HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1933-08-11, Page 2?(n
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THEIRMON,EXPOSITCgt,R . •
i I
*MUST 11, 1933.
,;
*FTER O N
Baagilton, 'toderich, ' Ont.)
3147 faith looks roe to Thee,
%hou Lamb of Calvary,
'Saviour !Divine;
New hear nae while •I pray;
• Take all nryr gtiilt away;
• 0 let flue from this day
IDe wholly Thine!
Ray Palmer.
PRAYER '
0 Lord of grace and goodness, keep
alive Thy grace and goodhess in the
wonrien of ,our land. May they make
duty their delight and keep) ever be-
fore them the coming of Thy king
dom. an Jesus' 'Name we .pray. Amen.
S. S. LESSON FOR AUGUSTienth
Lesson Topic --Hannah.
Lesson Passage -1 Samuel 1:9-11,
24-28; 2:1, 2.
Golden Text—Proverbs 31:30.
'Hannah was the wife of Elkanah,
and in ;Home respects her lines had
fallen lin pleasant places. •She was , in
constant communion with the relig-
ious ordinances of her country. She
had a ;devout husband—a rare priv-
ilege in that day. She enjoyed that
armband's undivided love. --though not
his undivided allegiance. H,e' had an-
oither wife—a fact which -was not
deemed at the time ineonsistent with
his piety. But ;Hannah was the fav-
aute; on her the riclr' gifts were be-
stowed, on her the fond endearments
were lavished. Most women in that
age of storm: and stress would have
been content with her lot, but Han-
nah was profoundly miserable. One
thing had 'been denied her; she had
a. house but she had no home. Her's
was a religious household disquieted
by one unhappy element. Hannah's
life was lived under the harrow of
Peninnah's reproach. There was one
thing that spoiled !the. home life and
that hoarse was no iso'l'ated one in that,
day or this. In almost every house
there is some little spiteful spirit;
in almost every family there is some-
body that has the power of sheering
at other people. Wlhat was Hannah's
cure? What is the only cure for that
kind of disease?
Peninnah persecuted Hannah daily;
provoked" her to tears, to grief of
heart so that she at length "did not
eat." What was the use she made
of this daily torment? She turned
into an occasion of profound worship
and laving homage. to God. It could
tio't the easy to endure the daily an-
noyance. Yet here is a woman who
was able 'to triumph over all these
things an& to. bring thein in as 11011;4
to her continual prayer.
!When the son. was born—the son
for whom Hannah had been praying
many a day—she called his name
8arniuel, "heard of God." •
(Living in the great age of vows,
she had before his birth dedicated
hint to the office of a Nazarite. As
soon as he was weaned, she herself,
with her husband brought him to'
the tabernacle at Shiloh, where 'she
had received the first intimation that
her request would be granted, and
there solemnly consecrated him and
made hire over to the care and - in-
a'truclionof Yli:
The hylmm (Sam. 2:1-11) which fol-
.
NO MORE SICK
HEADACHES'.
Fruit -a -tions
end year*
of pain
"1
Bred exceed -
with indiges-
tion sick head,.
aches for 'years. 1 •
could hardly eat
ba'yng�ebadlcotd
!realize now, of
course, that I was
fa a very run-down condition. Fortunately for
me a neighbor recommended 'Fruit -a -lives'
and I began taking them. I am certainly glad I
did. They regulated my system and toned me
up generally so that now Iam in the best of
health. I would not hesitate to recommend
them to anyone."
Fruit-a-tives . . all drug stores
lowed on this consecration is the first
of the kind in the sacred volume. It
is the prototype of the Magnifieat,
the song of Mary -the mother of our
Lord.
WORLD MISSIONS
An incident in, the early life of Jahn
G. Paton, missionary', to the New
lHjebrides, is recorded in his autobio-
graphy because of the lasting im-
pression made upon his religious life.
