The Clinton News Record, 1930-10-09, Page 3C. -Operating With.
.ther
By Helen Gregg Green
Looking throug-h a magazine the
other day, I became interested in . a
letter written by one orb its readers.
It was from a woman peat fifty, the
mother eofseveral children. She tuns
discouraged and worn opt, mentally
and physically with her years of re-
sponsibility and work, •
"We are ail to blame for many of
our troubles," the letter read. ".We
ask nothing in return for out labore
but the plea5ttre'of one dear ()lies; it
is a great mistake. '
"We teach them: from babyhood to
take - our .services as a. matter of
Course, and by -the time we 'realize
What we have done, we are too tired
and worn out .to care; and it does
not Par.,, I
This is only part of the•soul-reveai-
ing letter, bot.in it there is food for
thought and study, and as. warning to'
young mothers=a warning to begin
with . the just -around -the -Corner -from -
babyhood days to give the children
small duties nod small responsibia` Tawe articles are appearing weekly
ities, so that the burden which us- I our colu,Boles
ually falls 'to the mother's lot may
be lessened. When boys and girls I ^®���
discover how much actual labor there I A Real j Nerve
is coniieeted with. a house they real-,.
Ise the great help they may be to 1 0 Rich,
Is a 'Bountiful Supe y
Teat is what the 'writer of the let-
terant ggested: -
"And by the time they marry and
have children of tlieltr own, and learn
from experience, what life uteans, and
What children mean in a mother's life
perhaps it is too late; you may have
passed on, and if not, it Is still
rather difficult `to teach old dogs new
Aricks'l"
So the wives and mothers must
remedy this. They should 'commence
with the husband's at marriage, .•dud
With the children in their very early.
-years.. It is really very easy to, teach
the children to hang up their wraps,
to nun 'errands, to keen their rooms-
tidy, and to do the hundred and one
other little things w'hioh inculcate in
them the habit of service and the
sense of responsibility.
A mother, like a child, .needsnl
derstandiug, love and play., She should,
share these and also her household
cares with her family. This would
make happier, I s weeter-tempered,
younger, and more charming mothers
the country over, and better and hap-
pier boys and -girls.—Issued by the
National Iiinder•.garten• Association, 8
West 40th Street, New -York City.
Animals Prefer
trill(). Physiologically, it ie supposed,
musip:relaxes the udder of the cow
° yp� ° •end 00 allows- au increased flow of
Cly ssical t �� null). Such uses' of mitshc aro of long
standing. The old Greer[ shepherds
• " — _---, pipe2l to their• sheep thlul lug. thus
Female O� "the rJpecleS ,SNOWS „to promote digestion"; and a w.titov
More Appreciation thart', I iii. The Musical Quarterly instances.
the Male I tha fact that the Boetians;ueed.a pas
The' following is an interesting tors,: flute on their equine stud -farms
in the belief that this music stimtt-
article on ariimals' reactions to „the rated Droereation.
strains of music and jazz; taken from
On one of his Antarctic, expeditious
Shackleton took a phonograph along.
The instrument, set going out in the
snow; attracted a flock of penguins.
Tho bird's listened, interested, 'appnr-
ently pleased. Then the record was
changed to "Waltz Me Around Again,
Willie." For a moment, a moment
only, the birds waited; then, as With
one mind, they turned., squawking dis-
Mother.
So many mothers will continue tak-
ing the _entire responsibility for. run-
ning a house smoothly and. efficiently
year in and year out. The only sign
of protest they ever Crake is a weary
little "I'm a bit tired" at night, with;
out ever a heart-to-heart talk with the
family asking for co-operation.
The' piping -hot breakfasts, the dain-
ty, wholesome lunches and delicious
dinners, the cozy, cheery; neat home,
are taken as a matter• pf course. •Chil-
dren who have had no experience.in
doing household tasks do 'not realize
the effort, time and Bard work back
of it all. It all looks so, easy, so
simple! •
And who le 'to make them realize, emu 'months; extremely nervous;
T
()thin
It
tried see
mad
I- colter. A g
if not the Parents? It had no co 0
and
appreciate, air
Williams'
r.
is not fair to the "dear ones" to al-, to help rue till I Began D
low them to take all this for granted.) Pink -Pills. My condition at once int -
"It we allow ourselves to be loft proved and 'to -day I am poll and' able
behind, if we work. so hard we ire:for anything without fatigue. or trou-
ble."
