HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1934-11-22, Page 2A
40•010.1.011,
Here's Way Science Now
Relieves Pain in Minutes
BAD HEADACHES, NEURITIS AND RHEUMATIC PAINS
EASED ALMOST AT ONCE
Remember the pictures below when
you want fast relief from pain.
Aspirin eases even a bad headache
or neuralgia often in a few minutes!
An Asptrin tablet begins "taking
hold" of your pain practically. as
' soon as you swallow it, And Aspirin
is safe. For Aspirin does not harm
the heart.
Remember these two points:
Aspirin Speed and Aspirin Safety.
And, see that you get ASPIRIN.
the method doctors prescribe. It is
made in Canada, and all druggists
have it. Look for the name Bayer in
the form of a cross on every Aspirin
tablet. Get tin of 12 tablets or eco-
nomical bottle of 24 or 100 tablets.
Why Aspirin Works So Fast
Drop an Aspirin
tablet in a glass of
water. Note that BE-
FORE it touches the
bottom, it is disinte-
grating.
IN 2 SECONDS BY STOP WATCH
An Aspirin tablet starts to disinte-
grate and go to work.
What happens in these glasses
happens in your stomach—ASPIRIN
tablets start "taking hold" of pain
a few minutes after taking.
When in Pain Remember These Pictures
Aspirin is the Trade Mark of the Bayer Company, Limited
-3,0-6-1. 4,i- • Cr, if -4,-4
By the Author of "Pencarrow"
By NELLE M. SCANLAN
ra-v, -4,-4-4.-4-0-40-vpviv
-414.
SYNOPSIS
Here we see a group of young peo-
ple carried on the tides of youth.
Young Kelly Pencarrow finally settles
down on the Pencarrow farm, with
Genevieve his cousin as housekeeper,
Who is m love with her cousin Robin
Herrick. Cousin Neil Macdonald be -
homes engaged to Erena Joicey-Goff.
Kelly said she was a damn sight
too good for Neil, and the prettiest
girl he had seen for years.
"He is mad about her," said Gen-
svieve. "I don't think Neil could let
!timself go like that."
Robin did not see what the family
Were making such a fuss about.
"I couldn't help thinking of the
day you bashed Neil's hat in at the
party," and Genevieve recalled the
two countryboys in new serge suits
and heavy boots, and terrible bowler
hal s.
"He knocks the shine out of both
of you now", she said, "The last word
London clothes and such a fierce
:moustache."
Kelly, a squat figure in his rusty
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ai•••••11.11.11•••••••••
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Nervous, Weak Dizzy?
IF your day begins
with frayed
nerves, backache,
periodic pains or
weakening drains,
you should take
Dr, Pierce's Favor -
i e Prescription.
Read what Mrs, J.
Gunn of 18 Power
St., Toronto, Ont.,
maid: "1 was completely rundown in bealth.
My nerves were in bad 'shape and 1 had
headache day after day. 1 had no strength at
all—was miserable. / took two bottles of Dr.
Pierces Favorite Prescription and it was not
long before / gained in weight, my nerves
*were normal and I felt stronger and more
natural. It is a fine builder for weak women."
Al! druggists. New size, tablets 50 eta,
liquid S1.00. Large size, tabs, dr liquid, P.35.
Write Dr, Pierce's Clinic, Buffalo, N. Y.,
for free medical advice.
11.-11.••••-si.V,"-ir -to
tweeds, with his unconscious ease,
and the quiet authority of a ybung
squire, tapped. his pipe on his heel,
and said they would all get growing -
pains if they tried to live up to Neil's
exalted idea of himself.
"I bet he will dress for dinner every
night—"
"For six months Genevieve, not
more," Kelly said, with dry convic-
tion,
"Didn't you want to bath his hat in
today, when he stood there so con-
scious of his importance?"
Kelly laughed, 'Want me to start
another row, do you?"
"You've. changed, Kelly; hasn't he,
Robin?"
"Getting sense, that's all."
"Sense! If anyone is looking for it,
they can have it any time for the
asking. But I'm not picking a quar-
rel for the fun of it, or to entertain
you. And isn't it time we had tea?
You're a rotten housekeeper, Gene-
vieve."
