiled recently as a memorial to the fallen dead of Norfolk county, The total
cost of $30,000 was raised entirely by individual and corporate subscription,
the county council giving $1,000.
The Chinook Talk.
What pidgin English is to the traf-
fickers of the Chinese ports the Chi-
nook jargon is along the Pacific 'cogs
of Canada and the north -wester
states.
The language, says a writer in Ad
venture, was already in use whe
Lewis and Clark visited ..the Qolumbi
in 1506. Astor's agents along th
northwest coast and the British trad
ers at Nootka had been handicapped
by the fact that fourteen languages, as
different from one another as English
is from Arabic, were spoken by the
natives.
The Chinook dialect, which was the
simplest, furnished the ,grammar of
the jargon and also a few dozen,of its
words, but the language, like Topsy,
"just growed."
In We ability to assimilate Words 1
rivals English, It drew terse expres
sions from the dialects of the tribes
that spoke, it. 'A great nu'.tnber of its
words were formed by onomatp beta;
that is, by the sounds represents the
thing spoken of. Thus tiktik means
a watch; tum -tum means the heart
beating; tum -watch is a rapids; wa-wa
means to talk.heehee-but you can
guess that.
From the French Canadian voy-
ageurs the jargon, characteristically
enough, drew many of its expressions
that relate to love -making, drinking,
singing, dancing and the like, Thus:
Beebee, from baiser, means to kiss;
labouti, from la bouteille, means a bot-
tle or the contents thereof; mahsie,
from mord, means thanks; nzalieh and
tense come from the French words
meaning to.marry and to dance. •
English furnished some peculiar ex-
pressions. Oleman, from "old "man,"
means worn out; kwahta and tollah
are recognizable coins; wailer -sick
means fever, stick -horse, a frame
dwelling; nose means promontory;
Americans are Bostonni; Englishmen.
are Kinchortohi---King George.
Pelton was the name of a crazy roan
who lived at Astoria. So mike Felton
means "You are crazy."
The inability of the coast tribes to
pronounce r, f and nasal n --in this re-
spect as in others they resemble the
Chinese—gives a curious twistto some
English words. Lice and glease and
oauppy, for rlce and Breese and coffee,
sound like the talk of an Oriental
cookee in a lumber camp.
Scorn Fear.
Don't let fear clutch at you with cow-
ard -hand:
t With head held high, march proudly
n 'down life's. land!
• You are a hero—if you will be one;
- Small deeds or big heroically done
n Shall win your knighthood!
a And your strength will grow
e With every tussle, and with every blow
You 'strike at dread and all dread's
kindred knaves.
Over your head success's banner' waves
If you but keep it hying!
Don't lay down
Your weapons. Don't let cravens
drown
With craven doubts the battle -cry of
"Hope!"
With every mile spreads out, a wider
scope
t f work and usefulness for valiant wills.
- Then struggle on—until you scale
those hills
Which rise before you: scorn to feel
dismay:
'Remember ."Blackest night procgeds
dawn's day!"
What Johnny Hates,
"Do you like going to school,, sonny?"
the stranger iugiured of seven-year-
old Johnny.
"Oh, yea, sir," was the reply., "I
lilte going well enough, and I like com-
ing back, too. 'What I hate is staying
cooped up there between times."
—Lillian Gard.
A Pointer.
The genial but overdue boarder
came downstairs.
, "Good morning, Mrs. Monahan," he
called out eh.eerily. "Did you ever see
anything so unsettled as the weather
we are having these days?"
I "Well, there's your board bill, the
landlady informed him politely,
Might Spoil Them,
I Book Agent—"Have � you any child -
Iran in school?"
'armer—"Yes !"
Agent—"You're just the man. Wliy
not buy them an encyclopedia?"
Farmer—"Waal, it might be all right
for the girls—but, by grim, the boy
ain't do better than me—and I had to
walk to ,school when I was a boy."
•
Solution. of last week's puzzle.
