The Huron Expositor, 1921-06-10, Page 6f2
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nit . HURON EX1'OSITOR
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verybody Enjoys
a line cup of Tea.
IF YOU jDRINK JAPANS
TRY
"SALADA" GREEN TEA
Infinitely Superior td
the best of Japans.
SUCCESSFUL MEN MAKE
LICK.
One 'I 's not mere often find a
successful man who believes .0 lite.:
than- an unsuccessful r:''ur who
doesn't. Lt 5-0-,1 s::.i roe OIL, ,dy Wit
' know, h -i', e izac s -.til John !lay.;
Hammond lois been t., learn from hon
that successful roan bah' their lurk,I
and Cuat abut the eniy kind of luck
that is any use to them is hard luck,
for from hard luck tiiey glee valu-
able lessors, Epirletus wrote,
"On that oceasi'rn of every we:
dent that befalls you turn to your-
self and ingtnire whet power you
have for !urning it to use," .and
again, "Ai-,ilikr:es show what men
are. When you have a mischance,
cum•eive :lett G •d, like a-traicer of
wrestlers, has matched you with a
tough young men. No man has
ever had a mare profitable diffi-
culty than you have hall if you
choose l„ use it rig'.ttly." Cecil
Rhodes, wit l; whom Mr. Hammond
was intimately as..<,a+ia'ted for many
years, never haul one stroke of luck
in his life except a stroke of hard
luck -namely, the Jan:eson raid.
Many a mon would have sunk under
this misfortune. Later on he told
Mrs. Ha'mmend that he considered
it a piece if good luck, after all,
because he hail been able to profit
by it. bir.
Upon the matter of luck.
Hammond discourses in Collier's
Weekly. He mentions three famous I ice which covers rt may be sever.
men of whom he can speak from ice thick. But fish. as a know,
personal knowledge, Rhodes, Resew- must have a supply of as erh in ort•
veli and Winston Churchill, and er to keep alive -as proven by the
whte two does not deny that the f::et that goldfish will die if kept in
latter had luck, known contendsw vered bowl.How, then, do they
that had they not how to obtain their oxygen avhen the coating
neverc
evtro] the luck ite might as well of ice effectually prevents any air
have hMtpfned to tnew• firm reaching the water?
Churchill espractically unknown
before he escaped
aped from the Boers.I The answer lies in the •fact. that
Hundreds of other men escaped, and even the most edlid sheet of ice a -
in doing so had suffered greater miss a 'pond usually contains a num-
hardsh'ps and performed more gal• her of air holes or gaps in the ice
close to the surface. But, even if
]mot deeds than the young news- I resent, the fish have
paper correspondent. Yet who these are not present,
ever heard o]' them? Churchill ' another source of supply for their
was able to make of his escape the oxygen in the streams which brine
foundation stone of an amazing fresh water into the lake. This
political career. It was the luck of water, coming front the open brooks
the Spanish-American war that rave I and rivulets, carries with it a con -
tenuous supply of the oxygen, and
Deas
is truly delicious at all
times. 30 years' re-
putation for fine teas.
=
The subconscious mind never sleetts
1 and it is the subconscious mind that
i one dreams with. One curiosity of
1 the subcurtseietes mind is 'mentioned-
; by the .author. He notes that' tired
1 doctors or nurses' may Pail) asleep
and not be disturbed by quite loud
noises, but the slightest movement
I of. the patient -will cause them 'te'
i be 'broad awake in a moment. lie
1 suggests that the subconscious naiad
f and the conscious may be part of
i the same indefinable thing.
Says Dr. Bowers:
The mental function has ,a' power -
iful influence upon the function and
`the quality of sleep. This, in turn, de-
pends largely upon one's ability to put
1 the objective mind in a quiescent con-
dition and give the job of running
things over to the care of he sub-
:ems:ewes mind. The "objective
i4 tuff re rumen a is
mind, II t bred
that mums 'which hakes note of ever}
with the winners. thing L t hai:rpens 'to us when we
PflElli : { are uwuke, ge }
Il'� uhcn;iam: his own experience ltiu• all its ins prrs•
:., : mining fields, cspevmlly im. .ions through the avenues of sight,
• it vol. '}"here the deo} levels duel-, hearing, touch and taste.