Genevieve said he had changed.
Kelly wondered, Perhaps.
Genevieve's words sent his mind
enquiring through the dark corners
of his soul, She had said it as though
what she saw were a change for the
worse. It was not contempt in her
tone, but a challenge,
Seven years before Kelly was pre-
pared to go bull-headed into every
fight, Today he was content to sit
on the sideline and watch the fun.
Genevieve had challenged him to
come out, He accepted the challenge
and climbed into his starched shirt
and white tie for the dance Sir Miles
and Lady Pencarrow were giving to
launch Dr, Neil Macdonald and intro-
duce his fiancee. As he knotted the
tie under his chin it suddenly occur-
red to him that it was the first big
family gathering on the Terrace
since Ella's marriage with Gentry,
and the quarrel.
Tonight he was to meet Gentry in
the same room, under similar condi-
tions, Would the others remember?
How different things were now. In-
stead of an impulsive boy, reckless
in his blind devotion to Duffield, he
was a confident man, self-possessed,
with a definite status in the family
as owner of the Home Farm, Gene-
vieve's prod had wakened him to a
little more self-assertion. No more
slacking. Tonight he and Neil and
Gentry would meet under his father's
roof for the first time in seven years.
The prospect suddenly took a new
significance, and invested bile event
with greater importance.
'Well, are you ready?" asked Gen-
evieve, looking him over critically.
"I am; will I do?"
"You really want new tails; you're
getting—"
Bright Colors
License Vogue
Green and Blue Predominate
In States' 1935 License
Plates
Washington, D.C. — Designers of
automobile license plates for 1935
have caught the spirit of those •in
the fashion marts and the same
col-
ors will predominate in the parade
of cars and the parade of ,the well-
dressed, according to the American
Automobile Association.
The A.A.A. pointed out that black,
green and blue will stand out on lic-
ense plates as it will in the apparel
worn at fashionable teas and along
the avenues.
Thirty-three States and the Dis-
trict of Columbia, will change their
1934 color motifs, said the national
motoring body, and thirteen states
will retain their 1934 color schemes,
reversing them as to numerals and
background. In all 25 motifs will be
used, Two states, Arizona and West
Virkinia, will retain the present col-
ors on 1935 plates.
Black aad yellow, found by 'the
U.S. Bureau of Standards to off,eri
good visibility, will lead the parade,
being used in five states, namely,1
Colorado, Florida, Kentucky, South
Dakota and West Virginia.
Second honor will go to white on
green, white on blue and black on
white motifs, each to be used in four
states. Orange and black, blue on
white, and white 'on black will each
be used in three states. Beyond these
more standard colors will be a wide
variety of hues, such as blue on
cream in Arkansas, colonial blue on
old gold in Delaware, black on rbb-
ins-egg blue in Indiana, and gold on
maroon In Minnesota,
The District of Columbia, which
has used a black and yellow com-
bination for seven or eight years, Te-
versing them as to numerals vnd
background, will use a green on white
motif in 1935.
The Canal Zone will use plates
With light blue letters on a canary
yellow background; Hawaii, black on
yellow; the Philippines, orange On
black, and Porto Rico, black on yel-
low.
Importance of Early
Treatment of T. B.
Eighty per cent of patients enter-
ing the Central Alberta tuberculosis
sanatorium have .pasrd the
where Satisfactory treatment or
lapse of the disease can be OM,
"a sad reflection on our socigtY;
said Dr. A. H. Baker of Calgary, sup-
erintendent of the institution, in a
special address to the Alberta Assoc-
iation of Registered Nurses,
Dr, Baker emphasized the import-
ance of early treatment of tubercul-
osis. It was a wonder that so many
recover and return to work when less
than 20 per cent have a favorable out-
/ook when treatment is started, she
said,
Both Right
"Some of you pedestrians walk
as if you owned the streets."
"Yes and some of you motorists
drive around just as if you owned
your cars,'—Capper's Weekly,
"Not fat! not fat," protested Kelly.
"No, but broadening. The coat looks
pinched."
"I hope they won't expect me to
give a repeat performance,"
"It will be rather fun to see if they
do, But they will remember all right.
Father, Uncle Michael and Philip—"
"Why not the others?" Kelly en-
quired.