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Stories About WeJJ$nown People
Exhib1kion—Before-and-After. "There was grass mi. her decks six
Crossrexaruining a boy whose arm inches long when we arrived a2 .Cal•
had been injured in a tramcar acct- cutta!"
dent, Lord Birkenhead --•then lr, E. But the best .story in Sir I3ert:azn's,
Smith—asked hi'iu{ "Would you" mind book Is, of a certain transport railice:r
showing the jury bow high you can during the war, A cynical commen•
lift, your arm since the accident?" The tator on.. war officers once 'observed
-boy raised it to the shoulder. , : that their first idea seemed to be to
"Now show us how high you could. get a thing done, and afterwards to
life it before the accident." TJp went find out whether it was a thing worth
the bpy',s tum, well above tate head! doing, Sir Bertratar's transport officer
Lord Birkenhead's insight Into the w•a,s of this type.
boy's mentality had won the tramway A number of nwtor-cars'liad lo be
company their case,I shipped in a steamer that was aireadY
Forty-five Years of Sea Life. 'full of cargo. The T,O, buzzed around;
One of the most interesting of re- peered down One of ,the after -holds
cent books is "Hull Down," in which and cried: '
Sir Bertram Hayes, K•U.M.B., D.S.Q., "Take that: thing out, and. there will
R.N,R., chats ,about his forty-five yearsbe plenty om.
of,s'ea life. II "You canof'trotake" that out, sir," ae-
He retired at the end of last year, I plied the chief officer. "That's the
after commanding the world's largest tunnel."
ship•' -the Majestic and he has only "I don't care what it is—take it
had one collision in all that time. Even out!" was the reply.
this collision was not written down to But when he learned that the ship
his discredit, despite the fact that he' could not go to sea mauls the propel -
was responsible for it. 1 ler shaft, which passed through the
The other ship wag --a German sub- tunnel, he agreed that room ,niilst be
marine, you see, which he rammed found for the cars elsewhere.
during the war. This gave him hism—••s -- le• -
D.S.O.—Downed Submarine, Official. Tomy'st.
Sir Bertram tells an amusing story Well, Tommy, what do you think of
of an American packet ship, in the days your new bouncing brother?"
when ships and dttcipline were not as 1- `Something's the matter with him,
titer are now. The sailors did pretty na. I 'dropped him as hard as I could
well as they liked, which meant they on-'tbe floor, but he wouldn't bounce."
did nothing at all beyond making the 1 Short faces witheyes far apart are
ship go;, and the third elate, describing said to be the characteristic type of
the voyage, observed: ' people with niusical talent.
CROSS -WORD PUZZLE
THE INTERNATiONAL SVNOtc%TE..
SUGGESTIONS FOR SOLVING CROSS -WORD PUZZLES
Start out by filling in the words of which you feel reasonably
sure, These will give you a clue to 'other words crossing, them,
and they in turn to still others. A. letter belongs in each white
space, words starting at the numbered squares and running either
horizontally or vertically or both.
HORIZONTAL.
1 1—Convulsed breath
' 6—That Is here present
10—Hobgoblin
11—Unwell
15—Affirmative
16—Lack of caution
19—Domestic animal
20—Pronoun
21—Container
22—Perpetual
24—Spawn of oyster
26 -Tubers
28—Bolshevist
29--1 o place wrongly
31—Immovable
32—To forbid
33—Insect
35—Unit of work
36—To drop back
37—Existed
39—Bank employee
42—Permissive'
44- .Lofty mountain ra
Europe
46—H Ighway
47 --Narrative
48 --To regret
50 -Above
B1 --Speck
52—Envoy
55—A fetish or charm
67—A race or strain (
58 --Ejaculation
P " 60—A rod
;j -Once more
VERTICAL •
1—Pungent root
2—Part of verb, "to be"
3 --Flavored,
4—A tree
5--!ndivldual
7—African animal (pl.)
8 ---That is (abbr.)
9—Most secure
11—Likely
12—Swellings
13—Perfect
14—Wad animal
17—Deface
18—To call out
23—Excusable
24 --One who utters melodious
sounds
25—Placed for future consideration
27 --Servant
29 --Market
30 --Period of time
32 --To exist
nge of 34 --Latin phrase meaning "tor
example" (abbr.)
37 --To roll In mire
38 --Excessive strain
40—Parasitic insect
41 --Slight fault
42 --Married woman
43—A color
45—Total
47 --Likewise
49—Decline
pi,) 51 --College degree (abbr.)
63—Part of circle
54—Edged tool
66 --Barium (chem, isym,)
59—Pronoun
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