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The Clinton News Record, 1930-02-27, Page 6a eunehino and frost) ,air. Ia ether Improper ousint g lI wealth they have coddled them iaBlde ) the house. Rtetc is it .t:ho iu3'911"i° Bad as Disease'iesutt whether the tool It good or bad, . Chnid'xee, Like Plants, lie- With poor housing, rickets, attaentl&, • defective teeth,. are companions. endear Q1 ®nz Surolzra�R�' � � Tuberculosis is also closely associated naffs with the problen;'' One; city'ittveeta (This io lie sixteenth of a series of gaged: the causation of ,tt4borCulosis Health Articles prepa>'ed:by the Carta- and' found that over six times as many diaa Social. I•Iygiene Council): caoea emerge from li*es, Of. Otenroom as itt homes of fours roe d or• over. ',et us coaside h cthose hom le Au idea et the magattude of tee ivlto leave not ereacomfortable i'tis homes housing problem thta faces us can be as the average ei' of this Pape'-• found in . the itt tereut that about The gee Who worts in file mines, and neve¢ melIton people can be'Eoulid fu then goes: homy to a hake'with to the United Kingdom alone:wile live is sleep; o the city, and ti aka with his houses of three roome or 1650. ant e i t�i the city, and then yturns to Our aim- as Canadians ''. who are a me ata house that really .isn't a Treed of our country and its people home at all, but merely aa roof rker should be' to endeavor to help and im-: his lee have is'the type of worker prove condRiotie for those people who,. that we have to bear in mind when we hale to live in, houses that are data - take up the housing problem. mental to health. It ie a tiueetion of et has been definitely proven alter .broad Iegisiation and requiren•a great long and. ueiiig Crated study''that tie;deaf of study before it cat bo handled," tective itousing is au.essentiai factor but.everybody should lend ;a hand, in interfering with the proper meta, . of children, and in; the general health of any eouatey., We can take care of our food supply, ovie Recipes and conquer germs, and do, everything else necessary-to•conserve health and Pauline Frederick, the Warner Broa.' Prolong life, but .we oast count some settees star,should write a book on of our time wasted unless we give a the art of being a . perfecthostels. great deal of attention to ewhat is not Players working in a picture with the'. otter one of the most important, but star are oftea invited to enjoy .tho-hoe one of the hardest problems to handle pltatity of the Frederick home when —housing. the day's work is finished. One of Overcrowding, lack. of cleanliness, the most delightful phases of her and improper ventilation are the three cb,arm as a hostess is her abilify to big enemies of poor housing, Rickets concoct an appetizing repast on short among children is the most prevalent notice. Informal breakfast and late disease in the slums of all large cities. supper parties are favored by her and Sunlight Is the almost certain preve¢- cooktng is iter hobby. tion and cure of this disease. 'Defeo- Here are a few et her favortte,ee- tive housing is equally certain. one. of ctpes: the predisposing canoes.:: Date and Nat Muffins It probably does not occur to most One cup hot water, one cup sugar, people that the kind of house one lives Dae teaapootr butter, Due teaspoon•' in has Winch to do with the kind of socia, Dna egg, one cup chopped dates, teeth itt one's head. Yet doctors have one cup chopped wataute, taro ter: - discovered discovered that invariably when they ,spooaa baking powder, one and ono• take several hundred children, who half cup flour,. lived under better class conditions and First add the soda to the hot water compare them with several huadred and coot. Cream slightly the sugar children living uuder.sltum conditions: and butter and add toe egg. Beat the the teeth of the badly housed children 'three ingreients with an egg beater. aro much inferior to the others. Add the dates and nuts and mix well. is order to show how seriously de- Add the water and soda and the flour, festive housing arrests the develop• after stftiug the flour with the shaking meet of what otherwise might be a powder. normal madhealthy child, let us trace Half all the muffle. tins and bake in the developments of a rickety child, a moderate oven fifteen to twenty rata - always bearing in miad that in the rates, Whe¢ .bot ice with Brown Let - great majority ot cases this very pre- ter Frosting. valent disease is