HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1939-07-21, Page 3ti
Kk
4
21,
ti
een in the
County Papers
(Continued from Page 2)
tate and this was done in the Wing -
Seam' General Hospital ori Thursday
last, the leg being taken off just
above thee knee. The operation was'
successful and he is improving as
rapidly'as ran be expected.—Wing-
lnam Advance -Times, .0. •
Successful Students
Ate the recent exatminations of the
Toronto Conservatory of Music, Don-
ald Lloyd was su0ceseful in Grade IV
Piano, and Joyce Walker passed in
the same grade with honore.—Wing-
i ham Advance -Times,
Fifty -Fifth Wedding Anniversary
Mr. aped Mrs. J. Taylor, of 24 El-
lerbeck Ave„ Tomato, celebrated the
fifty-fifth anniversary of their wed-
ding on Sunday, July 9th, They had
planned originally to spend Sunday
in the old home town, visiting the
scenes of their early married life and
.attending worship in the old family
(pew, at Ontario Street Methodist
Church. Illness, :however, forced
them to abandon this plan. We know
all of our readetrs will joint with us
in congratulating Mr. aryl Mrs. Tay-
lor on the 55th 'anniversary of their
wedding.—Clinton News -Record,
Injured in Runaway •
' Lloyd and Harold, Campbell, sons
of Mr. Earl Campbell, of Hay, were
driving a team .of houses on the road
Thursday of last week when the
horses rani away and the boys were
thrown out. Harold .had 'his arm
broken and his face badly cut. Lloyd
was not seriously hurt. The former
-was attended by Dr. Dunlop and was
taken to London for an X-ray exam-
ination,—Exeter Times -Advocate.
Blood Poison
Mr. Mervin Johnston, who is sin-
.pioyed with the Swift Canadian Co.,
Inas been off duty with blood poison
in his right hand. Blood poison
started front a scratch receiveafrom
the wire covering of a ,chicken crate.
The hand had been lanced several
times and it is now believed that the
poison has been checked. -- Exeter
Times-Advoca'te.
Meteor Lights the Sky
A brilliant meteor like a ball of
:fire flashed over this section about
8.45 Tuesday evening. It streaked
through the sky and residents of the
district who saw it seemed to think
it fell only a short distance west of
them. 1t flar••r-d in the sky like some
gigantic fireworks illdninating every-
thing around, It was seen by numer-
ous people. Iti came so close to
earth that those who saw it seemed
to think it would strike. One farmer
'thought it dropped. just over his barn.
It was sero over a wide area.—Exe-
ter Times -Advocate.
Clever Music Pupil
Miss Maxine Harper has received
word from the Toronto Conservatory
.of Music that she has been success-
ful in passing the Grade II Theory
examination with first class honors
and obtained 98 marks. Maxine also
recently obtain'ed first plass honors
in the Grade IX singing examination.
—Mitchell Advocate,
Bone Fractured in Fall From Beam
While working in the hay mow,
Havelock Durrant, Fullerton, slipped
from a beam and landeed ' on uneven
boards on the granary below, turning
his 'foot in such a manner that he
sustained a fracture to one of the
bones. He went to Stratford for X-
ray and his foot has been placed in
a cast. While he gets about the
,house on crutches, he will be unable
to work for setae little time.—Mit-
chell Advocate.
CHNX, WINGHAM
100 Kee. - 250 Metres
'WEEKLY PROGRAM HIGHLIGHTS'
Friday, July 21-1.30 a.m., "Peter
IVLacGnegor"; 1.45 p.m:., Accordeon
Band; 5.30, Kiddies' Carnival; 7.00,
"Li'g'ht Up & Listen."
Saturday, July 22-10.30 a.m,, Shut -
Ins; 12.45 p.m., CKNX Hill -Billies;
1,30, Durham String Ticklers[; 6.15,
CKNX Sport Reporter; 7.45, CKNX
Bann, Dance.
Sundtaty>', July 23L-11 a.m., Wing -
'ham United, Church; 1.15 p.m., Scott
Patterson.; 1.30, Melody Time; 5.30,
af'1•uy Lonbarxl+o Orchestra.
Monday, July 24-11 a.m., Harry J.
Boyle; 6.30 para„ "Heart Throbs of
the Hiller'; 7, ."Lightt Up & Listen";
S, Kenneth Rantoul. ..
Tuesday, July 25-1L30 a m„ "Pet-
•ier MacGregor"; 6.10 p.mt, Howard
Bedford; 7, "Light Up & Listen".
Wednesday, July 26-11 Har-
ry J. Boylle; 11.15, Dick Todd; 7 p.m.,
-"`lAghi Up & Listen".
Thursday, July 27-1 p.m., Kuntz
tat the Keytboamd ; 6.30, "Heart Throbs
of the Hills";,w 7, "Light Up & Lis-
t tent '.
et)i.' Every 10c
Packet of
!W I LSON'S `1
FLYPADS;
WELL KILL MORE FLiES THAN/
SEVERAL DOILARa WORTH.
Of ANYOTHERFLYKILLER/
1 OC ; fte ; •Pr an fly Ulla*
cli % quk g sure,
WHY � Otiti ii)* gen
MORESforre.
faraVs�i'ri' TCQP., �T 1N;01 T.
1 y_Ar, ln,t:0 i.
ri
,1
T
Towar4 the
(Oonttinue'd fm xm Page 2)
Ment The Infected mlossuitoes trans-
mittedl the titpiekase to aton;laeys, and
the proof was 'comp/ate. A new and
profitable method? study was open-
ed uqn But Stokes didn't see it, He,
died on the fourths day.
Bestdee its. direct activities far in-
ternational natior}a1 health the, Foundation
llaarameest ether arganizationa which
carry on work in medical science, na-
tural seiteneets social ;science and) the
humanities. It has also awarded
more than 6,000 fellowships to prone
using mem in /medicine and other
fields of scieeneoe all over the world',
sending them to wherever their spec-
ialties can 'beet the studded,
For instance, 15 years ago, when
operations on the brain or spinal
cord were mtearl'y always fatal, there
was In London Hospital an assistant
surgeon, Hugh Cairns, who showed
great aptitude. In Boston was Dr.
Harvey Cushing who had developed
a brilliant new technique. More •than
80 per ceht of his brain surgery
patients survived'. The Foundation
sent. Cairns to Boston, where he
worked for two years with:. Cushing,
When he returned. to London, more
than 70 per cent 'of his .brain opera-
tions were successful at the very
start, and he steadily improved the
pereentage, Now Dr. Cairnes is a
leading authority in the field, and to
hint come othee Foundation fellows
who in turn spread his life-saving
technique over the world. iT
And so it ,works in other fields. ig-
nori.ng national frontiers, th'e Foun-
deation asks only two questions. in
awarding a fellowship: where in all
the world is the man who shows the
most 'promise in this field, and where
is the place where he can best in-
crease his knowledge ?
In one corner or another of the
globe, 'Foundation money is paying
for studies of ways to prolong .human
life, the causes of the weather, new
drugs for medical use, cures for nar-
cotic addiction, the causes of deaf-
ness, the betterment of housing pro-
jects, radio and motion pictures.
In addition to fellowships, "grants-
in-aeidt' are given to institutions, but
only when the Foundation believes in
some idea conceived by a man or a
group ,of men there. Representatives
of the Foundation go from college to
l.ospital to laboratory all over the,
v. or
> !d asking g questr n.
s Now
con-
fidentially-, how do you rate X as ,a
biochemist? What's th•e lowdown, on
this new process of his?" A card in-
cite.; file covers nearly every name in
the many sciences in which the Foun-
dation is interested.