--ie r.1y mate the future of tee The subjective or subconscious
,
i,_ 'c•t. .Haminend an -I his estitiu- 1 min.} is that mind -or that part of
...ink the chaf;s Ilett ais, lesel • eel' mind- in which are pigeonholed
,, m s
':' of the d+'•i' levi-Is- Had ;ia the impressions that the objtvotive
e sunk one or two shafts and n„n.l }others in its busy experience.
I :-:nal the ore, t hot might well hes" , It is the storehouse ofcteniory.
!wee eo!l,d emel luck. lied they But, in addition, the subeonseiuus
.ink three or four without resole minds cxerc`:itcoirtioll„over all er glue our
r
that might have been called hard ' -in olunhtary sc
lee-:; but knowing the geology of •and regulates the beating of the
the ceuntre they were sure of what heart, the inks atien and exhalation
'tiff would find and sank enough l of air, the digestion and assimilation
she fes to eliminate the element of I o!' fond. All the "vegative pro -
luck altogether. In opposition to enasese are under its control. The
Mr. lian,nvend might be quitted John seheunscieus mind never sleeps. it
::;mart Mill, who said, "Next to birth,"on the job” --day and night.
,:
ties chief tits,' of success is acclaim? is use part of our mind that
and opportunity. Ni, degree wht!- wakes some of us -dike an alarm
ever of good conduct can raise most clock--onthe precise hour we had
people in the wo,'Id without fortunate ;.-sanded to get up, and that solves
e'o^davits." We do not intend to give perplexing problems for us while we
the casting vote in the debate. We sleep
will only say that whether there ii Ile -mentions the classic instances
look, one who believes in it is loam of i'
trememberihose of Coleridge eam's bringing
ingingd Kame
ed to be unlucky.
Shan," and Stevenson, who dreamt
WHY CAN FISH LIVE IN A tine
plot
uuof iekyyll ansdfMr.
thyds"
FROZEN LAKE.? amaz-
ing clairvoyant or psychic powers
When we speak of a "uncal or lake sometimes exercised by sotnmam-
ru bring "frozen" we do not Sillily the holis''.s. But of more pratical import
term in the carne manner as if we
;ince is his condemnation of snor-
w •••e referring to a cake of solid ice.
Mall s+ atarrh Medicine rudimentary should ' have presented
Those who are in a "run down" condt-
tlon will notice that Catarrh bothers
them much more than when they are la
good health. This fact proves that
whilea
Catarrh t6 onsttitutional t conditions.
influHALenced by
Tonic a CATARRH and set ID o a
Tonic and', loot Purifier, and sets through
the Mood
us reducing u tthesin inflammation
aulkirestertgng guano1 conditions.
AU drAltate. Circular* te.
F. j. CpegeY & Co., Toledo Ohio.
in one of those little flats in Har-
lem!"
She was a warni"little human thing
no problems not perfectly easy to
explain.' It was herein that he was
exotic. Mr. Pafford, who was not
given to subtle analysis of differ-
ences in character• and temperament,
argued privately that An English
youth who had been -brought up in
the street's would have been one of
two things. He would have been se-
cretly terrified and resentful, rough-
ly awlcward and resentful, or boast-
fully delighted and given to a corn-
aton youcn's excitedly cmurmort swag-
ger at finding 'himself suddenly a
"swell."
This special kind of youth would
and a tender one, and when he carie most assuredly have constantly
close to --her, glowing with tent- thought of himself as a "swell" and
estrous boyish eagerness, her eyes would have lost his -head altogether,
g'i'ves bluer because they were sud-
deply wet, and she was obliged to
move o she ba'- „I know those lit -
possibly with results in the matter
of conduct in public which would
have been either maddening or crush -
"Yes
' sou ; ing to the spirit of a well-bred, ma- i
tie flats. Ally one could- She i lure -minded legal gentleman tempot•-
ptopped )t'erselt, because she had been arily thrust into the position of bear -
giving to reveal what a home a worn-! leader.
l
de•
an could make in rooms like the But Tembarom was none of these
compartments in a workbox. She ; thins. If he was terrified, he did
knew and saw it all. put out a hand withouthe drew hack not cdoubtel isnot ar esentful, butish. He won
as
a little again, but she [
and laid it on his sleeve• the contrary interested and 'curious,
"When you've had quite -time en- though he could not be said to bear ,
ough to -find out, soul know what the himself as one elated. He indulged
other thing means, 1'11 do whatever , in no frolics or extravagances. He
you want me tri do," she said, "It saw the flutc i sons ailsofitonem heir
r
w
won't matter w.t it and
is. I'll do it." I steamer, supplied
v "She means that," liutchinsun ; fretful mfoeration d He boolid not coe-
ks with re-
ntumlbled unsteadily, turning aside. sp
n.