directle• attributable Br)Wn Futter Frosting itI E the vtc to the housing conditions o Two tablespoons melted butter, one elm• Two of cream or top milk, a few Up to the time when a child i two drops ot. vanilla and eadugh coafeo- years of age, the mental fly subdued.' of. tioneer's sugar to make the icing of the rickety third o painfully subdued. the r€gtat consistency to spread. An a rule [t is constantly exhausting 'Currant Sauer.' Rd energies trying to .0et enough air ' into eta lungs to live. Its activities To be served with baked ham. Melt ' are sometimes confined entirely to two and one•half tablespoons of butter changes is the nervous system, over .and brown la It two tablespoons of which it has no control, such as con- flour. Add one Cup of brows stock. vulsions. Walking Is delayed, speech If you haven't this, dissolve some is slow in coning, and when it does boulltion cubes. Also add one-third route, sometimes halted and 'narked cup of meant jelly. Cook until Wok- by hickby stammering. Mental development a eag .dda to this sauce. of sherry flavor - is 810w. When a rickety child reaches the Macaroni Salad school age, 11 shows backwardness Boll macaroni in tate regular way which sometimes lasts for quite a few and when cooked rut under cold years. It lacks the power of colleen- water. Cut macaroni tato fine pieces kation. In eletreme cases the child, (tor this reason, do not cook too lauding himself, below normal, Is apt much). Chop Otte onion and a/gener- to become tumuli, bad-tempered and ons amount ot celery. Mlx mdcaronl, teottblesome. onion and celery together and sea - A peculiarity of the rachitic condi- son well. Put on crisp lettuce leaves Lion Is .that the backward child of and sprinkle with grated eggs and about seven years of age ie apt to paprika.. take a spurt in its mental activities .and seem to be brighter and more able' tp grasp the teachings It receives la school. . This fact puzzled lite authorities for some time, particularly when they Were being constantly told by moth- ers that titer children who had been delicate the first five years of their fives suddenly took a turn for the bet' tee. Finally the doptors reasoned It out, and they came -back to the same problem of housiiith;• again. These children had beet kept in- doors, largely because their -mothers were working women. The long wel- ter mouths had taken their toil helped by tee badly ' ventilated, crowded homes. Witett the children were al- lowed to escape from their eaptivtty attd sent to school, the change came. The sunlight and fresh air that came Into their lives with their new free• dem had done the work. The rickety ADAMSON'S ADVENTURES—By y a Jacebssou - 01.0., 5 AT TeiSSR Becalms OUT 13OOre gto6 i iaTeei TO '6'otd OV:33$ &i%$4 Air Circus Days Details of Famous Flier's .Career Revealed by Pal only three Years before Colon31 Lindbergh accomplished his epochal trans-Atlantic fight, the world's pro- uder aviator made a precarious. I1w. lag, la a ttaancial a:e welt as a physi- cal sense,- by "barestorming" : and putting on one -plane air -circu=ses in the smelt of the Middle West and Southwest. intimate. 'memories of those carte, taco mad. romantic days,. both: thrilling and humorouo,,yare told by handy Ea- siow, pow• also a famous pilot, who was "Sum's" closest pal and business Partner during that period. in- the October Issue. of Popular Science Monthly. "From Iowa we barnstormed down into -Missouri crud then over into Il- linois,": -he. writes •"siienditig most of a year (1924) at It. Slim was the eleanest.feltow I ever knew. He didn't d.rtak or smoke or swear, He had more nerve In the air and could do mare with an otd crate than any flier I've seen. The' greatest exhibition of nerve in the air f can recall' was the time Slim came closest to being killed. "He was' testing a new ship. for - Ben Bell in St. Louis. I stood in front of one of the hangars watching hien, At 8,000 feet he tried to pat the 'plane into a right spin so the Magee, or twisting'lorce, of the motor' would help him get it out. -tie triad three teems, but coueda't get it to spin, So he put' it be a lett sine, and down It Dame For a thousand feet, with - the wires screaming so they could be heard a mite away, he strug• glad to bring the ship out of that. spin. Then he crawled out on the fuselage hack' .01 his seat, hanging ou like a leech, ready to PAID with his para- chute But he Met jump. Ho pull• ed hints:Ai back into the cockpit