You can get these pills fiom any
medicine dealer or by mail at 50 cents
a box front The Dr. 'Williams' Medi-
cine Co., Brockville, Ont.
the Reader's Digest:
Dishwashing' 1s.
Still Hated Task
Childhood Duty Turns Mod-
ern Girl Against
- , Hornemalang
Compulsory dishwashing in 'child-
hood has given millions Of girls a' drab
Outlook on life and has caused. them:
to conceive' an absolute hatred for
Letters
®¢ Famous hotneinaking, says N[iss Marion S•
Van i,iew, chief of .the. home coon
atl�ered ()mics education bureetwof tiheUtriver-
��®��� sity Af _the State of New. York.
- - Hatred of. dishwashing, while it
Lady Hamilton's Last • MeS- ;seems of itself a most insigniffoant
sage'to Nelson Includ- matter, becomes the. root' of 'an ob-
session against all phases. of house -
ed lit Collection keeping,.ahe thinks, and therefore has
Louden—A Devonshire manor louse a potentiality of exercising a vicious
influence on the entire future of girls
and. women.
Miss Van Liew, who is widely
known tlil'oughout the nation as.'a
home economist• in addition to her
s v. men were seen c ;and,: he, position : with the State Department
adds; several of his ruse could ire- 1 t th 11f Educat[ou, yesterday become edu-
ship ly be found on the Poop ,of• the tunes, and that, in itself, has been catiohal director of fh'e .Iiomemaking
ship singing before'' an admiring l classed. as' the most momentous liter -I Center of th$•Nety York State Feder -
group of A,dello penguins• ary and ,historical discovery of the ation of Women's Clubs.
In malty animals music stirs •a deep, century. It is a veritable Pageant on
ustedly, and went off. Their an -4 on. the fringe of Dartmoor will abort-
cient dignity had been profaned. The
explorer Scott tells that penguins
would :always "come up at a • trot"-
whenthe
I•Iealth-Giving Blood
Sufferers from nervous debility find
themselves tired, low-spirited and uta,
able to keep their salads on anything.
They are totally unfit to perform their
everyday 'duties: •
Doctoring the nerves with sedatives
is a terrible mistake. The only real
nerve tonic is, a gbod supply of rich,
red blood.. To ,secure this rich, red
blood pr. Williams' Pink Pi115 should
be taken., Enriching and purifying the
blood Is their whole mission. Concern-
ing'
oncerning• them Mrs. Albert Bentley. Ban-
croft, Ont., writes: "Two years ago I
was a complete wreck; in bed for
Iy give to the world a treasure. trove
that will solve a legion :of hitherto
Weeded Historical problems; .that .will
thrown still further light .on the lives
of almost every great figure fi'om.the
sixteenth to the early nineteenth coni.
too tired to take part in the daily
lives of our chtldren and ] usbands,'"
the letter conttnhed, "they simply
learn to do without us,"
Isn't there a lot of truth tucked
away in those words? Shouldn't
they make all mothers who have tiny
children think?.
I remember a certain Thanksgiving
that shames and grieves fee, We did)
not have a maid, so Mother cooked
and served a delicious Thanksgiving
dinner for two guests, and out own
family. After dinner the guests, my
father and I hurried down town for
an afternoon's' merry -making, leaving
Mother who was not strong to clear
off the table and do the Stacks of
dishes. Mother was the one who de-
served and should have had the leap•
py afternoon. And, now that I have
come to a realizationof Use many
sacrifices she made and have learned
how much help I could have been and
would 11110 nothing
it itottrtlan • to
lighten her burdgin
emotional response, whether of pain
or of pleasure, it is hard to say. Some
doge point theli' noses toward the
stars and wail at, the sound of a piano
or of a violin. Caged jackals and
wolves show a like fristinct. The
ancients are said to lla'e drawn crabs.
out from under, the mid and stones by
music, and swarming'bees-were coat-
ed,
oax
ed back to thele• hives: by the clash-
ing pf 'cymbals or the. pounding of
iians. Seals have 'followed • drips for.
many miles' ,when there has been
music aboard. Musicians: playing in
the• open fields have had strange ex-
perience -s. Lizards and squirrels have
gathered about them 'unafraid. .One
squirrel, it is "said,, came regularly
from its hole every: time the adagio
from Mozart's quartet in'E metier was,
played. Sheep 'and goats leave. come
running for an opera. air played on a
flute.
