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The Clinton News Record, 1930-07-31, Page 3aelellisneetassalastasteeramatew "AND STILL THE WONDER CREW" 25 year: ago ; o when the conquest of the air was m its infancy,Wilson's Bachelor cigars were already finding favour amongst smokers d . . and, today, there are more Wilson's 'Bachelors -100% Havana filler smoked and enjoyed than any other ten cent cigar in Canada. WI.LSfS BAdHao. Ca gap .sr" individually' foil wrapped .op and in pocket packs of five Still most for the money The Triumph of the Machine Fay The Late 0. H. LAWRENCE, in the London Mercury. "They talk of the triumph of the machine, - but ' the machine will never triumph, "Out of the thousands and thousands of centuries' oe man the unrolling of ferns, whale tongues of acanthus tapping at the sun for one sad century machines have triumphed, rolled us ]tither and thither, hardened the earth, shaking the lark's nest till the eggs have broken "Shaken the marshes, till the geese have gone and the wild swans flown away, singing tete swan -song of us. "Bard hard on the earth the machines are roiling, but through some hearts they will never roll. "Alt no, in the hearts of some men there is still sanctuary where the lark nests safely, "The lark nests in his heart, and through the reeds of his marshy loins swims the mallard duck at dawn, in that quick joy; deer crash their horns in, the mountains of his breast, there are foxes in the cver of his beard. "Alt, no, the machine will never triumph; In some hearts still the sanctuaries oC wild life are quite untouched. "And at last 're all the creatures that cannot die while one heart harbours them they will hear a silence fall -as the machines fail and finish; they will hear the faint rending of the asphalt made as the hornbeam pushes up. Itis sprouts; they witt`hear far, far awap the last factory hooter 'sends up the last wild cry of despair As the machine breaks Really down. "Andthen at last• all the creatures that were driven back into the uttermost corners of the soul they will peep forth," ' TAKE, NO CHANCES WiTH BABY! Cook Her Food in the ' "Health Ware" Doctors ,recommend Enameled Ware for 'cooking baby's food. It is so simple to clean ... so easy to keep sanitary and free from germs. It cannot stain. There is no fnetal surface ex. Poled to the food. Nothing to absorb moisfare, flavors nor odors.. Make We you get McClary 13nameled Ware . . the ' Modern "Health Ware' . Watch for, the familiar McClary label. A Health hroa'iuetoP GENERAL STEEL WARE5 rAtiiTrt2 Branches Across Canada Prices front 30c to P..rClar • ENAMELED Feeding Our Wild Birds For winter feeding of wild birds place suet, sunflower seeds, and grains of corn where• they will not be covered with snow. That child whose mother is a golf widow and its father a bridge widower is like to become a divorce orphan, "The cusomor complains that this sandwich is too small." "Put it on a smaller plate and take it back." Minard's .Liniment for Lumbago. "A religion, likea nation, is saved not by the wars it wins, but by the children it breeds."—Dr, Will Durant, Home Circle yading Is Good For Youth A ve ;tor to a farm home noticed a narrow indentation worn into the white surface of art old colonial man- tlepiece. He had not thought to make it a subject of comment until his host stopped ansa ran his finger across the hollowed trail in the board. "I suppose you're wondering about this long mark on my mantlepiece," said the far --'t. "I'm very proud of it, for on top of this old mantlepiece in the evening my father used to place a flickering of lamp when I trae.a boy, and then he backed his chair on a slant against the woodwork and pro- ceeded to read aloud to the entire family. ale did it'almost every night for years until the imprint of his chair left its trace. This mantlepiece al- ways reminds me of my dad." Row many homes to -day contain memories of the pleasant custom of reading aloud from a choice book, once the chores were done and the shades drawn? What if the sonorous voice of Dad did send a tired boy atter a while into a sound slumber—with full orchestra accompaniment — or serve only as a verbal background for Junior at the table, busy with his arithmetic lesson? Mere was an um broken home circle, with Dad at the centre of it reading a lively yarn de- signed to thrill the youthful imagina- tion and start memories certain to -lin- ger to the sunset days. Many a boy of a former generation has acquired hie appreciation of good literature from just such reading aloud, No wonder that marked mantlepiece meant so much to the farmer. Every household could well treasure some such heirloom as this, and seek to keep intact the comradeship of tamily Mei in a day when a thousand distrac- Howl tend to lure 'children away from the -protective influence ot home. Have Minard's Liniment on your