again `and came down 1;100 feet -more, try- ing to save ,the ship. He was only 100 feet above the ground when he jumped, bat ho wasn't hurt a bit. "Lindebergh and I always tlew Into a tows with one of us walking on the, wing to attract attention. Then wo would throw out a couple el a hundred paper. hattdbitle, .printed on We bad worked oat the wording to- gether. It read: 'some out and get acquainted. Title ship 13 made of ,rood aid wired together. The wings aro nut covered with tin, It 'deal track up.' "Then we woald land in a cow pas- ture, or baseball park, and invite pas-' Bangers to go up at five ateliers a ride. If nobody west up, wo woatd fly awoy. Later, wo would coma back, Vinton the people saw they couldn't keep us unless somebody went up, they got air -minded and climbed Into the cockpit. "Wo did overyttiiteg that would bring in dtntee, Sometimes we would race automobiles at couatry fa'lrs. We got $76 for each race. Above those Utile half-m[lo dirt-tractes we would have to bank the 'plane almost straight up and down and buzz around like a lie itt a bottle. M I remember it, wo always won, But we Used t0 throttle down the motor until the last lap to flee the spectatora a run for their money. Oa that last tap, we would show the boys what .ho old elite could do. "Once we flew into • a town with S[im on the wing.' Whet we landed, an old lady came up and asked: 'Wtiteh ono Det you young mea was that out on the fender?' "At algae we would stake the ship clown, or- tie its • tael. to a stamp tad A Country Without ®,ks. Kemal Pasha's introduction of the European aiphabet,intoTur'key seems to have brought shout a veritable re- volution. •,weal has not merely repplaced one, series- of letters by anot[iel'. The Turkish Ianguage itself' has been at - footed, and will be affected• even more u itt the course of time. Moreover, Kemal has, for the 'Present at least, suppressed all books. The Turkish . nation Is without a literature-- Writes ";-L"•a contributor; to Reelaw's Cate versum (Leipzig); r "This is the inavoidable result of ritppressing all books printed with Arabic letter's. It ie true that the p'ue' chase and sale of these books have not been legally prohibited, but hence- forth, booksellers will not dare to pee ter them, and the public takes caro not to demand them. "In Constantinople alone about two million books wilt have to be' destroy- ed. estroy ed. Booksellers and publishers have already claimed damages from the government. It is uo longer pennies - Igo to print books with Arabic lettere, Still, there ie on the book market at present jest one specimen that has been printed in the. new Latin alphabet, It is a volume of prose poem written by .a member of Parliament, and la called 'Banta Dania' (Drop by Drop). This is the only book that for the pro; sent may be awarded as a prize to brliiiant pupils in educational instltu- tEotis. `The Governtnint Printing settee has its hands full with the preparation of schoolbooks. •It has already pub - netted some very ,attractive primers In the arra type, and some children's books with verses, interpreting popu- lar pictures in color. There is a heavy demand for these books—the joint work of the Director of the Fdi- tortai Bureau at Angora and a Turkish. lady. "The European alphabet has already exercised a strong influence upon the language, which is taking on a muck simpler form. Its new garb makes ninny old idioms and expressions ua- suitabEe. All Arable and Persian e[e- meats are bonstautly eliminated. "Experts have been sent to the pro- vinces to select words and expressions from the national Language and to in- corporate then into the modern classic. language. The Language Committct which directs this research work is to be orgaotzezd as a sort of Turkish.. Academy. It will compile and control tete dictionary. Besides other duties the Committee will also have to super- vise works of IUterature so that they may be adapted in style and expres' Bion to the new tendency of the Tare: - isle language. • "Authors who have been tweeter only with the old way of writing aro practising and otudyIng diligently, so that they may resume their work as soon as possible in the spirit of the new alphabet. "It le not only the fashion to know how to write the Latin alphabet but it has also become a cult. "01 courae, this liuropeareizatiote meets with some resistance, but the Geed ce In him. sett attti�4whilelhoe takes titre old vette and garments from