Here are some •of the projects as
they stand today:
At Columbia University are 20'00
healthy rats, They are the current
survivor's of 45 generations of rat
life, representing 900 years of human
life. Some of the rat families have
lived on one diet—wheat, milk, table
salt and distilled water—through the
whole 45 generations. With others,
the proportions o7 milk, fat and other
foods have been varied. The results
in lon'gedity are recorded'. As an out-
come of this study it is possible that
your children and 'mine will live, on
the average, about seven years. long-
er than did our fathers.
In one of the rooms of the Massa-
chusetts Institute of Technology is a
30 -ton machine with dozens of mo-
tors, thousand's of electromagnets
and vacuum tubes. The teol,niciaas
call it a "differential analyzer"; actu-
ally it is a mechanical brain. A. sin-
gle mathematieai problem which
would take an army of computers
years to solve can he handed over
to this robot by means of holes
punched in a card, and in a few min-
utes the solution emerges. Founda-
tion money helped build. it.
The Foundation, has granted funds
for the study ,of the stars, giants of
the universe. But it is even more in-
terested ' in' the study of tiny things.
In New York University a physiolo-
gist, working ou a Foundation grant,
has drawn out glass into points no
slender that they cannot be seen ev-
en when greatly magnified. With
these 'fratgile hreediles operated me-
cbeaniically, an ti working under a
higih powered microscope, 'he has sep-
arated tiny human cells, punctured
them, cut 'out the nuclei.
It was the Foundation that enanc-
ed the famous "atom -smashing" ma-
chine that is advancing our knowl-
edge of the -tiniest units[ to which
matter can be reduced,
To promote the welfare of man
himself, the Foundtation has backed
extended studies of government ad-
ministration, of social security, of the
origin and distribution of national in-
come, of thousing legislation„ of agri-
cultural control. Nor does the Foun-
dation try to influence any project it
assigias. It says, "Here's your $3000.
Now go ahead_ We don't want to
hear about it until you're through"
In many non-political ways the
Foundation has co-operated with the
government, The ool'leges are can-
vassed each year for graduates re-
commended by their teachers for
government careers. They are gent
by the Foundation, to Washington,
where they serve a year without pay
In various departments, shifting from
one to another. After the yea.r's ap-
prenti•ceShip nearly all of them have
been taken permanently into govern-
ment service.
The aiim of the Foundation is to
seek for knowledge Wherever It is to
be founid and to apply it to the good
of all men everylw'here. In seeking
the best man and the [best place It
doesn't care whether it finds thein in
a country that is d'emocrati'c, fascist
or communist. However, though it
has given' niillients of dollars[ •to'' Ger-
man insrtttuttone, none is given todeay
—b6cauee the Nazi regime has made
the search far knowledge nearly„im-
poesi'ble.
But the treasurer had no [hesitation
in signing -that cheque for $74,000 for
J'aj5ab. 'ilhe' Tstitute of, Public Health
In Tokyo May be saving •lives long
after the 'present ,mil'itarisiito regime
le forgotten.
And so today, while bullies and
bt'aggarte strait e.erdes the internee
tional stage, the real work toward a
tette,[ future for maskilid quietly
going an.
rt:.
ravelling Around Home
One of the busdeset, executives I
know', boo tied by affahe" to have tak-
en a • holiday in ten yews', has Pearn-
ed ihew to 'travel at home. He owns
a piece of Connecticut, woodland' and
spends his evenings and 'week -ends
journeying in it to see -the sights.
Now he is •planning' to adventure
further on his hone acme& Recent-
ly he advertised for wood -wise guides
to conduct him around his own prop-
erty and show him aneytlhing t he
might have (Missed of what there
grows aild sings and flies.. "There
must be legions of young botanists
geologists and ornithologists, just out
of college, who would like to make
$10 and crakes of a Saturday after-
noon," reads has wistful advertise-
ment.
That executive is a contrast to the
dull fellow who owns a [huge estate
across the road from a house where
I visit. He takes a foreign cruise
everyyear and when he gets back
we all have to sit through„ his travel
movies. One evening when be had
shown ante the usual shots of the
Grand Canal, the. Pyramids and Gib-
raltlar, I ment'io'ned to hime,how much
I had, been ' enjoying the autumnal
gold of his tulip' tree by the gate.
"Tulip tree?" he asked. "Didn't
know I owned one."
"Irl that case,". I said, "you don't.
I own it."
.Thoreau did not legally own the
land 'his cabin stood on, nor the logs
it was built :of, nor Wald4n Pond.
But they are famous as "Tluomeau's
Cabin," "Thoreau's Pond.'di And his
journal of intensive exploration near
home t'Un's to 2,000,000 words.
•We have all yearned for far places
and I think we peed to keep the
dream of seeing them some day. But
nature at home is just 'as fill with
beauty and wonder as the hates
wheelie bronze -limbed girls wear red
flowers over their ears. I was once,
while working for the Government,
told off to entertain a visiting Eng-
lish naturalist. I asked him what he
wanted to see, and he said, "A rat-
tlesnake, a poison ivy bun, a Milk-
weed flower, and an opossum."
Exploration begins et the back
fence. No matter how limited your
field, there is enough in it to keep
you busy for all the time you can
spare to travel. Scientists of a Cleve-
land museum found that four years
was sufficient to catalogue all the
wild life on 60 acres Of 01110 wood -
lot. After three years I have not yet
concluded a survey of one square
mile of ordinary farm and woodland,
near Chicago. So far I can report
450 kinds of native flowering plants
(which includes some 30 sorts of
trees) and 150 fungi. There come
to those trees and sloughs 155 kinds
of birds every year, and 27 kinds of
quadrupeds pass their adventurous
lives there. Twelve sorts of reptiles
and 14 amphibians appear upon the
roll call; the insect hordes are still
unnumbered—they are probably not
less than 2,000, species.
Dr, Frank Lutz, leading authority
on insects, once predicted that he
would find a thousand kinds of .in-
s'ects, if 1 remember rightly, in his
backyard in New York City. I be-
lieve •he underestimated the number.
Dr. William Beebe took up a sackful
of earth and spent days exploring the
minute and curious life in it. '`
These men were expert explorers
in nature, but to become. an intelli-
gent, traveller at, home, you need
simply to train your powers of ob-
servation. You 'may have no time for
wicks exploration even in your neigh-
borhood, and the daily round from
your door to the store le so familiar
that, like a picture left always in the
same place, it is something you Iiave
stopped seeing; But look again Can
you name every tree on that walk?
How about the birds in their boughs,
the bracket fungi shelving from their
'heoles, the tree crickets singing in
them so • quietly that •only the listen-
ing ear detects them in the summer
hum? That ,hole itn the ground; by
'the .stump in the vacant lot — what
made it? Chipmunk? No, it's too
small for that. Nightcrawler? No—
too large. Crawfish? Yes—th -e's a
telltale turret of earth around' r.t. And
Weigh fragments of his shell — a
cnow must have got him as he em-
erged. .10
Sharp eyes will find plenty of
birds' nests when the leaves are off,
but the fun is to find them when the
families are at home. Leaves screen
the nests from peering eyes, so use
your ears • instead; the high, clamor-
ous squalling of hungry youngsters
will lead you to the spot[ Then snake
yourself small and watt for the par-
ent with the worm. The efforts of
those 'driven parents, the flying les-
sons, the first tem-ified take -off of
each child, the ene'miee of the nest,
the fatalities, the rescues will be
your three weeks' in the home life of
a fascinating foreign family.
I used to be amazed by a friend
who could say, "The last junco ]'eft
a week ago," Or, "There's the first
redstart" How did be knave it was
the first ,redestart ? Why, he knew It
betausie, as be took his daily exercise
always Ube same male a.nd a half
through vacant lots and fields/ around
the city's edge, he trotted all the
birds every day. If juncos were miss-
ing, he sensed it as a mother of 12
knows at a glance if (she is a child
short,
There are certa'lh customs of the
wend you must Rotl'low, to learn to
know the natives. The first is quiet.
NO Shattering growl, of frletde, no
dog, The perfect attire is natural
clothes. Peolii'e who stroll Into a
q �t
ys!
.., a e, i.. �P 4! Y. r.r�.!i.l!' �, .. �-.. ui4 61.0 ., ,k �i'i; T...r� /h,.•Y
meadow or tbi ket dweed in white
like a Sailboat might as well 'come
with a braes band,, I tIe iv_e my light-
colored hat at theme, and take, care
that even my shoes are dakk. Clothes
that flutterr also frighbern off the wild
folk; they are lese alarmed by quiet
talking than 'brusque .'iirov'ement, Re-
peatedly I find that by • sitting or
standing 'still for, 15 mintftee in one
place, J encounter a greater number
of wildemneas Wives than. I would
by ebriding with more vigor 4than
Wisdom for an hour. John Muir
could[ sit so quietly upon a rock that
the water Dazed, [bird of the deep
canyons and cataracts, would seine
and share it with him. Darwin, mo-
tionless,, attracted the curious baby
squirrels actualle to run up his aa -ma
and per on this shoulders, though
their mtother chattered with hornor in
the boughs.
Sonne people's way of "going out in
the country for the day" reminds me
of the travellers who "do" London,
Paris, Romte'and Florence in a week.
Our Sunday motorists get in a clos-
ed car, go just so far, and tarn around
and comae black. They have seen on-
ly what can be noticed at `50 miles
an hour.
But suppose you park the car just
off the highway and get out. There
is a muskrat swimming secretly a-
cross the, river, just come out of hid-
ing from the very, bridge over which
you spedt. Grassof-Parnassus Irene.
blies in the boggy meadows, there is
bittersweet clambering in the oak ;
yiou can 'hear the trilling of a tree
toad now that the roar of the car
has died. You stand on the border
of a country -forever foreign, because
it is not mamai. '
And what kind of souvenite do you
bring back, when you have been, a-
broad at home? The inexperienced
traveller who gets taken in by the
Arab rug sellers, of Nice is an object
of mirth and pity to those who know
their values. Coming . home from a
cot excursion', how country many people
bear back with then, pathetic corps-
es) of wi'ldflower's! Most wildflowers
never Survive a journey, or in the
house look ragged and ill at ease,
like gypsy chdldmen.
My friend just back from the Tyrol
boasts of the fine bit of carving he
picked up for a song in au out-of-the-
way village; I+,,have the same satis-
faction from the lashing spoils of a
recent tramp—a spray of silvery
three-eornered yam pods trailing ov-
er my, mantel', the empty nest of a
yellow warbler that had been cun-
ningly roofed over by a deer mpuse
to intake his winter home.
A woman in North Carolina, when
she goes afield, brings back moss
and fern and lichen, checkerberry,
and the tiny 'basal rosettes of wild-
flowers, little pine trees still not
three inches high, softly gleaming
mica flakes and the .pink feldspar,
and of these, she constructs "fairy
gardens." In open pottery dishes or,
better, in fish bowls, under glass, she
gardens on a !scale so fine that she
uses little forceps and needles. The
daintier the aumount of material, the
prettier the garden, so nature never
misses the oddw•ents and bitments•
that she takes. She sells her tiny
growing forests in the gift shops of a
mountain resort, and: their popularity
is astonishing.
Dividends were declared from na-
ture by the investment that a young
student I know madle in travelling at
home. He wanted to go to a state
.normal school in California, but had
no funds. The country he came from
was admittedly good for nothing ex-
cept rattlesnakes and cacti.. So he
took an, antique flivvsr and began col-
lecting cactus for City window gar-
dens. White limiting for cacti, he
discovered a loft.. of old, bones. They
proved to be In+l1ian skulls, worth $10
a piece to arohaeologiste. Cacti and
'skulls netted $1,500 in cash to see
Mm thorough his freshman year. In
hie sophom.oyd year he began captur-
ing rattlesnakes for museums, shows
and 'snake Mims.
This saw him trough another year.
By that time his teachtma were aware
that he was not only the brightest
student 'they '•bati, but the most re-
souroefult They are rove recom-
m'endimg him far a scholarship.
Here was a traveller at 'home who
knew what to look for before bre set
forth, and so found riches on his
journey. Most of us do our travel-
ling, near or far, without thought of
cash profit, but the mare we know
how tin look for, the more we will
find. It is easy to see the Grand
Canyon when you get there. But'otth-
er [bingo worth going to look at lie
*titbit' smelt of your own cbdniney
smntoke.
” Tennis Is
Duck Soup."
She le known to pipet eattl ,. all the
tennis piayeus of Southeen la.lttfornia
as "Teach," but she signs herself
Eleanor Tetnmtantt-
' 'Tin 1920 [etre gave up heir amateur
standing •bo beoomcee a, Minnie teaching
professional. That was a wrench, for
she atood third in national ranking
at the time and was' amlbitii:ous to be-
come a 41Vbmnrr1omi, Culllte has •found so-
lace -dn the intervening years by set-
ting more than rolme young player on
tbee road to aue6esta. lour Tae'terpiece
is Atniee 1Maa1ble. ,holder, or bath wo-
men'e singlieto atad double* (Mee in
thiel United Stat 1.
`°'.11 ,f' tat Pat it in her own.I
.d1 Atiz ,."r:1..,�,.iat „li7nY a,�,.rmici,i�u,.1'(t r<fh�.iaU�tiits�f".l,urii}dh
Ileal eel TeatattaihriOle e i01t ` ll''01409
in. the i iteWiela!ty d "4-ttlia leer
oda ealtAcZca by- §Taric prolrsieo"
"Tecate a. SanteiTl7diajg to be play"
and ealle(yod," She transoms[ "Whoa
began to 'play I wanted) to raniyou'd.. ,.Irt
and ,halve fulfauxW y shouldiai`t ray p'
pd'ls
want the seine?" She. 'Planat
gave a'�pupil enough equipment tin th
dant three lessons., so oven if he h
never had a rachet im• his, hand, b
fore, One utas go Out and play,
feet et tennis Lesson from "Teach'
is an exhilarating exp len ee. She
greets you oen the court with a firm
handshake. Then[, withdrawing her
hand but bidding you „keep yours. in
the handshaking position, she puts
your (racket in it and tells you, "Shake
hands with your raokei." Thus, with -
mitt puzzling technical explanation,
you are shown the natural grip that
you will use. She has you •bopnee
balls to get thus feel of the contact
of tali and racket, meanwhile ex-
plainingex-
plainingwwhattore' threat and ahead of
the racket are. You have just mas-
tered; the track of plinking a ball- up
on, your racket and feel that you are
on your way to being a great
player when $111,0 takes the racket a-
way and gives your a dozen or so
balls.
"Throw 'them," she commands, "ov-
er the fenoe, anywhere." You throw
one. "Don't be a sissy,'' she calls.
"Throw them overhand, up over your
head, like a ball player. Didmft you
ever play baseball?" You throw
them overhead. You are beginning
to get 'good when she puts the racket
in your hand again and says. "Now
thajorw them with the racket, the
same motion." Thus you are led to
your first stroke, the overheat:,, which
you thought would be one of the last
things learn.
"Hit 'ani into the fence!" cries
"Teach." "You've never Lived till
you've hit bal'1s into the fence," No
talk about getting'-" death, on your
shots.
You're beginnibig to get pretty tir-
ed when she says, "Come on, let's
have some fun. I've got to be amus-
ed,' and, grasping your hand, begins
to hippity-hop forward and back a-
cross the court.. 4 You may not re-
alize.., it, but this lively slipping and
the exercise you get shagging balls
(she makes you chase ,them all) have
a definite purpose of limbering you
up and getting you in shape foe the
foot work and court covering that
are such an important part of tennis.
Next day you are taken easily
from the overhead to the overhead
serve. You may get a little technical
at 'this point and ask, "Wh.i t motion
do I make with my wrist?"
" tvfh, send your -waist bonne to Mer
Ma," advises Teach, "you're doimagi all
right without it." '
"Stretch! Reach for the stars'
Stretch- till You feel tit," she .dtrecta•,
and isn't satisfied until your shirt
pulls 'out of your 'belt. "Now you're
stretching properly," elle sem.
At the tend of the third lesson she
will tell ytou, "Go out now and 'play
and cone back to me next week with
a lot of bad halts. That's how I
live."
But if you think you've discovered
a painless way to learn tennis, you
are in for, a terrific letdown. It's
when you begin, to get good and want
to get better, when, -you've learned
enough to see for yourself how much
more you need to know that "Tech"
beans down.
"Now you've got to be bored," she
tells you. "You'll never be a good
player till you've hit 1,004 bails," and
she begins to work intensively )on
your forehand, backhand or service.
When "Teach" gets a pupil who
ha.s played for years, she just starts
playing with him. "I want to see
how he does it. He'd get too dis-
cau:rtaged if I attempted to tear drown
his whole 'game and -rebuild it. I try
to 'suggest a few changes that will
help him. If he begins his forehand
way back Of his neck soanewhere, I
ask if he would like to try begin-
ning it with bis arm out even with
his body. I explain that as the ball
is coming tow -and him he gets More
ea it by meeting it at that point and
letting his packet bead do the work.
"When you swing your racket way
round behind you, you are losing time
and wasting energy. Watch Budge
when he makes those powerful `shots
that nick the baseline. It looks as if
he merely leans toward the balk and
his racl.et meets it at just th•e right
moment to send •it back like light-
ning. That's perfect timing,"
Miss Tennant believes in cultivat-
ing originality in her pupils. "I show
them my way midi then tell them, 'Do
it your way,' and if they get goodre-
sultss, I don't try to change it. A
eP
bads
teadinga *OD.'
tthiatt way. Duck
egesfUny; be: it'f
h hu. lack* U )
and, he gete 1ed."
. ]Ea Aidee- Marble `4140agrh'''
only an ilndivid4.ualkir.4c, on
obstinate one. -i-ituoWl lb
her work thiazin out her; e
anid wait In patience for bar
m)" uuggestiions," she gist
"Teach" 'tate pbasty of
with anything but fiazinase;
n5,s playa' .lust can't lee lazy,
battle -•cry, familiar to every- 1
Who has over taken dem
is, "Stir your stturipsti Get eii
dime and get Slits l't•-k• as
senile at fast ball.. whizzing i
•
net,
work on Miler holiday -
"These oysters are very
waiter."
"Yes, sir."
"Amid not very freak"
"Then be 'glad they're atonal,
A little girl was examining .0Maw
per's catalogue. "'Mumma,, s
"why' de they brake pig s �.
dies weho are not guide ready?"
Fiery, Itching
Toes and Fee
Here is a dean, stainless antisepticcost,
'• e
now dispensed by chemists at .'rifling c,otms'
that will do more to help you get rid t> f
your trouble than anything yasi'We ever
used.
its action rs so
rating
that the itching is instantly powerfully reit
in a short time you are rid of that bother.
some, fiery eczema. The sante is true O
Barber's Itch, Salt Rheum, Itching Toes -
and Feet—.other irritating unsight skint
troubles.
You can obtain Moone's Emerald of to
the original bottles at any modern
store. It is safe to use—and failure kt�8tyr
of the ailments noted above is tan, vldo
little it
It's nnei wand sum
coste
toma
c connect tow telephone. That's
camp 9
why so maty families arrange
ant telephone calls.
And when
n telep hone time
comes, you'll see the young'
eters hurrying flI back
ss th r chi
they
ce
to talk, too!
Telephone service s widely
used because it is n-
expen cit, Yet surprisinglyelse
in-
expensive. Nothin6 it costs!
so much for what
Miss E. M. Cluff,
ilianagero
-"tor--' "ten
far
'IA , le ..,v1 Irl:
•Our.I�lt�ra„4.er,