"Sapte as her mother would have duct himself as a benefactor bestow -
meant it. ,end she means it in more ing unknown luxuries, but as a
ways than one." young man on whom unexpected luck
And so she did. The promise in- had bestowed decent opportunities to
eluded quite firmly the possibility of express his friendship., In fact, Pal -
not unnatural changes -i'n himself - ford's taste
Was approved
a ofhhis attitude. the
each as young ardor could not
see, even• the passibility of his new spell of the slight girl wjth the Man -
life withdrawing him entirely from cheater accent and sober, blue eyes,
the plane en vdhieh rapture could but she was neither flighty nor
a flat
onIl twenty dollars a week meretricious.
give no trouble even when
in a flat in Harlem. he naturally forgot her in the revela-
CiIAPTER IX I tions of his new life. Her father
A type as ex.,tic as Tembarom's also was plainly a respectable work -
was to hie solicitor naturally sig- ing-man, with a bluntLancashire
pasted problems. Mr. Pafford found . pride which would keep him from in -
his charge baffling because, according
Snorers con be conquered if
for -it is only the surface of the the will go to the trouble of put -
eater which is frozen, and the water ti reg a piece of ising-glass court
emains liquid, though the sheet of plaster over the lips before retiring
or wearing a kind of yoke which will
support the chin or a bandage pass-
ed under the chin and tied over the
eieel. Snoring; is caused by the jaw
felling, although there are versatile
snorers who contrive to score their
paints through the nose or perhaps
from soma•where in the reverberating
caverns of their skulls.
Roosevelt the opportunity to show
the American people the sort of stuff
he was made of. Many others had
the same opportunities, but were
not able- to turn them to account.
We doubt, however, if the career
of Roosevelt is the happiest that
Mr. Hammond might cite in proof
of his theory. After Mr, Roose-
velt had made himself famous in the
Spanish-American War, he found
himself sidetracked by astute
politicians into the Vice -Presidency
of the United States. well known ao
a political graveyard. We doubt
if even Roosevelt would have been
strong enough to - burst these
winding -sheets had it nut been for
the tragic fate of President McKin-
ley. This again gave Roosevelt a
chance to appeal to the general pub-
lic instead of to the political bosses
and he prevailed. We hardly be-
lieve that he ever would have been
President had he nest first been Vice -
President. Weare in agreement with
- the famous cowboy motto which Mr.
Hammond quotes with approval: -
"Life ain't in holding a good hand,
but in i -Caving a pare hand well."
The writer admits that there is
such a thing a hard luck, from
which wise }nen sihou'ld learn some -
i ding, another kind of luck which
is opportunity and which is not lurk
at all if you do not understand what
to do with it, and the third a kind
of hull or burro luck. As burro
hunk he cites the diseoverey of the
Bunker Bill and Sullivan mine in
Idaho, said to be the greatest silver
lend in the world, which was
stumbled on by a couple of pros-
pectors whn were hunting for •a
strayed burro. Alolesgly prospect-
ing in an Arizona district, supposed
to he worthless the brothers Schieflin
accidentally came across the rich
Tombstone property from which they
derived a great' deal of money. Had
they realized 'that they were the ben-
eficianies of bull luck -all might' have
been well, but trey seemed to imagine
that they were unusually gifted fin-
anciers. S'o 1/hey eleeli'ned to reinvest
their dividends in mines, but put them
in various other enterprises, to the
end that they lost nearly all their
money. Mr. Hammond says that for-
tunes made by bull luck rarely stay
when a lake is fed with fresh water
only at one end. the -fish will be found
to congregate there in large numb-
ers -a fact well-known to ice -fisher-
men who always chop their holes only
a short distance away from the place
where the fresh water flows in.
SCIENCE EXPLORES THE
REALMS OF SLEEP
We now have it on the authority
of a scientist, Dr. Edwin F. Bowles;
ers,
of New York, that of all things, .
is the most vital. A man can go
without food or water for a long
period.. Men have had fractured-
necks
racturednecks and lived. Bullets have even
pierced the heart without fatal re-
sults; but if a man gets no sleep for
ten days he either die's or goes in-
sane. Scientific interest in the phen-
omenon of sleep appears to have been
Stimulated by Freud's theories re-
garding dreams, but while Freud un-
dertakes to understand all about
dreams, investigators are by no moans
agreed concerning sheep. They, differ
as to what causes it, and why it is
necessary. There are quite half 'a
dozen theories each with respectable
exponents, but the one that Dr. Bow-
ers speaks of with most approval ie.
what is called the chemical theory.
This is to the effect that while one
is 'awake the expenditure of tissue is
greater than the rebuilding process,
but that while one sleeps nature takes
her opportunity do restore 'what has
been expended. So the best theory
apeears to be the one that Shake-
speare had in mind when 'he spoke
of sleep as. nature's "sweet restorer."
But comparatively few people are
interested in an explanation of
what sleep is. They are more con-
cerned in learning what is the proper
amount of sleep. People who think
they can get on with only a few
hours are rather proud of the fact.
Dr, Bowers tines not encourage this
sort of vanity. Ile. seys that every-
body should geh as belch sleep as he
can. He rather pricks the bubble that
Edison has blown these many years
by boasting that he requires only
four hours' sleep. He notes that
Edison works in a room with a couch
and that he frequently indulges in
a nap through the day, thus prob-
ably getting as much sleep as the
average person, and at the same time
acquiring rather a Spartan reputa-
tion. About eight or nines hours is
the period required by the average
man, and a little more for a woman.
Growing children need more still
because . they have more tissue to
build up. So there is -some scientific
justi'fidehion for the old schedule of
"eight for a man, nine for a wo-
man 'and ten for a fool," though
the real foal would appearto be the
man who goes -without necessary
sleep because he is rather ashamed
to slake the period of rest that he
requires.
But it is unwise to dogmatize about
hours. A great deal depends upon
the quality of the sleep, for there is
good sleep and sleep that is not
so good. The real sound sleep is the
best. This ks defined he the sleep
that is untroubled by -dreams. They
light Sleeper Is the dreamer, or
dreamrinng, for even the soundest
sleepers dream, slays science, though
they May helve no recollection of it.'
T. Tembarom
trading.
to ordinary rules, a young man so Continued next week.
(Continued from page 7)
before her was a sort of unronseious
tribute of respect.
"I know that," he owned.. "I know
you. That's why I take it like this.
But I want you to tell me one thing.
If hadthis twentyn dollars a�, if d
only
week, would
you have taken me?"
"If you'd had fifteen, and Father
could have spared me, I'd have taken
you. Fifteen dollars a week is three
p.:unds two and sixpence, and I've
known curates' wives that had to
bring up families on less. It
wouldn't go as far in New York as
it would in the country in England,
hut we could have made it do -until
you got more. I know you, too, Mr.
TempleBarholm."
He turned to her father, and saw
in his florid countenance that which
spurred him to bold disclosure.
"Say," he put it to him, as man
to man, "she stands there and says
a thing like that, and she expects a
felliew not to jerk here into his arms
and squeeze the life out of her! I
daren't do it, and I'm not going to
try; hut -,well, you said her mother
was like her, and I guess you know
what I'm up agairust."
Hutchlrinson's grunting chuckle con-
tained implications of exultant ten-
derness and gratified paternal pride.
"She's 'th' very spit and image of
her mother," he said, "and she had
th' sense of ten women rolled into
one, and th' love of twenty. You
let her be, and you're as safe as th'
Rock of Ages."
"Do you think I don't know that?"
answered Tembarom, his eyes shining
almost to moisture. "But what bits
me, by 'thunder! is that I've lost the
chance of seeing her work out that
fifteen-dollar-aeweek proposition, ,and
it drives me crazy."
"I should have downright liked to
try it," said Little Ann, with spec-
ulative reflection, and while she
knitted her brows in lovely consider-
ation of the attractive problem, sev-
'eral previous unknown dimples de-
clared themselves about her mouth.
"Ann," Tembarom ventured, "if I
go to Tenrple Barholm and try it a
year and learn all about it-"
"It would take more than a yeas,"
said Ann,
Don't make it two," Tembarom
pleader]. "I'll sit up at night with
wet towels round my head to learn;
I'll spend fourteen hours a.d'ay with
girls that look like pictures in the
'Ladies' Pictorial,' or whatever it is
in England; I'll give them every
chance in life, if you'll let, me off
afterward. There must be anothed
lost heir somewhere; let's dig him up
and then come back to little old New
York .and be. happy. Gee! Ann," -
letting himself go and drawing near-
er to her, -"'how happy we could be
r�.
ht
F`,2
tt
Girl's Statement Will
Help Seaferth
Many women will profit by the fol-
lowing statement of one of their sex:
"I was afraid to at on account of
stomach trouble. Even rice did not
agree. After taking Adler-i-ka I can
eat ;anything." Adler-i=ka mete on
BOTH upper and lower bowel, re-
moves four retarder wltidt (poisoned
Stomach. EXCELLENT for gas on
the stomach or sour otontach. Guards
against appendicitis. It brings out
poisonous,metter you never thought
was in your system. • E. Umlblseb,
prtpggbat,
..;en�gt, .•.,.. c.
2 t I9
it
i11 iw:ri<;.
'}
!ia
'..DUNE 10,E 1921.
\0.
d�
"The second blow-out in a week!
Why don't you get good tires ?"
DOMINION TIRES
ARE GOOD TIRES
DOMINION TIRES are the same quality, no matter what the size.
DOMINION "NOBBY TREAD" 30 x 3 ja Thee for Ford,1Chevrolet,
Gray Dort, Overlanli and ,thee light care are the same design, same
material, same construction as the big "NOBBY TREADS" for
Pierce -Arrows and Packarda. You get the mileagewhep you ride on
"DOMINION TIRES". '
There are Dominion Tires for every car and every
purpose -DOMINION INNER TUBES, too -and a
complete line of DOMINION TIRE ACCESSORIES.
Sold by the best dealers from coast to coast.
sou
a„ 'r^•c,n-m,s ay.•'�s+•F.p^'^vrae•„ifrJ'r°'o ' ...•`•'
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Rebuff
to re/nil!
jug
Patron:
His Excellency The Duke of
Devonshire, K.G., G.C.M.G„ Etc.,
Governor-General of Canada.
Honorary Committee:
chairman,
His Honour Lionel H. Clarke,
Lieutenant -Governor 61 Ontario.
Vice-chairmen:
Icon. E. C. Drury, Premier of
Ontario.
His Worship,' 'R L. Cbureh,
Mayor of Toronto.
Aon, W. A. Charlton, MI'.
Wm- Thomson, Orillia.
A. C. Hardy, Brockville.
Honorary Treasurer:
Sir Edmund Osler
Ontario committee:
Chairman,
T. A. Russell
Vice -Chairman:
Lloyd Harris
Secretary:
B. Dunbar
e
aro
®N November 30th last, the
Muskoka Free Hospital for
Consumptives was destroyed by
fire.
On January 14, this year, Sir
William Gage, founder of the insti-
tution—the one man who had con-
tributed most largely to its support,
and for twenty-five years the out-
standing friend of needy consump-
tives—died.
To -day, more than ever -before,
poor, suffering consumptives need
your assistance.
Give — give all you can — to the
National Sanitarium Association's
Consumptives' Emergency
Million Dollar Fund
The Muskoka Free Hospital
for Consumptives, destroyed by
fire on November 30th last, must
be replaced by buildings, larger
and fireproof.
Accommodation is needed at
the Muskoka Free Hospital for
400 adults in early stages of
thedisease. This will restore250
of them to their homes and loved
ones -cured. The remainder will
be greatly benefited.
A -few months for each patient
soon means thousands cared for.
Funds are urgently needed for
this work.
Again- adults in advanced
stages must be treated at the
King Edward Sanatorium, on the
banks of the Humber, near
Weston. Extensions are neces-
sary. Many of these patients can
be saved.
And again -little children -
stricken with the dread disease -
must be cared for at the Queen
Mary Hospital for Consumptive
Children, near Weston. Ninety
per cent. of these are saved to
become healthy men and women.
Funds are urgently needed to
cover the cost of extensions.
Further, funds are urgently
needed to carry on the work of
The Gage Institute in the City of
Toronto, where the needy poor
come for free examinations, in-
cluding X-ray, and for medical
and nursing assistance.
Fifteen thousand needy con-
samptioes have been caredifor
to date of the hospitals con-
ducted by the Associatiin.
NATIONAL SANITARIUM' ASSOCIATION
Headquarters: 46-48 King St. East, Toronto—Opposite King Edward Hotel
Telephones: Main 4148-4161.6353-4-5••6.7.
"Every Needy Consumptive Must Still be cared for"
Cti ui .-•et4`.�ikLUF'Fa '�
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