Turkey, he gives It neer amts and new Ideals," Lassoed i4 II ad �tviU Sandgate Bl -ach Thrilling Five Hour Chase Ends in Execution) on Sands A mad bull, on a recent evening, escaped at Sandgate and was at largo for five hours before it was lassoed after an exciting chase, and killed. After breaking a rope in a slaughter house, the bull ran into the I•lythe Canal, into the gardens of the Lent County Constabulary, and along the main road into Sandgate, Pedestrians ited at its approach. Between Battery Point and the coast guard station the animal narrowly escaped being run down by motor cars. Ad young cyclist who was in its path saved himself only by leaping front his machine. as the hull charged had dr wn. • ".NOCKED OVER WOMAN Leaving the cyclist the bull ran on. the pavement and knocked over a we-- Man, o man, who was wheelirg a pram. Nei-' titer the women nuc the child, however" was htirt. By this tine several hundred people had taken up the chase in the darks, ahii at..2andgate coastguard station,' where the bull sprang on to the beach', a slaughter nen named Marshall tried to rope the animal, Bat the infuriated bull turned and charged. Marshall fell, and the ani• mat's horns caught isn't in the back. Another man went to his aid, but the bull again attacked Marshall as he lay on the stones. Marshall saved himself by rolling over, and the ball's horns became bur= ied in" the beach, while Marshall scrambled up and was hauled to serest; On the sea-wall. BEACH "STEEPLECHASE" Then, bellowing as it went, the bull over jumping loll the beacb, dashed along groynes until after a half -mile rualb it was stopped by a groyne too high to jump and by a 20 -foot wall on the inland side. When a rope was thrown aver the bull's horns the animal charged at th0 sea-wall and broke the rops. But the bull was lassoed first by e. constabltl and then by people on the 'sca-wall and slaughtered where captured. The tendency of the childless gat to adopt orphans is dna to their deslrit to give tietuselves hetes. Rocket planes which can go 5,000 mites an hour are talked about; wei are nlaitiag up a list of erietids wheat we should like' to see travel that way; —Ctuoinuati Times -Star, A home is ;1'1[0.e -used bundle; Tituge that na;,ally stahtds n. the tlhtea80100 t ot wl to the garage 'tliiioll. "This Years Next Year—" "What is My Chance in the Marriage Market?" Every Girl Asks Herself this Ques- tion in Her Secret Heart. And Here are Some Official Figures that Will Help Her to Answer it. choose hrides.younger than themsel- ves, An old adage arrives at the [dean roepective.ages of husband and vette as foiiowa;, Halve the man's age, add seven years, and you have the ideal age for his wile. Thus a man of twenty -flue would marry a girt just under twenty; a matt ot thirty would mate with a girt of twenty-two; forty with tweaty- seven. This vcarian standard, however. would scarcely be accepted by most people nowadays. Having arrived at rho ages when the chances of marriage are at their best; let us tura to the .subject of happy marriage. There are no exact statistics avail- able as to the relation between happy marriage and marriage ago. Bat there is abundant evidenece of what factors militate agalast bappy mar- riage and lead to disaster. In tits divorce court the woman with two or more children figures less fre- quently than the woman with moue, white the woman with n targe family 1>y modern standards—that is, four or more cbtldrett—navigates the waters of tnatrimony with more skill than her -loss prolifio sisters.. It Is very seldom indeed titat a race Nowadays those myaterionsepeople, the Btatistl0ians, are able to tell us with deadly precisioa mann things formerly left to guesswork. For example: At what age has a girl the best chance of finding a 1110• mate? From what age doe3 her chance become more remote? Whet. may •she resign herdeir to lifelong celibacy? By carefully contptltng agitate the experts 'can give tatrly melee anew- ors newors to these and other very importaat questions. . Statistics prove conciu@,1vety that the age when a girt hal tete host chance or marriage is twenteaftee. The (ndde that a girl of twenty will 4,,.x,_.4 Toucher—"llarite, are tl',: e feathered quadrupeds?" ' Eartie—"Yes, ma'am." Teacher—"Nam) one." Earlie—"A feather bed." , E PROVERBS NoCHINES No needle is sharp at bout ends. • children were getting better,. although Everyone pushes a tall ng fence. they- seldom reach the standard 