- Roads Young and Old
Roads that lull to houses
And a- city's pride
Go straight and hard' like young mets
With sure and eager stride,
But roads that lead to mountains ..
Or hidden desert streams
Shuffle along like old neon •
Happy in their dreams.
—By Rachel Harris Campbell,
Diego State Teachers' College.
Damp Walls
Walls can be rendered damp-proof
by alt application of water -glass used
for preserving eggs, Strip or scrape
the old paper from the walls and
brash oyer the damp Patches with the
waterglass mixture according to the
directions on the tin. Allow to dry,
then put on two more coats. Each
must dry before the next is put on.
When repapered the damp will not
Penetrate again.
• INVALUABLE MOMENTS
paper.
The treasure itself lies in 39 •em-
boased volumes containing 5,000
hitherto' unpublished autograph let-
ters; representative of almost every
.celebrity living, not only in Great
Britahi„ but on the Continent of Ears
ops and in the United States, during
Some ot'.the tales. one dismisses
v h offs ring of fertile iina-
Basil- as.t e P
ginations. Others may arise from
man's willingness to. think of. his own
Musk as having rare "charm. In a
•comillatlon to 'prove the. power of
music, written something over a cell -
Wry ago, several such stories appear.,
One morning very early a tailor is
going home, atter a night spent in fid-
dling at a' party. An angry bull at-
tacks' hint, .With sudtlen'inspiration
he begins to fiddle. The bull stops,`
listens, is charmed. - When the man
stops, its rage returns. So till dawn
the hapless man•.fiddles away to save
his satin, Again,' a state primmer in
the Bastille is allowed to take a lute
with hint to his cell. While he plays,
Nue mice come 'out to listen, and the
spiders suspend themselves around
the instrument.
No Fad, Sile Declares -
"Home economics ie no fad," Mies
Van Liew told an interviewer' in Al-
bany. "It has Passed that stage'and
has stood the teat. People'ave more
'home .consctotis' 'titan ever and it is
recovering its former dtatds rapidly.
Now, the difficulty is that girls are.
not Prepared to 'take over the prob-
tour centuries. " ' ) lents of homemaking when they be-
Securely Guarded some brides.
They were originally the Property "It May astonish people to • know
,of a John Wild,of Clapham 'Lodge;, that the state is training_ltundreds of
Surreyied noted autograph. collector girls`nnd young women far the career
who died in 1856.. Until last year, of marriage. Outside , of New York
when they became the property of bis there are 211 beaters under the super -
great -grandson, R. N. Carew -Hunt, vision of the State Department of
they had reposed, locked and securely Education where homemaking is
taught a
guarded in en immense .mahogany s a flue art, and New' York
bureau in this 'Dartmoor house, un-
does 'not neglect this important train-
.touched and unknown by the world -at jug.
"Women dud• girls must get away
Their value has already been as- from the old' idea that homemaking 15
sassed as running into "hundreds' o4 nothing butsewing, cooping and clean-
ing,' has not a pounds"—and be the 'full
ing;' Miss Van Liew added. "These
collection not as yet been wholly things are but incidental and as such
me
f ti
clasetfiod. s ns o a
men
Lady Hamilton's lash letter to Nea should be done by
Son, an impassioned outburst written budget so.as not to interfere with the
on the great admiral's departure 1or'major•phases of the calling."
Trafalgar, and hitherto utilmown, is She reminds one that choosing bar -
but one of thousands of almost price• monious color combinations for the
less documents. home and purchasing clothing, edibles,
Every one of them was chosen, not and other supplies come into the call-
ow behng merely a specimen of some ing of homemaking, as well as person -
noted figure's correspondence, but as at grooming and adjustment of family
one of the most vitally important let- relatlous, and that to be successful 1n
tars the individual ever wrote. all these the homemaker should be
Novedist's Last Letter trained.
The last letter Sir Walter Scott She declared that every feminine
wrote before he left England on' the member of every family should be la -
visit to
.s edilb economics.
oah s Inbuded inthe collectionwouldhave teyouugerchildren
Another' is from Sir Christopher learn it in junior high schooi, and
Wren, complaining bitterly of build- have mother keep up with tlteni by
Mg worries at Hampton Court Palace. extension courses in tate afternoon
Guy—the founder of Guy'n Hospital and evening.