shelf. Retaining a policeman to escort children across a busy road represents a cost of $1600 a year. A tali mart can, a000rding to one ex- pert, stand more intoxicating drink. than a short one. "Please a man's pride and you may do anything with him,"—Dr, Will Dur- ant. Honor Heroic Fireman Clifford Kneeahaw, of Calgary, young Canadian Pacific fireman, wasthe guest of honor at a banquet be the Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen and nnginemear held at the Palliser hotel, Calgary, recently,' in August -of Mat year he made a courageous attempt to save the 1116 of a young woman in aj the ilood waters at High River and he is hero' shown being handed the parole- Ing Ment of the Royal Caltadian Humane Soolety try A. Iialkett, general auperia• tendent for the Canadian' Pacific Railway, Alberta district, " Min Owl 'Lafs Laundry Work •Lverything.comes out in the -wash- iuoluding the buttons. When some girls break off' a match they try to malgeeli'ght of it, Always Too Much of Pain There will always be on earth' The ancient pain of human birth; Always;'the sad•tetease of breath, At "endless, horizons X01 death;. And men will always have to pay The toll 'on nature's .perilous way. No progress can evade the urge ,Of earthquake and volcanic surge. Yet why permit wanes Judas knife To strap :the precious. .cord of life? Why, must our faetory-horded slaves Droop cold sad ragged to their graves? Why let each bitter acid steal Through `wounds that kinder men would heal, Kinder men 'who clear the sod For the commonwealth of God? -Lucia Trent. Olive ---"Why can't 'lightning strike the front end 01 a Sfrnet Car?" Oiled—"Because the Motorman's a 'nen-conductor." Maybe the only trouble with busi- ness the last few months fs Mai it has forgotten all about Coue. It you thing tomorrow never coulee just make a note at the bank due there and see. Judge --"Have you any proof he hit you inthe eye?" Prisoner -"Why here it is in Black and White," Another .thing no .girl should fail to put plenty of in her hope chest is patience. She'll need it badly before she is married three months. - Automatically Speaking 'Zen may talk about your "nifty dogs" And•cute calves all you please; But me, I am contented with A little peek a' knees. Hint--"rify, what a nice mouth you. have:, His -"Illi huh, and remember it's lip year." Ragsou Tatters rises to remark: "Ever sines ma bought one of them newfangled cabinet furnaces, I never know whether I am pouring coal in the phonograph or putting a jazz re- cord in tit' heatrola. There's nothing good or bad but custom makes it so._ Many a man who says he was driven to drink was headed that way of This own accord. it was a cold and stormy night. There was no 11,e in the furnace. They were sitting all Moue in the living room. She had no coat. Neither did he. They shuddered to think oe how cold they might have been. The world likes a good loser, es- pecially if somebody else lets some- thing out of it. When a girl tells you you're differ- ent, you know Ghee' not. Some women contrive to look young, others dye in the attempt. BIeesed are the poor. They just keep on working sad a cold wears off instead ot knocking off for a week. Weak and Depressed The week of the average woman in the home makes greater demands on her vitality than she realizes, Long hours, care ot children and home is the daily grind. No wonder site is depressed; that site suffers from head- aches and is run down. What is needed is a blood -builder to give her vitality to perform her every- day duties, Such a blood•bttilder is Dr, Williams' Pink Pills, of which Mrs. Jos, L, Corbin, Moncton, N,13, says: "I was weak; badly run down; ]house- work was a herded and I was greatly depressed.. Dr. Williams' Plnk Pills were recommended and by the time I had taken half a dozen boxes I was fully metered to health and strength," You can get these Pills through any medicine dealer or by mail at 60 cents a box from The lir. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. Berlin Schoolboys Build Atlantic Liner If you should happen to be sailing along the Templin Lake, not far from Potsdam in the direction of the air- port, you cannot fail to se a beautiful little steamer lying at anchor. On coming nearer you wil be arrack by its familiar funnels and general build and can with little effort.imagtue you are looking 'at a transatlantic liner far away on the horizon, The obser- ver would not be very much out in his surmise, for the steamer Is an almost exact copy in miniature of the Colum- bus. It is twelve meters in length, and has been entirely built by Pots- dam schoolboys of twelve' to fourteen years of age. Every detail—hundreds of tiny portholes, a wireless equip- ment and. several dinghies included— had been from start to iinish,accom- plished with true German thorough- Itess under the supervision of a quali- fied