01 A maker of idols is never au idot- children who escaped tit disease. iter. Free setters grumble most at a play. He who rides on a tiger can never dtsniottnt. One dog barks at semethlu g, the rest bark at hent. • Freedom is not obtahned by running away Rom It. Patient waiting may solve a prob- lem when feverish activlty fats. itaitan bachelors aro protesting against regulations imposed on them by Museoltni. "But to the married man a Mussolini more or less makes little their children the proper atnount of difference. �_..MUUTa AND JEF1F By BUD FISHER rJUDGCy'M!S y_..711AT's NoT A MIscReAmr iW MARRIED MC FOR M1t MONEY!. "What there's a win there's—" Att- ewer: "A. row." "Take everything with a grain of —" Answer. "Souse," "Sweet are the uses of—" Answer: "Sugar." "Uneasy ties the head that wears —" Answer: "Curltag pins." "Music hath alpacas to so0ths—" Answer: "Babies." "A bird in the hand le worth two —' Answer: "And sixpence." "Mea must work and women—" Answer: "Go to the pictut'as." ifve and harry within tete next ave watt watt six or more chtidrett ap years are erectly even. 1pears in the dtvorc0 court, either ea The odds that a girl of twenty wilt survive ten years and marry ere two- thirds In her rayon. But later on the chances are lase. ' lou can put tee ntatlee tennis seer. 'ile chanl"s t. the teontv.yearoldt girt tnarryitt; are two in three. For gals of toe'tlyhve the odds are Due itt two; nett 1.0 those of thirty the rids etre thrpe to Otte ageenet. Points We Must Conslder These are the tiguree today. Fttty years ago they would have been re- garded as fantastic. During that perioenttyd two into play, br�ingtng ave come about man• reaching changes. First, econotutc pressure, or tate greater difficulty experienced hit men is establishing themselves la eerie Me, las resulted in a genera! post- ponement of marriage to a later any In Australia, where there are great open spaces, the disease of rickets has been found very. infrequently. South Melee has had the same experience.' 1 South Africa l and Now, as Australia n become more thickly populated, and the cities more crowded, tate disease of rickets is beginning to allow its head. Rickets, however, is not-conftied en- tirely lo the poorest sections. It Is found In wealthy houses too, but when it is, the cause generally Iles in the fact that the parents have denied petitioner or respondeat. The eouclusioa to be drown from these tarts le the obvious one; ehitd• le35 marriage has lest chance of sue• cot than Otte where cltildrea aro in the nursery, Women Who Wait • The tendency today it for a girl to demand a higher standard ot liv- ing than did leer Victorian grand- mother. She prefers to wait three or more yearn rattler than. start mar nage 00 a slender income. In short, she agrees with the cynic: "Whop. poveety comes la at Nae door love hies but 01 the window." But this adage does not stand the test of experience. The proporttott of poor or not -very -welt -0E• couptes who com0 to grief is smaller than { that among those who enjoy good In- comes. These facia suggest that Those Lazy Loltarsst Hiatoey seems .to be the happy Rutting-groaud of the sehaolboa how- ler. Here to a saw light on an event of the past: "Magna Marta was .good and kind anti everybody liked her. She was strong." Another cattd, asked • to describe some of the hardstttps of the Crusad- ere, said that many of Meat died of salvation. Another young genius tette us that "la 1620 the Pilgrims crossed the ocean, and this is known as the Pltgrtm'; Progress." • Ou semi[ar1y original linea are tate following lttstoricat judgments: The three estates :of the realm are Buck- ingham Palace, Wiadsor, and Bat• moral. Julius Caesar was renowned. for Itis strength; he threw a bridge across the 'thine. Matta Luther dee not die a natural death, he was ex- communicated by a bull. Loliards were lazy people who aware wanted to rest up against soutething. Wat Tyler led lite pheasants' revolt; he Wes 11imseif a plteasaut. The cause of tate Peasants' Revolt was' that a shtliing poultite should bo put on everybody over sixteen. Clueea Pllzabetlt's face was thio and pate, but she was a stout Protestant. John Bright is famous for as Incurable disea30. period. worldly success and married happt- The second rector as the greater nese are not to any way related. It all-round chance of attatnthg a decent le when Idiet:es, selaehness and die- iife•apaa. The battle for life hes be. content come