—writes of his dealings in South Sea
Bubble shares• Gahleborough voices r
CO STtrA C
Salt
'While Josef Hofmann was once
playing in Chicago, a mouse ran up it
leg of the concert 'grand, and , there
on the top listened with every evid-
ence of delight throughout a concerto.
In Dayton, Ohio, during a recital by
Harold Henry a rat posted himself
behind one leg of the piano, listened
attentively till the end of the num-
ber, then scurried off into the wings.
A
series of experiments conducted
with, flute, violins, oboe, and mouth
organ, in the Loudon zoo indicated a
real interest in music on the part of
scorpions and spiders. One remem-
bers " that whenever Gretry played a
spider would settle itself upon his
harpsichord. The cheetah showed a
Preference for gay music; the rhino-
ceri were annoyed and attempted' to
charge the musicians; the sea -lions
came to tate surface and listened,
Pleased by all but the, jazz. The rep-
tiles—crocodiles excepted --paid little
attention to the music. It was there-
fore inferred that the gift of the
snake charmer is probably not in his
music at all but rather in 'Lite rhyth-
mic swaying of his body to the music.
A violinist once tried his shill be-
fore the cages of Lincoln Park. The
time chosen was nightfall, an hour
which may have iniluer}ced the results
markedly. la general, the night
creatures 'appeared to be much more
sensitive to the music than ware
those 01 the day, and the males were
less interested than the females. The
male Bengal tiger, for instance, snarl-
ed once at the musician, then ignored
hint. The female pushed her nose
and paws :between the bats, seeking
apparently to get as near al possible.
The coyotes came out•of their )toles
at the first sound and ranged them
selves . in a semicircle . around' the
tnusician. When he put up his bow,
they "pawed at him through the bars,"
as if asking'for more. When he
played again, they once more squat-
ted before him. Two Puma panthers
disliked" all • fig music such as.,'The
Irish Washerwoman," yet lay content,
listening to such slow and sentiment-
al numbers as "Home, Sweet Home"
and "Arline Laurie." Most of the
birds remained, utterly -oblivious to
the music: The' pelicans, -however,
according to 'the account int The
American Naturalist, ,flapped their
wings avid aliened their beaks at the
•
musician.
Never suffer tine invaluable mom-
ents of thy life to steal by unimprov-
ed, and 'leave thee in idleness, and
vacancy; but be always either read-
ing, or writing or praying, or medi-
tating, or employed int some useful
labor for the co•u:not poet,.
•--A'Henipis.
1950 Worker Will
`1 -a®+i pa a�e jt' ING Mink, and Foxes, at
'Get $
IClassified Advertising
OR S.1T,E--s'ta0T CLASS BREED -
prices.
rices In your own ieterests• write for
•
p'
-particulars,. J. 0. Mitchell, St, Msry's,
Ontario.
Predicted by Ford in His New
•
-3
Silver Found in Mushrooms
London.—Silver is found in mush-
rooms -by High Ramage, a British
scientist of Norwich. In some of the
mushroom parts the silver amounts to
one -thousandth of 1 per cent., and in
others to' oris twentieth of 1 per cent.
EN CHILDREN A certain well-known Wine writer
FRETTHERE aro • times
when a child is too,
fretful or feverish to
be sung to sleep. There are some
pails a mother cannot•pat away. But
there's quick comfort in Castanet
For diarrhea, and other infantile
ills, give this pure vegetable prepare-
titin. Whenevercoated' tongues tell
of constipation; whenever there's any
sign of sluggishness. Castoria has a
good taste; children love to take it.
Buy the genuine—with' Chas. H:
Fletcher's signature on wrapper.
CA$.T®RIA
re C=ENTS WANTED" FOR DR, DOV•-
Book•, "Moving Forward" P,L'S soaps, toilet articles, eta, welt
I known for twenty years.
Quick turn -
New York—i-Ienry ford blames the ,over manufacturingeCom fit. , Toronto g ()vel
present^industrial depression on bust -
tells the following story about the fa-
mous poet, James Whitcomb Riley.