engineer. The -boat is driven by electricity and when lighted up pre- sents•a charming appearance. Other models of many kinds of water craft are made by the boys in their spare tree, it being their ambition to be- come boat builders and perhaps some- thing even higher in the nautical pro- fession. Scotsman—"How much to press a r of trousers?" Assistant—"26o." hen press one leg for 120. I'm itav- my photograph taken side view." ard's i.iniment removes Warts, London Play Via Television First Attempt in History Still in Experimental Stage London, -For the first time In his: tory a complete drama was transmit- ted by television ,here recently. The play,, which was transmitted over,a station of the British Broadcasting Corporation • by means of the 'Baird television system; was "The Man With a .Flower lit ;He Mouth by. Luigi Pirandello. • Both, sight and sound wee' trans- mitten by novel methods devised by experts of the television company, and received with' varying degrees of sue - cam by listeners. within a radius of 'several miles 01London. " While re- viewed by London dramatic' critics and 'receiving more or less' favorable emu went as an experiment; it wasgeneral- ly regarded as not having 'reached the stage for reviewing from a dramatic standpoint of view. ' Method of Presentation The play was adapted for presenta- tion by LanceSieveking, of the British Broadcasting Company, and Sydney A; Nloseley,,editor of an English tele- vision magazine. Scenery was pro- vided in miniature, designed to be placed before the television transmit- ter and were painted by C. R. W. Nov- lnson, While the method of presentation le generally regarded as crude, it is pointed out that this is the first time' a Bray has been televieloned in Eng- land, and that methods for transmis- slon.had to be devised solely for the broadcast. Inorder to prodaee the effect of "fade out" a property, man lowered a huge disk before the artist, Vision of the artists were alternated by the plactug of the miniature scen- ery before the transmitter. The scenery paintings were about three feet square and were placed betore tate trausmitter by means of a sliding ar- rangement. Aural pick-up was accomplished through a microphone placed several feet away from the speaker, and did not appear within the focus oe the tele+ vision transmitter. Television is said to be still in the experimental stage, and for this reason the number of lis- teners and witnesses were few. 'Re- ception was limited only to those equipped with receivers for this pur- pose. Summer Complaints Kill Little Ones At the first sign of illness during the ]tot weather give the little one Baby's Own Tablets or in a few hours he may be beyond aid. These Tablets will prevent summer' complaint if given occasionally to the well child, and will promptly relieve these trou- bles if they come on suddeuly. Baby's Own Tablets shotild always be kept in every home where there are young children, There is no other medicine as good and the mother has the guar- antee that they are absolutely safe. They are sold by all druggists or by mail at 25 cents per box, by The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. Cold Vegetables Many housewives; faced with a plate of cold vegetables, are inspired with nothing but visions of bubble and squeak. All very nice, too, for a win- ter's day, but not so good in the sum- mer heat. Most cold vegetables treat- ed suitably wilt serve as admirable salad dishes. Cold cabbage, for instance—sounds dull, doesn't it, but if it is white•henrt- ed and you chop it up finely with a cream dressing and garnish with .cubes of beetroot, you will admit the result Is delicious. Cold broad beans, especially when they are new, are excellent treated With oil and vinegar and eaten with thin brown bread and butter. Cold cauliflower, providing it is the flower and not Lite stalk, may be treated to a little tomato sauce and a sprinkle of celery salt and then garuisbed with watercress. Cold green peas may bo placed in a bed of lettuce and spriuk- led with sugar and a few drops of vinegar, Cold new potatoes can be sliced, dressed, and sprinkled with chopped parsley, always providing that you resist the temptation of eat- ing them whole out in the kitchen! The piece Ile resistance, of course, is cold asparagus, --Answers. "I don't think that society has any right to wreak Vengeance upon any one." ---Lord Buckmaster. Minard's Liniment for Neuralgia. With the price of goods cut in half, you lose only halt as much when a friend says: "I'll return' it in -a few days" VelOitt itt wit II 'bat .O -t ostelia. Rem tow tn. Rot. RSD oRAnc -knitw:W 101 How Plants See Without Eyes Plante have no eyes, yet they can distinguish between different colors, and, strange to say, they indicate their choice by bending toward the radia- tion that they Sud hardest on their growth. Tete preference is being explored at the Smithsonian Instltutiot,, in Wash- ington, as a part of a program of re- search on the influence of radiation on living things, Says Science News Letter, a Science Service publication (Washington, D.C.) : The group led by -Dr. le, S. Brackett and Dr. E. S. Johnston have arranged a dark chamber with a lamp at either eud, ite light passing through a color screen. A young plant is placed between the two, at a point wltere the energy of the opposing light -beam hes been in-' strumentatly determined as being ex- actly equal. The lrlaut thus Rade iteelf in the position of the donkey exactly mid- way between tivo haystacks, which medieval phoiosoptters aro said to have argued about. Which will it choose? The way out of the dilemma is as though the donkey had found himself between a stack of timothy hay and one of clover. All kiutle oC visible lights seem to have a retarding effect on plant growth, but some have more than others; and the plant grows leas on the side exposed to the more growth - retarding of tate two beams, and therm fore grows toward it, being pushed over by its more rapidly growing side. Red tight and the short-wave Infra- red, the Slidthsoufan experimeutn have shown, have very little effect on growth, Yellow light stilt has tittle effect, though more than red. But the green sector of the spec- trum has a powerful influence, and the blue -violet group of wave -lengths are stronger still in causing growing plant tips to bend, a�i1a�tteTh Thal&&neyyCal ane You Must Do Your Bit 11 the war against the fly, carrier of germs nod breeder of disease. Et Is proven that AEROXON is one of the most convenient and most efficient means of combating this fly avit. It to convenient, because of the push•p,n. It it hygienic, 1liar never get away when once caught. Each spiral gives three oeeetc, perfect service. aEWARE OF IMITATIONS SW at drug, gro,ory and hardware ,tore, • La Cie C. 0. Genesi & Fls, L,mitee eacceaoaas, qua i sen atm �`.v�-ev M GNF44 S PorTroobles due to Aoki. rACIDE5T,ON STot.ACn ARTOURN AOAONt= OASES•NAUSNA Many people, two hours after eating, suffer indigestion as they call it. It is usually excess acid. Correct it with an alkali, The best way, the quick, harmless and efficient way, is Phillips' Milk of Magnesia. It has remained for 50 years the standard with physi- cians,' One spoonful in water neutral - lees m'auy times its volume fee stow- ach, aoids, and at once, The amp; tome dtsappoar in live 'minutes. You will never use crude methods wheno know this better h Y u h s b tt r mat od, And you will never suffer from excess acid when. you prove out this easy re- lief, Please do that—for ,your own sake -now, Be dire to get the genuine Phillips' Milk of Magnesia prescribed by phyai- cfane for 60 years in, correcting excess acids, Each bottle contains tali direc- tions—any drugstore, Classified Advertising FOR SALE 10 IRIS—ALL DIPii'ERENT, SELECT- ED from choice varieties only—good healthy atmos --$i.00 postpaid. 1i' J. F..rward, Iroquois, Ont. ASEA. SLIM FOR SALE, manor, 7.6, with new 22 H.P. hh•inrude mo. tor, all in perfect condition, very fast, absolutely sate, splendid fishing boat. has special sedan top: owner Cetfint: larger model. Now los `ed on Georgia*.stay. Wilson Publishing Us„ 73 Adelaide W„ Toronto, Box 27 SITUATIONS VACANT START NOW — YOU CAN EARN money quickly, taking orders for the most beautiful line of Personal Christmas Greeting Cards ever shown in Canada. Write for particulars. Regal Art Cm, 312 Spaditta Ave., To- ronto, Thinning Flair Stimulate your scalp and prevent dandruff by massaging t8itit Minard's. It give hair new lustre. o ... !sit:" re are Upset BABY ills and ailments mein twice RLI as serious at night. A sudden cry may mean colic. Or a sudden attack of diarrhea. lbw would you 'meet this emergency—tonight? Have you a bottle of Castoria ready? For the protection of your wee one --for your own peace of mind— keep this old, reliable preparation • always on hand. But don't keep it just for emergencies; let it be an everyday aid. Its gentle 'influence will ease and soothe the infant svho cermet sleep. Its mild regulation will help an older child whose tongue is coated because of sluggish bowels. All druggists have Castoria. READ OF A USE LIKE HER riii Decided to take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Meneton, New Brunswick ---"Before my last baby was born 1 was very weak, nervous and dm- couraged. I saw an advertisement in the paper about a woman who had been like rue so .J[ bought a bottle of Lydia la, Pink. ham's Vegetable Compound.1 took three bottles and it carried me safe. ly through that critical time. 1 . have three children to care for and 1 feel well. and strong, 1 have told two, other women about your medicine." -a Alas. CiesAnstsvevfm, 82 Albert Streak Moncton, New Brunswick, ' ISSUE Ne. 31---'30