in at tete door that love come more acute, but disease hoe 1081 R[e thrust hack: tete death -rate declines as the marriage ago Increases, There is Mao a tetra factor raking for later marriages; the independence of the wage•t-truing girl, She often earns as much as, sometimes site earns more titan the matt she wishes to marry one. who wlshee to marry her. • "Why marry Jack," she Aske. "worm Y act earning a better satat'y than he is?" This verve common attitude la quite• understandable. But ittdependeat girls who realty wtse to marry one day would do well to remember the cold fsguret of the statisticians. After twepteefive their chances a:re steadily declining, A peculiar fact has been revealed by rho probers tato the secrets oe Mar- riage chances. It is that white a girl's best chances of . finding a part- ner decline after sbo is twenty-five, the reverse Is true 01 men.. The eau oe thirty la0 a greater chance to survive and marry than the man of twentyafve. Ile the great majority of cases men - ARRWAGE.—'fiAT°S A KERGE Revising the Bible ' Geography probably come- next to leave it backed tato the wind like a history as a vegeta parent of howlers. 'Miasouri muco. One time, when we wort aro a few new views et, the lett it teed- down like that in a held world is general from the small boys is Illinois, a tornado came through point of view. tiro cohntry and treaded right that ne £nate a .ane out ee a cask „tet way. But just before the tw[ster marry lt woman oat of another cask- reached the spot it, gave a jump tad Ito Sublime Port to a good wine. Litt- Como down several miles beysttd. The rude tetbt you how hot you are, tad stop wasa't even scratched" longttttde te[Ce -you hoW cold you aro. Stirling le noted for its flue ether. s mut of cyte r maw. spread. a ley a are your marroage chances? Iland.arsfeoscelee Wanglesiare used on Tthey are cart50ly what you make theu. charts to iota up place, tvtth the sante The best comm with youth and depart weather. From Australia we get with anal,• wine made from a bird, called emu. Filling the Gaps Scholars Who Have a Little Knowledge and a Lot of Imagination At a recent esamtnation. chlldrea were sat to tilt in the gaps lett [u very well•ktiowa tluotattons and coni- mon his own spear while beteg chase Th sits were 1 u on Biblical knowledge is sometttnea o, bit mixed, and, though revised, it le by no 0100118 authorized. Atte Youngster, [n his religious knowledge paper, wrote. "Bathsheba. was tete-wo- man who fled David up with her girdle." AnotEter said: "The word§ 'Would God I had died for Tiiee' were. uttered by David after he had mar - dosed Uriah and married his widow." A similar youthful theologian observ, ed: "Abner killed hhuseif by falil g anon sayings. 0 results some cases almost startling. Here by Dorcas." Auather ventured: are a few examples: "Publtus was the sou of the man who "You cannot make a — ottt of a Was cured of Proxy by Paui—a vena sow's ear." Answer: "Rasher." terrible disease." And lastly: "The "Caeaar's wife is above—" Answer: Pharisees are peeve who lure to show "Forty" • "There's maay y slip 'twtxt 1110 cap and—" AnnWor, "Tho third round." "Do unto others as—" Answer: "`They do to you." • Interval Tho dead keep silence. All their sttr Than strtugs uttiarred is quieter; Not muco but stilt, as tone to tone For rhythm's enchantment ytetdo its Own. Musts an outward teem Etatk found Iu :tweet rotattonstlips int sound, But music's sett, the soul unseen, Dwells fu tete intervals between. —Dorothy -Rowe in The Observer. A GREAT TRIER 5y- � Iu his last fetter to his Friend nit. Rowett, the late Sir Ernest Shackle.' ads: . Ma wrote these wo "Never for tee the towered flag, Never for me the lost endeavor." It proves that the explorer was a v to great trier.. He never gave up. the their goodness by pta-t11g hope of conquering the eternal ice; synonyms." he never gave in. His lila to an' ex- ample to us all, showing filet by dog - The the bask roll the tigh- gel determination much can be ac - Tho b tib 00mplis11ed. ter the rubber ,>and. ITliCl�rC`5 Tela wertlMG tRING tibs(Gain. MG.— t�iC stoic: it- OFe .A t .�' I DID MT%MAL 0T - l6: ,' • %r - tnG l{11E.MMDec t t- ame. Iiia MIN1STCIe TtiC'TVI0-DOLLAi . TG61,1 IMAGtN1E: I N v .*. SOU!) WC SO ctieMi1 .t c c° B oto Yr . The Defense Rests, Its Witness. NA NM NAV, 'Rte.. JUDGE 'Matt q GG -r mouNcit. 5ttE Tali) NIM "MAT ON) oUR N0(,1 "MOON- x WAA)TCD t5Gf To GO OVER .141AGARA FALL N. A .BART4E.L. 1