The poet, while on his way clown to
the office of his publisher one bright -
morning, had met an unusually large
number of acquaintances! who con•,
secutively made the usual convention-
al comment on the "nice weatltei•."
This• continuous. applause began to
amuse the Poet. When he reached the
,office• and was greeted with a "Nice
clay, Mr. Riley,' he smiled broadly; and
replied, "-Yes; I've heard it very high-
ly spoken oft"
Minard's Liniment'gives quick relief.
CD Cil11 DDEN
Itis remorse for an notion whisk he
imagines has affronted Bartolozzl, the _ --
Denton
_
great engraver. Constipathmn is one of the most coo•
Dau f the famous
Robespierre are but mon ailments of childhood and the
two of the lotions figures ti the child suffering from it Positively can -
French rareluedi whose intimate not thrive. To keep the little ono
tory's
b are rediscovered for ,kis• well the bowels must be kept regular
Af benefit, and the stomach sweet. To do this
A featre in the collection w a series nothing can equal Baby's Own Tab -
all
of vitally slier set letters written by lets. They aro a mild but thorough
the earlier Presidents of the tint• laxative; are pleasant to tape and can
ted States. be given to the newborn babe with
Uttdueensdeflheek by jowl
perfect safety. Thousands of mothers
gre queens ie cheek by jotvt a ethre use no other medicine for their little
green embossedtragically
volumes. There are ones but Baby's Own Tablets: They
six, o least, tragically eloquent elks- aro sold by medicine dealers or by
ties s Queen wifeCardeaititg so Ilk's mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr.
intrigue
suffering wding her 'd with the Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville,
intrigue surrounding her 'divorce. On.
Insights into the diplomatic relations a—••
between Spain and France, Holland
and England that existed in Queen The Wrong Phrase
Elizabeth's days are now bared to kir,' Brown had just returned from
view with the signatures of their ptb• the oitlee and was introducer) to the
tagonista., new nurse, who was astonishingly
Samuel Pepys leetty.
Samuel: Pepys writes; so with an p She is sensible slid sc[entldc, too,"
interval of a century does Gar. sat11 Mrs. Brown, "and she says she.
rick, and se in turn does every figure will allow no one to kiss the baby
Of international importance who lived while she is near."
in . the four oonturies, "No one- would want to;' replied
"Tile collection is not only un- Brown'redly.
paralleled but of such importance „Oh indeyd, John!" snapped the
that words are jnadequate to describe fond , Inde.
it" said an intimate friend of Mr. „I mean,"" faltered Brown, eudeav-
Area ntativ to a Daily Express re- oring to Make things better, "not
pr "One -tf it while site is neat'."
"One -Of its most itn coot .()haeme Is The pretty nurse was given march -
tact,
Query letter it is u is its leg ordora the following day
tact, uumutilated, and is set up Ili its
nese men who watched the &tock mar-
ket instead of their business, and be-
lieves• the cure lies is quantity pro-
duction and intensive marketing of
high-class. goods.
He outlines his opinions' in a book
"Moving Forward," published on Oct.
2nd. He predicts that in 1950 the
United "States workingman will get a
minimum wage of 327 a day, advoc-
ates high wages as one of the tonda-
mentah laws of business, and says I Emergency Dressing
genuine over -production has never
existed.
Bless
WAD IdOISES
apse INERT
IN N05TRItSr•• 'E�•�, Qa1s,,
$1.25 ill Druggists Descriptive folder en request
A. O. LEONARD, Inc.
70 Fifth Ave., New York City
s however, ?lir. Minard's fa invaluable as a quick
Iu believes
to wages, urns scalds and all
s in for b
' hasa
die
s
g
a
maand
t while�. s s a
la' II e
i vest.,.a
,ec
Ford beSt
P rns.
•t abrasions. io
right to work, his right t0 a job de•I flea)
pends on his ability to render vain- soothes the wound.
able service. He says belief that. a
company owes a living to those who •
work for it is based on 'bur tradi-
tional conception of master ant ser-
vant."
The book, written in collaboration
with Samuel Crowther, says the fun -1
damentols et business principles are;
First, to make more and better goods
cheaply as possible and force them on
the market; second, to strive alwas —
for higher quality and lower prices
and costs; third, to raise wages gradu-
ally and continuously and never to
cut them; and fourth, to get the goods
to the conamer economically so ire
may benefit by low cost production.