"Mother and the aunts are far toe
busy speculating about the prospect
of Erena having brown babies,
Mother, poor darling, is so glad their
name isn't Pencarrow, Being Macdon-
ald doesn't matter so much—there
are lots of Macdonalds—and if then
turn out cannibals we can disown
them."
"You have a flippant tongue," but
he smiled grimly as he realized the
transfer of the family problem to a
new centre.
This dance was not merely a fam-
ily affair; the guests included people
of importance from Wellington.
Though not large, it was exclusive,
Norah felt it was imperative that Neil
should begin right and know all the
proper people.
(To lie Continucela
Relieved/
Mrs, Edward James' baby bad
two teeth when less than three
months old. She writes: "Belies
18 now and I Can truthfully say
that giving him Baby's Own Tab-
lets while cutting his teeth kept
him fit and well". Teething is a
restless feverish time for babies
but the little one can always be
soothed and the. fever reduced by
giving sweet, safe Baby's Own
Tablets, Very, easy to take, no
after °fleets. Price 25e everywhere,
.4.4tr "44,4"
Orange Pekoe
Blend
Fresh from
the Gardens'
A New Method
OF Education
New York School Uses Emo-
tional Appeal to Aid
Personality
Here is a picture of a new teach-
ing method being tried in New
York, writes Clyde Beals in the N.
Y. Times. A group of grown-ups is
attending a , class for serious study.
Their teacher announces a session of
drama. The idea is a little startling,
but before stage fright develops she
suggests a rousing game of tag.
This is still more startling, but the
class tries it and soon is giggling
and puffing merrily.
Now the teacher pulls in the reins
and reads a poem and some nursery
rhymes. Next the pupils draw lots
for characters to portray and some
one passes out slips, indiscriminate-
ly, assigning each to portray an
emotion, anger, horror, or the like.
Presently the teacher divides her
class into small groups, and gives
each ten minutes to improvise a
play — with costumes. And the
theatre is on.
With similarly informal begin-
nings leading into sincere but utter-
ly uninhibited discussions of the
arts and philosophies and adven-
tures in painting, music, dapcing or
acting, a series of experimental
courses has been conducted during
the last year in a group of widely
different institutions in and near
the city. They were designed to
show whether the awakening of
new means of self-expression can
be made to benefit all kinds of per-
sons, from the highly intelligent,
well -adjusted adult in need of a
restful avocation to the yongster
or adult with nervous difficulties
who is in need of actual therapeutic
treatment.,
Funds were supplied by the
Carnegie Corporation for the ex-
periments under the auspices of the
National Committee for Mental
Hygiene and the report on the work
has just been presented by Dr.
Clarence M. Hincks, general dir-
ector of that committee.
AID IN NERVOUS CASES
The National Committee f or Men-
tal Hygiene became interested, ac-
cording to H. Edmund Bullis, 'its
executive officer, when it saw at
first hand what it considered a strik-
ing improvement in the serious per-
sonality problems of a mother and
daughter through the methods of
the Arts Guild. Before sponsoring
the recent experiments the committee
investigated altogether eighteen cas-
es in which nervous patients had
shown improvement following cours-
es under Arts Guild, obtaining both
medical and psychiatric opinions on
eacThe aim of the guild, it is ex-
plained in. the report written by Dr.
V. V. Anderson, "is not to consider
art as an end, but as a means (1)
to foster the development of inte-
grated personalities; (2) to nurture
creative and independent thinking
as an element in self -development,
and (3) to aid the development of
individuality by an approach to the
emotional life of the student as a
natural and necessary phase of per-
sonality training.
As a result of the year's work the
guild now has "case histories" of
some ninety persons, ranging from
high school age to full maturity,
normal quirkless individuals for the
most part, although including some
with "problems." In courses of fif-
I Old Relit le Remedy
Stili' Best For Chapped
Skin
Rough, chapped hands are irritating
and
ugly.They are also a source of
danger from infection, when the skin
becomes very raw and cracked from
exposure.
The old reliable remedy—Hinds Honey
and Almond Cream—is still a favorite
remedy after being on the market for over
50 years. Ever since 1875 this soothing,
healing lotion has beext the choice of men
and women in every walk of life, for its
instant relief from suffering, rapid healing
and remarkable protective qualities.
In cold weather, hands, neck and face
need protection to keep them free from
chapping and danger of infection. Hinds
Honey and Almond Cretan is easy to use
—quickly absorbed by the skin and Ica yes
no trace of stickiness. Men like it after
shaving, Any druggist can supply you,
Issue No. 46—'34
84
teen sessions, usually, it has given
these people its impressionistic les-
sons.
REPORTS OF
ACCOMPLISHMENTS
What happened to the students is
summed up with utter frankness in
the report; not only by representa-
tives of the Arts Guild but also by
representatives of the institutions
where the classes were held and by
the students themselves. Some re-
sults were bad, some negligible and
some good. In many cases the
length of the experiment seemed too
short. On the whole, however, the
results were regarded as highly
satisfactory. There were discoveries
of buried talents, gains in self-con-
fidence and happiness and improve-
ments in artistic technique.
RESULTS WITH STUDENTS.
Here are three of the comments of
the director of education of Sarah
Lawrence College, Miss Doerschuk,
on the effects of the work on some
of her girls:
This student's interest in the
history of art has been deepen-
ed. She has 'overcome to an ex-
tent her shyness and reticence;
she has developed a freedom in
her point of view, rather than
to tend to do what is expected
of her.
Since (this student's) ap-
proach tends to be, if anything,
over -conscientious and some-
what lacking in imagination and
spontaneity, the set-up of this
course has proved beneficial to
her in attaining a greater de-
gree of freedom and imagin-
ation.
(This student's) adviser feels
that it has been definitely ad-
vantageous for her. She has her-
self come to see that she needs
help in developing tolerance and
in supporting her enthusiasm by
a background of factual mater-
ial. She has gained a certain
degree, of freedom from the self-
consciousness with which 'she
entered the class.
VIEWS OF PSYCHIATRISTS
Besides the many bits of evidence
submitted, the report includes a
statement by three psychiatrists,
Dr. Ira S. Wile, Dr. John A. P.
Millett and Dr. George A. Steven-
son, who themselves attended the
demonstration class.
They regard the work of the Arts
Guild "as unique and as possessing
distinctly new and significant bases,
methods and goals. * * * The in-
trovert and the extrovert alike are
treated as individuals while partici-
pating in definitely social projects.
Similarly, they are subjected to a
variety of emotional stimuli and ex-
periences that tend to promote ab-
sorption and stimulate activity
while reducing self-consciousness,
self-pity and self -depreciation.
Arms Production
London—Except for two minutes
of silence in tribute to Britain's war
dead on Armistice Day, the Sunday
shift at Vickers works at Crayford,
Kent, worked all day long making
machine guns, rifles and gas -project-
ing machines.
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FALSE TEETH
A Joy To All Users
Can't Slip or Slide
Sprinkle on Dr. Wernet's Powder and
you wont have to think about your
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—it holds plates firmly in place—they
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protective cushion for sensitive gums.
Leaves no colored, gummy substance—
keeps mouth sanitary, breath pleasant.
Preseribed by world's most noted den -
fasts. The cost is small—the comfort
great. Any druggist.
Bulgaria Refuses
To Allow Women
To Practise Lavi
•
Although the first Bulgarian wom,
an lawyer qualified as long ago al
1906, the Government still refusel
them permission to practise at the
Bar,
The opposition of men lawyers 10
declared 1»' the women tobemainly
responsible for the ban.
The women halve started a cam-
paign to induce the Government to
lift the ban on women lawyers of
whom 103 have qualified by passing
the requisite examinations in juris-
prudence.
Ask Hunters To
Spare Squirrel
Eflkns, W. Va., — The hunting
season opens soon and trainmen on
the Huttonsville branch of the Wes_
tern Maryland Railroad are asking a
hunters to spare a certain gray
squirrel which lives in a tree beside
the tracks.
"For nearly a year the trainmen
say, the squirrel has come out of its
nest daily as each train passes to
wave a friendly greeting with its
bushy tail.
SS
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Niagara Falls, Ontario •
•••••••••••••••••••
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Drink this delicious wine regularly
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To pick you up when you are out of
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