It is as follows:
Our family, like all others of peas-
ant "rank in the land. were plunged
into deep distress, and felt the pinch
severely, through thg failure of the
potato, the badness of other craps,
and the ransom price of food. Our
father had gone off with •work (he
was a stocking weaver) to Hawich.
and would return ,next evening with
money and supplies; but meantime
the meal barrel ran empty and our
'dear Strother, too proud and too sensi-
tive to let anyone know, or to ask
aid from any quarter, coaxed us all
to rest, assuring us . that she had
told God everything and that lie
would send us plenty , in the mrorn-
ing, Next day, with the carrier from
Lockerbie came a present from her
father, who, knowing nothing of her
carcunvstances or of this special trial,
had been moved of God to send at'
that particular rack of time a love -
offering to his daughter—a common
custom in these kindly Scottish shires
—a bag of new potatoes, a stone of
flour, or the earliest home-made
cheese of the season ---.which largely
supplied all our needs. My. mother,
seeing our surprise at such an ans-
wer to her prayers, took us around
her knees, thanked God for His good-„
nese and said to us:
"0 my children, love your heaven-
ly Father, tell' Him in faith and
prayer all your needs, and He will
supply your wants so far as it shall
be for your good and His Glory."
Prayer.
Prayer is so wonderful, I love to think
That I, so feeble in myself can
bless
B•y prayer, unnuinvbered souls, and be,
a link
!Between all power and needy noth-
ingness.
No spot too- distant, and no depth too
deep
To feel the toach of that Almighty
Hand
Pledged to'supply all need, to guide,
to keep
And strengthen with a might none
can undei'stdhd. • •
---!Selected.
Prostrate China
(Condensed from Current" History in
..Reader's Digest.)
.It is a sad fact that tamest the
only Chinese who are really doing
anything in? China are those doing
harm. Tele.' does not disparage the
activities, .aclmiraible and convincingly
altruistic, of the enlightened few who
are working for improvement. But
their numfber is small and their in-
fluence seems very nearly non-exist-
ent.
This handful prove in pamphlets
and newspaper articles for the esti-
mated two per cent. of Chinese who
can read that conditions have come
to a sorry pass and that self-seeking,
plundering officials and ruthless war
lords ought to be supplanted by men
of integrity. But the readers,
though quick to assent, have no more
idea than the writers of challenging
the power of those plundering offic-
ials and ruthless war -lords. For one
thing, not a single person among the
educated could•be convinced that his
fellbws would loyally support him in
any collective effort. Furthermore,
no one readily believes that the self-
proclaimed patriot who ousted the vil-
lainous oppressors would necessarily
be an improvement. Chinese history
suggests quite the contrary. -
an China, action and accomplish-
ment are attributes of the official
and unofficial looters. Usually they
have come up from the ranks and ac-
cordingly they have the vitality born
of adversity and (the hard-d1'iving
spirit that are necessary in China to
control the treacherous and illiterate
men who constitute most of the Chin:
est, soldiery. Scholarship in China
is emphatically separated from any
cultivation of =the stern and daring
spirit that belongs to command. A
son selected to be educated is by tree
dition exempt frown' manual labor in
The home.
• 'Such considerations have a direct
bearing upon what at first seems the
incomprehensible impotence of the
right-thinking Chinese to make any
headway against their wrong-think-
irg countrymen. To compare the
physical frailty and torpor of the av-
erage student -reformer wiiht the nrfus-
cular vigor and sturdier bearing of
the mountaineer .bandit -soldier is to
compare more than two " physi al
types; here is a contrast between two
distinctly different spirits. One is a
timidly •protesting spectator talkiahg
to- an apathetic and skeptical audi-
ence, about high-sounding but doubt-
ful changes. The other is a positive
force with a fixed purpose, however
unfortunate the effect upon other
Chinese of the methods for attaining
that purpose. The reformer has no
recompense except risk and thesat-
isfaction that his utterances coincide
with•the ideas of Confucius, Sun Yat-
sen, Jean Jacques Rousseau and
Woodrow Wilson. The bandit has his
promise of $10 (Mex.) a month, a
.w:
Try - a
refreshing
breakfast
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Rich' in energy and so easy to digest
they don't "heat you up."
Enjoy a bowl of Kellogg's at lunch
and feel cooler. Splendid for the
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Extra delicious with fresh fruits
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Two,. fr
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SOURED NN THE
W0111111--TNATIS LIVER
Wake up your Liver Bide
—No Calomel necessary
Many people who feel aour, sluggish and
generale wretched make the mistake of taking
salts, our mineral water, laxative Dandy or
chewing guns or roughage' which only move
the bowels "find ignore the liver.
What you need is to wake up your liver
bile. Start your liver pouring the dully two
pounds of liquid bile into your bowel's. Get
your stomach and intestines working as they
should, once more.
Carter's Little Liver Pills will soon fix you
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Ask for them by name. Refuse substitutes.
25e. at all druggists. 51
rifle with which to forage among his.
own people for food, and the pros-
pect of opium and loot.
Unresponsive to appeals for collec-
tive efforts to check their opressors,
the 395,000,000 Chinese—out of a
'possible population of 400,00Q,000—
constitute the most easily intimidated
people in the world. Day after day,
advantage is taken of this submissive-
ness by bandits, war lords, pirates,
wholesale extortion gangs in every
town and city, duly accredited pro-
vincial and central egovernment of-
ficials and military 'chieftains on a
scale probalbly never parallelled in
the world's history. The magnitude
of the looting and the intensity of
the cruelty appall, even persons well
prepared by previousknowledge of
.Chinese conditions.
According to best estimates there
are at present more than 3,000,000
;len tinder aims in China. At least
half of them. nvae be regarded as in
dliposition' to the Nanking Govern-
ment of •Ohiha though the other half
maintain a faint-hearted allegiance,
except when some ,powerful General
makes a gesture of revolt. But ev-
en'the Generals of the supposedly loy-
al armies have little use for one an-
other and display perpetual rivalry.
There is no banner under which a
genuine 'patriot could enlist in China
today with any conviction that his
sacrifice would serve any purpose of
bettering • conditions. Unique in
modern strife, the many contending
armies present no clash of prima
ales. The aim of each is to main-
tain itself against competitors in the
privileges of exploiting a downtrod-
den population in a particular terri-
tory.
Perhaps tlhe most ,generallyoppres-
sive practice in China is that of farm'-
ing( out the taxes by districts to the
highest bidders. The successful bid-
der is required to return a specified;
amount but he may hire soldiers to
collect as 'much in 'exces's of that a-
mount as he can squeeze out of .an
already 'poverty-stricken population.
Since his tenure of office is certain
to be 'brief, the collector wants to
make every possible copper. In many
places the levies amount to confisca-
tion of all that a peasant possesses;
those.. who protest are shot down
without further argument. One tax
praciamation I saw imposed a levy
upon every ten potato plants, upon
pigs, opium and everything else the
farmers grew.
The people at large get nothing
in return for these exactions — no
public school system, no :police pro-
tection, no roads, except in' a few
limited areas where roads have been
,built,as +t`Lipium traffic highway or
whera war lord feels himself suf-
ficiently permanent to justify a
strategic system of ,communications..
Opium is everywhere the big stake,,
second only to silver dollars in ne-
gotiability. Many of the soldiers are
paid in .opium, and military activity
over most of China increases during
the o'pi,uml harvest when everybody
scrambles for the loot.
The wonder is how the Chinese
continue to survive. Naturally, a
god many do not, but there is a cur-
ious equilibrium between integration
and disintegration. Most Chinese live
on farms or in near -by villages, pro-
ducing food and small shop or hand-
made goods and exchanging ; them
with one another. Neither group 'is
affected by distant economic upheav-
als:, When the peasant hears that an
army is cotrnin•g, lie either flees with
what he can carry or else stands his
ground, hiding whatever is portable:
Wl}ien the army has passed he is left
pick€d to the bone, but he stolidly
proceeds to make a fresh start.
The lot of tlhe Ch.inese in the towns
is even lot.
hazardous. The sol-
diers quartered there to "protect"
the storekeepers from the bandits of-
ten seize most of the stock them-
selves. 13oth urban and rural groups
are taxed and scourged beyond Oe -
lief. Millions are ruined every year.
But the survivors tenaciously keep
ming with what the day offers. If
tie situation becomes too bail, the
mentry to enlist irf an army, 'hue
acquiring the privilege of turning up-
cr. °!•a• felir;w . Those with mean.:
toamonly try f•) transfer their pro -
pe , y to one of --the treaty ports.
Despite all the distress there are
signs in the towns of lively spend-
ing. The opium racketeers, the shale
dit chiefs, the 'suceestful military
leaders. comprise market, small but
profitable, for ratite -mobiles, phono-
graphs, gasoline, and California can-
ned fruit. Their women like Ameri-
can lipstics' and perfame. They all
like American jazz and moving pic-
tures. The nation as a whole groans;
the few hundred thousand who profit -
by the plunder feast and f, fox-trot;
the two or three million identifiably
Christian pray; and the handful of
the enlightened and educated agonize'
in the columns of struggling weekly
newspapers over a situation which
they cannot alter and about the re-
sults of which no one can be optimuise,
tie.
Summer Squlish Recipes
,Sulmrmer squash is scarcely the for-
gotten vegetable, but in many homes
it is a neglected one. The old cook
books are most rviersatile with sug-
gestions for preparing this delicate
vegetable, In the very old 'banks one
finds recipes for cooking "gonads,"
a (descriptive and quite ,,'raper class-
ification for our so-called squashes.
After about 1a80 the gourd became
known as vegetarble marrow and this
name is still coniimon!ly used, espec-
ially in the English books.
bn ofie foam or .a !other,• strainer
Oquats'h can be found, in the inarlots
the year- aroma. During the sum-
mer n oirtibs one can e1it)ose from a.
greet variety •otic fantastic s4r4, +nal -
axirnaa and nrlaxkhlag!a, Ter is the
tt1al(iall zuchini, a email, dark grelent,
striped, species, resembling a eucOm-
bler, excerpt eat it is smooth surfac-
ed. The fruit of the New Guinea.
Bean is a squash that is two to three
feet"'ily length. 'From Central Ameri-
ca comers the ehaydote, a staple food
there for centuries, bub a mow comfier
in world markets. This its a :orae -seed-
ed squash, slightly more fibrous then
other • species. Because it holds its
form ;perfectly after conking it is
excellent for stuffing and baking irl
sweet •piekleis or cold' in salads
iConrimlon garden varieties of sum,
nuer squash are .the ' p'att pan,." pale
green' and white, shaped like small
shallow bowl with scalloped edges,
and the small yellow croak neck.
When young, these are thin skinned
with tender seed's and can be cooked
with the seeds and without paring.
Ali varieties ,have a very high water
content. Little water need be added
in cooking. Usually the sgnatsh must
cook until part of the water has evap-
orated. ;Steaming or baking are ex-
cellent methods." If 'boiled, cook un-
covered, siinvmier gently and' stir `fre-
quently,
;The delicate flavor of squash must
be preserved and accented, with skill-
ful seasoning and flavoring. It is in
this matter that the old cook books
excel. :The following recipe for pick-
led marrow has been handed down
through several generations.
• , Pickled Marrow
1 quart ;a'negar
4 ounces sugar
1%-ournces ginger' (broken into
p iece,s )
11/4 ounces dry mustard.
1/2 ounce turmeric • w
6 chil'ies (whole)
1 clove.garlic (finely ch'app )
Marrow (summer squash).
Boil vinegar, sugar, flavorings .and
•seasonings until strength is extract-
ed. Pare marrows, remove seeds ,and
cut in 2 -inch pieces. Add to boiling
vinegar mixture, cook gently for 10
minaltes. • Turn) into large pan to
cool. When cold, carefully pack piec-
es of marrow in glass jars, pout ov-
er vinegar mixture, cover tightly and
store in dry, cool place. Pickle will
be ready to serve in .2 or 3 weeks.
Spanish squash is another way of
preparing in Which flavor is added.
The recipe can be varied at will and
really is a sort of summer garden
hash. Cook the squash with chopped
Onions, green p!appers and rtomatoes.
Season' to taste. Corn ;ablate are
good in this, toot
There is something about toasted
earn flakes:that brings out the .deli-
cate and dtsitinctive flavor of summer
squash. Crushed corn flakes are de-
licious for crumbling strips 'or slices
for fried ,squash. 'Dip an corn flake
crumbs, then • ry egg and again in
crumbs and fry in deep fat. Or use
corn flakes as •,a topping in casserole
and stuffed squash recipes.
Summer Squash Custard.
2 lbs. summer squash
1/2 lb. well flavored American cheese
;Pepper
% teaspoort salt
2:t/ eggs
74 cup 'milk
'Cornflakes
1 tablespoon butter.
Boil the summer squash until very
tender, drain and put into a deep leak-
ing dish. Add the cheese, except °a
little which should ible reserved for the
tea, cut in snriall pieces. Add a bit of
pepper and the salt, the eggs beat-
en just enough to blend yolks and
whites, and the milk. Sprinkle the
remaining cheese over the 'top of the
!squash, then cover all with crushed
corn flakes. Dot with butter and
bake slowly (at ;5245 deg. F.) for 30
minutes, or until the top beco•mies • a
delicious brown and the mixture is
firm when tested with a silver knife,
Stuffed Pattypan Squash.
s!mla11 pattypans
3 tablespoons butter
1 tablespoon thick cream
1/2 teaspoon salt
as teaspoon white pepper
1 cup corn. flakes.
Put the whole,.,st ash to boil in
-cold water an•d•scook until tender, but
not soft. Drain and scoop out, leav-
ing enough pulp to keep in shape.
Mash the scooped -out portion, add 1
tables•poo'n of the (butter; the creant
and seasoniings and simmer three
minutes. Fill the :shells with the
mixture and place in shallow baking
pan. Toss the cornu flakes in melted
butter until well mixed and sprinkle
over the stuffed squash. Pour a lit-
tle water in the baking pan ane bake
in hot oven (475 deg. F.) until well
browned.
Learn To Relax
(Condensed from "Power Through Re-
pose" in • Reader's Digest.)
Extreme nervous tension seems to
be so peculiarly American a failing
that a German physician coming to
this country to practice was puzzled
by the variety of nervous disorders
he•was called upon to help, and final-
ly announced his discovery of a new
disease which he chose to call "Am-
ericanitis." We suffer from "Ameri-
canitis'-' in unlimited forms and de-
grees. All of us have personal tend-
encies toward restlessness to over-
come; more than that, we have inher-
ited the nervous habits of genera-
tions. But repose is an inmost law
of our being, and the quiet of nature
is at our comlman'd much sooner than
we realize, if we want it enough to
work for it steadily. Ten minutes'
practice a day will free us to rise to
our best powers of muscle, nerve,
mind and heart.
'IHow do we misuse our nervous
force'? Constantly, in all Movements
that are or ought to be under the
control of gur wills, On a railroad
journey we resist the motion of the
train:, instead of yielding to it. In
motoriiig we try to help the motor 'or
the driver, pressing our feet hard on
the floor in rounding, a corner sharp-
ly ,in stopping short, or at any mom-
ent when there is excuse for some
anxiety. If we are obliged to wait
for any length 'of time we are so
nervously strained with impatience
that we use up in an hour Vital force
which should be s(Yfii�cient for a day's
labor. If to c'ateh' a train we hastily
take a talri, 'atodety makes ixa act as
if reaehing the station in time deo
YOUR BUSINESS ACCOUNT
is Invited
Founded in 1871 this Bank has in the course of
over 60 years developed intimate association
with very many- successful Canadian business
/ enterprises. This experience is embodied in the
services we make available to you.
These services include Canada -wide collection
facilities, dose contact with our own offices in
London and New York, and ready access at
any time to our executives for consultation.
THE DOMINION BANK
ESTABLISHED 1871
/ SEAFORTI:I BRANCH
E. C. Boswell - - Manager
3771,•
Direct wires connect our Head Office in Toronto with Montreal and New York
u rugtJY.Wu 1
.pended oly our keeping a rigid spine'
and tense muscles. A common cause
of fatigue with women is the useless
strain in sewing. "I get so tired in
the 'hack of my neck" is a frequent
complaint. "Because you sew with
the back of your neck" is the correct ,
explanation. Aln'tost any even mod-
erately nervous man or woman wall
hold a pen as if some unseen force
were trying to pull it away, and will
write with jaws, and throat power-
fully contracted. "
'Even when the brain alone should'
be used the body expends. ;vital force
extravagantly by holding muscles in
unnatural contractions. Most of us
think with a contracted throat, the
tongue held firmly, and the jaw mus-
cles set as if we were suffering from
an acute attack of lockjaw. We ex-
ert the same superfluous tension in
silent reading; and the force of the
strain in proportion to the interest
and profundity of the "matter read.
We use tremendous and unnecessary
force in talking; aimless motion of
the bends, the shoulders, the feet,
the entire body, as well as power-
fully in wear and tear on the nerv-
ous 'system as superfluous motion.
We propel the voice from the throat,
using force in those delicate muscles
when it should come from the strong-
er muscles of the diaphragim, squeez-
ing the life out c.. our speech, so that
the words are born dead, and our
voices are shrill and harsh. In listen-
ing only the brain and the ears are
needed; but the individuals at a con-
cert or a lecture listen with their
spines, their shoulders, tlhe muscles
of their faces.
an sleep we seldom .allow the body
to be completely at rest. It is ab-
surd that we do not abandon our-
selves to all that nature could give
us; but there are very few of us
who have net, unconsciously, some
nervous and muscular strains that
make sleep fatiguing. Watch, and
unless you are an exceptional case
you will be su:.prised to see how you
are holding yourself on the bed, with
set muscles, not all oiver, perhaps, but
so much so that you will be astonish-,
ed at tlhe tenseness with which you
are working yourself to sleep. The
spine floes not give to the bed, leg
or arm muscles are tense, fingers are
clinched, the throat contracted, or the
face ,is drawn up in some way or
other.
At the back of every action there
should 'be a 'great repose. • `Lift a cat
when she is quiet, and see how per-
fectly relaxed she is in every muscle.
No matter how great or rapid her ac-
tivity at any ;moment, she drops all
tension at once when she stops. Man
alone of the animals disobeys ihis
law of rhythm, or equilibrium in mo-
tion and in rest. Yet repose can be
gained very simply.
!Lie flat on your +back, giving your
whole weight to the floor, which does
riot yield. Close your eyes and im-
agine yourself heavy, as if you had
dropped with all the force of grav-
ity-. Begie a deep breath; inhale
through the nose quietly, let go and
exhale with relief. Then drag your
leg up very slowly, with effort only
I
1111 thehip joint, bending the knee°,,
and dragging the, heel heavily along
the floor, until the sole of the foot
touches without effort. Let it slip
slowly dawn and ;when. nearly flat let
go, seen drops of its own weight. If
it is free, there is a little spring frons
the impetus of dropping. ,
Then lift the arm from the shoul-
der, letting the hand hanig; be careful
to think the arm heavy, and the mo-
tive •power in' the shoulder. Next,
roll the head slowly to the left, back,
to t'he°right, and back again. To free
the spine, sit up and, with heavy
arenas and legs, head dropped forward,,
let it go' back slowly and easily, as if
the vert brae were beads', on a string;.
and firs one bead ]ay flat, then an-
other, till the whole string rests ors
the `floor. Take each exercise three
times, with long breaths between. Re-
member it is equilibrium we are work-
ing for, and because we have erred se'
far.iri the opposite direction, only ex-
treme relaxatieffat ill bring it.
To gain restful sleep, give up en-
tirely, a dead weight, to the bed. If
you..ea,pnot stop thinking, do not try..
Only relax your muscles and as the
attention is more and more fixed 'ore
the interesting process of letting -go'
of the muscles, the imps of thought
have less• to take hold of, because the.
mind has applied itself to something -
worth accomplishing. Restful' sleep
will follow; but this habit must be
•cultivated. -
This training of body also trains
the mind, teaching us the power of
the will ,over muscles that should be
independent of sympathetic contrite -
tion in other muscles. This is the
(beginning of concentration. Having:
once sensed a free body we gain pow-
er to return to it at a hnloment's not—
ice; we learn to prase previous im-
pressions, and to overcome the temp-
tation to take work into play. Free-
dom to drop what we are doing andt
give our attention to the next duty-
or pleasure is our saving health ire
mind and body.
When your maid has become sensi-
tive tie tension, one hundred tunes a
day you will find arms, jaws,, shoul-
ders, rigid. Drop the contraction cel-
ery
vlery time you notice it; this is the -
real practice. Etery day you will
gain new- power to release the ten-
sion, and feel Ale exquisite sense of
ease in natural, free movement. Aa
ydu graduallylearn the absolete re--
laxation and re-
ie
of the cat or the:
baby, equilibr um' will come into ev-
ery action of 'your life, and you wilt
swing into rhythm with nature:
through a child -like -obedience to her
laws.
Secretarial Science
Business Administration
Office Training -
One Year Post -Matriculation Courses-
Write
oursesWrite for syllabus of Course
M which, you are interested.
Fall Term opens August 28
LONDON Estah. IBIS CANADA,
CANADIAN NATIONAL
EIH 1111101
ORONT
AUG. 25 to SEPT. 9, 1933
A new era dawns. Old theories, old practices,
old methods pass on to make way for the
New. This year hundreds of thousands of
keen alert, intelligentpeople will atiend the
world's largest annual Exhibition, there to
learn what is new, what is modern, in an
ever-changing world.
Canada, the United States ancl""•tile nations
beyond rhe•seas will exhibit their natural and
manufactured products in beautiful, perman-
ent buildings of stone and steel. The greatest
agricultural show on the continent will be
held in thevrorld's largest show building. Two
art galleriestwilt•liouse magnificent modern
displays of the arts trod crafts. Science and
invention will be on review in the Electrical
and Engineering building. The famous band 1
of His Majesty's Scots Guards and thirty other
bands will delight music lovers daily. The
gorgeous glittering pageant "Montezuma"
Will thrill and inspire tens of thousands.
Competitors of intetnational reno*n will
compete in the world's .championship Mara-
thon swims the world's professional champ-
ionship sculling races and other national and
intern5tionai competitions. These ere but a
few of the.. ntensely interesting educational
and recreational attractions that will fascinate
and invigorate almost two million people.
Plan to visit the "Show Window of the
Nations" this year, Exceptional excursion
rates arrsnged. Consirktfocal agents. Railways,
Steamships, Motor Coaches.
C+DM. INGLIS, H. W. WATERS,
President General Manager
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