The carrying out of these modern
business laws requires much. more
leadership than did the old produe•
tion, Dir. Ford says. He believes that
was Why interest in the 1920 stock
marke. brought disaster.
"The true occasion for alarm was
deeply hid," he says. "It consisted
iu the complete stoppage rf improve-
ment in quality of goods and in metro -
ods of manufacture, which in turn
causes a stoppage in the increasing
values of the Purchasing money.
There is bound to conte a time whoa
things are offered for sale at so much
more than they are worth that the
public will itesttate to buy theta, an'1
then will stop buying altogether and
may even fall Into a panic about wllat
it has bought. •
"No one its yet berm born who can -
tnanage both to manipulate t11 a alar-'
,tot for its stock and also do business
in such a way that it will be profit-
able. Tia two do not awl commit
"I'm drinking of moving out into the
country." "Do you like the country?
'What will you do in the evenings?"
"015, I'll run up to town."
°
T1~"
r •'.k
1much
eat-
ing,
hours after.at
Many people,
tw
11
ing, suffer indigestion as they ca 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 G0 years the standard
with physicians. One spoonful in
waterneutralizes many times its
volume in stomach acids, and at
once. The symptoms, such as head-
aches, gas, heartburn, etc., will
disalipear in five minutes.
1
You will never
use crude methods
better method.
o this
know when you
And you will never suffer from ex
cess acid when you prove out this
easy relief. Please do that—for your
own sake—now.
Be sure to get the genuine, pre-
scribed by doctors forconditions
due. to steels acid. It is always a
liquid; it cannot be made in tablet
fontn; Look for the name Phillips'
and the word genuine in red.t
All of these observation's accord
hY
of n ono
-time
With
the. test
,mot
bandmaster of Bement and Bailey
Iulepheuts several of the deer and of
Um eats, he had noticed, were espec-
ially responsive to music. There
night be, he said,a great difference
in this respect between the individu-
als of a species. One leopard might
seem 'hardly conscious of music; an-
other,wouid dance with joy at a given
air.'"Lions, h0asserted, sometimes
showed definite liking or distaste for
nts be-,
elephants And p
certain. tunes;
cameso used to the match from Loh-
• outraged
the
Would ba g
•i that Y
septu
it led into the circus
arena, to any
accompaniment less stately. All train-
ed annuals, he` added, are dependent
on familiar music. A. change in rhy-
them or iu melody might throw them
off ;their euea and result In panic or in
serious accident.'
A southern dairyiisant is said to
have iusta}ted •a Playub piano in ilia
barns; ; another has introduced a
particular volume, accompanied by
rare Prints or etchings of the writer
Any Offers?
.concerned. • As Mrs. King was cleaning her front
"The greatest msieiaus, poets, sol- bod•room_w•indoW5 she saw a friend
diens, diplomats, anther's, ]angers; hurrying along, the road,
doctors, or politicians of their day find "What ever itas happened?" site
space in it,, and almost all the letters cried, running to tiro garden gate and
record not trivial episodes, but toe callingAto the friend. "Why are you
crucial events of the word at that in such a hurry?"
moment " The friend paused to regain iter
___—,,- breath.
Copenba.gen BuildsI'm trying to get ething for my
odern Schools
husba"01'n"d " she 1-.nt e
Md v
Copenhagen—There .is a tendensCY relleved,replie"Had ahvfa�. , ',ifeesng, ?"ery meek
ln.,Copenhagen, as .-in other cities, to ----•
remove from the center of the city to "To -morrow roust I richer than to -
the outskirts, and this Sear three new day: the totals of .3rclay must be
schools are to be 'opened when the greater than. these a :•?sterdaY•"—
term commences. It is six years _Andre Siegfried,
since tine last were completed.. There
is au average of 30 classrooms to each• Mineral's Liniment pas a h andel uses•
echoer and
from
nine
to 11
halls' and
mixt'
Athletes recommend Minard'sLlniment
When asked his idea of rigid econ-
omy. Will Rogers replied: "A dead
Scot_cltmalt "
Special rooms for gymnastics, domes- Doctor You ou LC
el any change
tie science, natural science, drafting;
matt work, sloyd and library,vvork, as
well as other rosins for administrative
purposes,
At Skovsboved one of the districts
near Copenhagen, a new school to be
built this•year ls.without a staircase,
,but a gradually descending slope in
a spiral form, which tapes the place of
the usual steps.
The school is a two-storey building
and the slope will be of reinforced
concrete,
,
Heavy sleeperscan't excuee them-
selves' because they "didn't )near the
alarm" if a new German invention
becomes popular. This, novel device.
is attacked to a 'clock, and at the
given moment tplodes a cartridge
containing pu ).gent gas, This causes
the sleeper to sneeze Himself awaket
phonograph to he ,played at milking Minard's Liniment aids tired feet.
since You come back from the
Riviera' Patient—"Not a penny."
C® e4
$,
i
$,'gA
f h
toil!
u CIGGs .�
s
111
G
o s
o H
NF5sca
s,
•r •
"7HE site WORK step!.,�r•ir
ISSUE No, 41—'30
I
ATLANTICCliftf.N.J.
Just orf the Boardwa•k
Fl rep roof Construction
On a Residential Avenue
Ilarmonious, restful surroundings
With recreational ad% Mitoses.
European Plan from 34 Daily
American Plan from $7 Daily
WEEKLY 051 SEASON RATES
0:1 APPLICaT1ON
ER
DON'T SUFFER
�ITD DANGEROUS
INDIGESTION
Do you suffer after meals with a
belching, from sour and acid stomach?
Many believe they have heart trouble
and tremble with fear, expecting any
minute to drop dead. This condition
can be prevented, likewise relieved.
Take Carter's Little Liver Pills
after meals and neutralize the gases.
Sweeten the sour and acid stotnach,•re-
lieve the gas and encourage digestion.
The stomach liver and bowels will
be cleansed of poison painful and
dangerous indigestion disappears and
the system enjoys a tonic effect. Don't
delay. Ask your druggist for a 25c
pkg. of Carter's Little Liver Pills.
READ OF A CASE
LIKE HER 0
Decided to take Lydia E.
Pinkliam's Vegetable
Compound
MonetOn New Brunswink—"Before
my lest baby was born I was veryweak,
nervous and dis-
couraged. 1 saw
an advertisement
intim paper about
a woman who had
Wen like me so 1
bought a bottle of
uvdta E. Pink -
ham's Vegetable
tiontpound, i took
three bottles and
it carried me safe-
ly throtugh that
enlace! tune. 1
have three children to care tot and I
feet well and strong, I hove told two
other Wenn%) about voui medicine.' —
bins OUS Moneten NewENAULT 82 BriunswkllbcrtStreet,
P1IMETE
COA
a � A•
C
l "
• +FF11
ti
4 Ik
AT56
Tells SII Wrniu i Hew She Door
20 YEARS OF RUMEN
20 YEARS OF HEALTH
other and still
nc 1,
A
rn
ndm
being
arn fa y g
1 How does shmplimented epdolt ? com-
plexionSier
letter explains. Kruschen keeps her
young and lit. That's the secret of
the whole matter.
•' When I was on holiday this Summer
I was asked what gave me or what I
used for myfresh complexion. For 20
years now, I've used as directed Iirus.
then Salts, the finest and only medicine
to my knowledge.Bathis
I was
troubled with my liver and hi
and rheumatism ht my arm and
e
sxu ' sL• take ;t regularly
.
ssould t 1
as you describe, with the aboVe'i'0sult:•
ne this also my fancily,
I tell every() ,
cI
ea fo
men a women, ,
114
are
now
w
am over OIL" —E. B.
Don't be content to envy her. Follow
her example..i{rusellen will keep you
young, just as, it keeps her . young.,
The little daily dose keeps you young
inside ; you wake up every morning
as fit and fresh. as -a schoolgirl, and
before the first month is out the
wonderful difference is written y
complexion and your eyes, Krusoiten
es
t()re the te
0c and lode y
IIv
will resWaste products will
proper activity.
be )Y
expelledcued
by those el[
ninat-
in
g
organs rgan
s asNaturo intends.
blood will be refreshed and will sours®
in- a cleansing stream to every fibre
of the body, reinvigorating your whole
system, brightoning,your eyes, clearing
your skin. You feel—and axe--fe
different person. Thousands ate
proving it daily. Why shouldn't you,
Krusehen Salts is obtainable at alt
Doug Stores at 450. and 70o, tier bottle: