The Huron Expositor, 1931-11-06, Page 277,
77.
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"4
4 Splendid Recovery•
MACHO' HAD
BLOOD CLEAN
4,01,days of beingaqerated on
pp,endieitis and tonsilitis, this.
was back in her own home.
*Ac, is over 71 years of age!
en they told., her the reason for her
Ircinatkable recovery—clean blood—
eta-Jsnew what it was that had helped
Iie She.remembered the daily dose of
Ranschen which she had taken for
•• 114atty years. And she knew that 'one
, a the things that Kruschen did with
absolute thoroughness, Was to keep the
bloodstream free from impurities. She
wrote this soon after her return home k-
1" I am an old woman over 71.• I have
taken Kruschen Salts for a number of
years, and find they keep me fit and
well. I had operations last May fur
tonsilitis and appendicitis. I was
only•away a fortnight and two days-
-wrhieh is a very quick recovery for an
old woman, I reckon. Clean blood was
the reason for it, they, told me—and
I give Xruschen, Salts the credit for
that. I recommete them wherever
I go."—E. R.
The six salts in Kruschen persuade the
organs of elimination4—liver, kidneys
and bowels—to function as they should
—often for ,the firsttime in their lives.
Instead of being clogged, the intestines
are clean and clear. Instead of liver
and kidneys being sluggish, they are
active and efficient. New, healthy
blood goes coursing through the veins—
carrying health and strength and energy
to every part of the body.
And Kruschen's gentle but positive
action is more than merely purifying—
it has a direct tonic effect upon yeur
blood, too, and through your blood-
stream upon pvery fibre of ypur body—
fills you with a bracing sense of
energetic fitness. • r
Kruschen Salts is obtairifible at all
Drug Stores at 45c. and 75e.,per bottle.
SUNDAY. AFTERNOON
(By Isabel Hamilton, Goderich, Ont.)
O'er the faithless falkni world
,Raise your 'banner in .the sky;
Let it float there wide unfurled;
Bear it onward; lift it high.
Be the banner still unfurled,
Still unsheathed the Spirit's sword,
Till the kingdomsof the world . •
Are the kingdom of the Lord.
W. W. How.
PRAYER
Help us, Lord, to be ever steadfast;
immovable, always abounding in the
work. of the Lord. To this end we
pray for great grace. We pray in the
name of Jesus who came to do His
Father's will. Amen.
S. S. LESSON. FOR NOVEMBER 8th
• t
Lesson Topic—Paul in Ephesus.
Lesson Passage—Acts 19:8-20.
Golden Text—Ephesians 5:11.
Ephesus was the most magnificent
of .what Ovid calls "the magnificent
cities of Asia" and there Paul sought
to introduce Christianity. As he had
at the first made Antioch his centre
of missionary labors in Asia and
Corinth in Europe so he soughtto
bring the Light -of the Gospel to the
country of which Ephesus was the cen-
tre. In it Greek and Oriental met—
civilized philosophy faced Eastern
, superstition ai 'Light faces Darkness
and into this arena walked a stranger
bearing a message that had power
to turn both to that. Light which is
Life.
As was his custom Paul used the
synagogue ' as a meeting place. He
saw in that city that "a great doer
and effectual was open to him" but
before long he also • saw that there
were "many adversaries." ' Ephesus,
amid its vast population, contained
specimens of every form of belief.
We read in the first part of this chap-
ter of twelve followers of John the
Baptist. These Paul took and" in-
structed further in the faith until
they were fitted for baptism. To
them was given the power to speak
with tongues and prophesy. Pans the
influence of the new teacher would be
widened 'and strengthened and brought
into greater prominence so that as on
'former occasions hatred of him and
his doctrine sprang up forcing him to
seek another centre from which to
preach. Taking his disciples with
him he left the synagogue and taught
daily in the school '''ef one Tyrannus.
And for the space of two years he
continued there, disputing and per-
"Liast,,TereelS leMetorOeled for nlio0
ie4eiveti; ! • •
200 Wiles (ASV 0 k'SauO. mai passed
throogli Ave largoktcOrM .,(son . with
a population o abent 40.00) and
sores of villages, --all: without a sin-
gle°•witness. Surely the need is great
and urgent. O. wishes One could
give the. !Christian constituency at
horae•a real vision of this tremendous
need. One could not help but think.
about how many of the thousands of
people nen on this trip would go to
their graves without having at least
one golden opportunity to hear of
God's love and grace in Christ. The
cry goes up 'from many a sad and
darkened heart, ',Come over into
Ethiopa and help us! "
suading the things concerning the
kingdom of God. "I am a debtor to
both Greek and barbarian," he cried.
And again he cried, "W -De is me if I
preach not the gospel." His labors
were three -fold. He is a capable art-
isan gaining support' for others as
well as for himself. "Ye yourselves
know that these hands ministered un-
to my necessities, and to them .that
were with me;" then he is the skilful
controversalist "reasoning daily" and
then he, is the indefatigable pastor
"teaching publicly and from house to
house" and "eeasing not to admonish
very One night and day with tears."
"So mightily grew the word of God
and prevailed."
At this time in Paul's life magic
prevailed all over the pagan world
and in the East magicians practised
their art under the patronage of re-
ligion. At Ephesus where Diana's
worship reigned supreme it is no won-
der magical practices also flourished
there. St. Luke expressly declares
that there too God manifested Divine
power in the person and ministry of
s was just then the
St. Ppb. Ephes
devil's seat so here God displayed
His special stn ngth, enabling His
servant to work wonders and signs in
His name. The reality of St. Paul's
power, demonstrated by the awful ex-
ample of Seeva's sons, smote them in
their inmost conscience. They came,
confessed their deeds, brought their
magical books and gave the greatest
proof of honest convictions, for they
burned them in the sight of all, and
counting the price thereof found it to
be more than two thousand pounds of
our money, "So mightily grew the
word of God and prevailed" in the
very chosen seat of the Goddess Diana
Take Advantage Of
The Big Apple Crop
Apples are unusually cheap this
year. Canned apples are delicious for
use as apple sauce during the winter,
or they may be used as a filling for
pies; apple butter. may 'be used as a
spread for the ehildren's bread, or in
an almost countless 'number of. des-
serts; apple jelly is so popular that
it requires no recommendation.
For those who are interested iri
apple recipes, we recommend the goy-
crnment booklet, "Apple ;Recipes," is-
sued by the Department of Agricul-
ture, Fruit Branch, Otteta. (Bulle-
tin No. 35, new edition).
Ginger Apple Jam. ,
Pare and core half a peck of high-
ly flavored early apples. Put them
through 'the food chopper, together
with one lemon, one orange, two
ounces of green ginger root. Mea-
sure this fruit pulp and add an equal
quantity of white sugar and one pint
of water. Cook gently, stirring fre-
quently, until clear and thick. Seal
while hot, in small jars.
Canned Apple Sauce.
Peel and cut apples in quarters.
Make a syrup in the proportion of
one cup of sugar to two cups of wa-
ter. Have zready the apples; drop
them in and simmer for about ten
minutes, or until tender but not brok-
•
•
WORLD MISSIONS
From the Sudan Interior Mission
comes a message to spread the Gos-
pel in face of great obstacles. In a
letter to prayer helpers, the Seer -4-
tary, Rev. R. V. Bingham, writes:,
"We are again facing' Governmen-
tal difficulties ih our effort to enter
the great Moslem areas of the North.
For this our Field Director has ap-
pealed for fifty workers, but Govern-
ment prohibition again blocks the
way. We urge our friends to pray
earnestly, as our workers decided a
year ago when we were on the field,
that if the Government continued in
this attitude, we had no alternative
but to go in and to take the conse-
quences. At least five millions of
people occup this prohibited area. In
visiting this area and witnessing for
Christ, Mr. Ackland writes in a letter
Fill
en. ster zed jars and seal air-
tight. These may 'be used for apple
sauce or are delicious in pies in win-
ter.
Apple Marmalade.
Choose apples that do not cook to
a soft pulp, such as russets. Cut
them in quarters, remove the cores
(but do 'not peel them) then cut into
thin slices. Put three pounds of
granulated sugar into the preserving
pan with a pint of water and boil
rapidly for twenty minutes to make
a syrup. Sufficient' syrup should be
made to three-fourths cover the ap-
ples that are prepared.
Put the apple slices into the syrup
and boil for one hour, stirring fre-
quently.
Flavor, with cloves or lemon as pre-
ferred.
Spiced Apple Jam.
Eight pbunds apples (weighed af-
ter being peeled and cored), 6 pounds
white sugar, half pint good vinegar,.
half -cup water; about two dozen
cloves, tied in a muslin bag, and
taken out after the 'jam is sufficient-
ly cooked. Mix all well together and
let stand overnight. Next morning
put into preserving kettle, slowly
bring to boiling point, and boil gent-
ly for one hour, stirring often to pre-
vent scorching, Store in small pots
or jars. This is a cheap and appe-
tizing jam. . -
Preserving Apples Whole. -
Pare and core large, firm apples.
Boil the parings in water ..of fifteen
minutes, allowing a pint of water for
each pound of parings. Strain, and
add three-quarters of a pound of
sugar for each pint of water; add
the grated rind of•one-quarter lemon
for each pint of syrup, and • return
to the kettle. Boil for five minutes,
skim, and pour over the cold; raw
apples. Let stand until cold, then
cover and cook gently until trans-
parent. The apples will remain un-
broken.
If desired, the apples may be cored,
, No Ma er can
exoect t at 139r
childwU oscaPe
ali the ills tot
which, children,:
are subject, but.J
she can do much
to relieve their
severity.,
If your child is
constipated — if
he has a cold,i a
fever, no appetite
or a coated
tongue, don't
wait until a more
serious illness result.
Own Tablets at once.
Get Baby's
' For your own peace of mind don't
be without Baby's Own Tablets. 25
cents a package at any druggist's.
BABY'S OWN , TABLETS
(Dr. WilliaOlf) 174
iiii.3•1•1*.•1111111•
peeled and cut in eighths, and when
cooked; may be carefully stored in
sterilized, air -tight jars.
Apples With Pineapple.
Four pounds apples, using fire ripe
fruit, 1 large tin grated or ci•ushed
pineapple, one quart of water and
4I/2 pounds granulated sugar.
Peel, core and quarter the'apples,
and as they are done put them into
the cold water to which a little lemon
juice has been added, to preserve
their color. Bring the apples and
water slowly to 'boiling point, and
let them simmer until tender but
unbroken; then drain them carefully.
Add the sugar to the water; together
with two cupfuls more of water; add
the pineapple, and boil for 3 minutes,
then add the apples carefully and
simmer for five minutes longer.
Now pack the apples into jars, let
the syrup boil quickly for five min-
utes, then pour it, while hot, over
the fruit. Seal and store in a cool,
dark place. ,This is 'a very rich pre.
serve.
•
Anew, different
This delightful tea menu suggested by Madame R.
' Lacroix, assistant director at the Provincial School
of Domestic Science, outstanding Montreal Cook-
ing School, will come in very handy next time
you're entertaining. Keep it for reference.
5
TEA MENU
Fruit Cocktail
Hot Cheese Biscuits*
Salad Marguerite
Assorted Tea Cakes
ineapple Ice Cream
Chase 'Sanbom's Tea or Coffee
Mada e Lace says; "For my part, I always use
end re e Magic BakintPowder because it
is absolutely dependable. Its high leavening power
is always uniform. You get the same satisfactory
tesultklzvery time you use
•
/ • •
!"','"!x•
is mark on every tin.
uarantee that Magic
owder does not coni-
cr any harmful ingre-
Try Madame Lacroik's recipe
for *HOT CHEESE BISCUITS
134 -cups flour 4 teaspoons Magic mY3 ccuapp Mgrailtek grated
Baking Powder cheese
/ tablespoons batter 1 teaspoon salt
Sift flour, baking powder and salt. With two knives,
thoroughly mix flour, butter and cheese. Dilute the
mixture with milk to make a soft dough. Roll
quickly and lightly to one-half inch thicknels and
cut with a round biscuit cutter. Place on top of
'each biscuit' a cheese cube, one-half inch thick,
and bake in oven at 400° F. about12 oer 5 minto.
More than 200 interesting, tested recipes areton-
tained in the New Free Magic Cook Book. IF you
bake at home, send for a copy. Write to Standard
Brands Limited, Fraser Avenue, Toronto.
Buy Made in Canada Goods .
^I!
attirtg.Powder
ensures better baVtIng results
Wonderful
.
' For Indigestion
Henry bvi,1,131) Ter' r
eeiii dShAW *40 f.T4'
with such idolatry.
014IrPlnard aw was mach too
Ii1101194441iiipa nia4 to pep.* bio per-
sonal ,4;4ke for Wit* to cause him
inamothately ,to remove Irvng from
the; ltst, of those who might help Shaw;
It is trine that he believed the Eng-
lish stage to be dead and Irving one
of the eller obstacles to its decent
3;lrial. He wished to See a wholly new
body of stage literature created and
in his head, if not actually in his
trtnk, he had, ready to be produced
at a favorable moment, the vital or-
gans .of it. In other words, he would
be glad enough if Irving would ac-
cept some of the Shaw plays,and he
used Ellen Terry to have them \ sub-
mitted to the great actor manager.
One of them had roles in which he
thought Terry and Irving would, par-
ticularly shine, and Ellen had the
same idea Irving also considered the
matter, for he ,retained The Man of
Destiny for some time before return-
ing it. As a matter of fact it was
only when Mansfield accepted The Dev
only when Mansfield accepted The
Devil's Disciple and played it in the
United States in 1897, that Shaw had
his first commercial success. By this
time the power of the Lyceum had 'be-
gun to wane.
Then there came the time when
Terry broke with Irving. Shaw wrote
Captain Brassbound's Conversion for
her, and it may be that he had the
real Ellen in mind when he said of
the character she played, "she ran
through her husbands and ended as
her own 'mistress and no man's house -
mate." But by this time the philan-
dering in the letters had ceased and
the communications were more busi-
nesslike. Their roles had been revers-
ed. It was Shaw who had become one
of the chief figures of the English
stage while Ellen was fading into a
lovely tradition, linked with the tra-
dition of Irving whom she survived.
One of the significant gaps in the cor-
respondence is caused by the absence
of some letters Shaw wrote about
Miss 'Charlotte Frances Payne -Towns-
hend, who was to become Mrs. George
Bernard Shaw. It is another com-
mentary upon Shaw that these un-
gracious passages are omitted because
Ellen Terry burned them. Happily
Shaw, the editor, was not confronted
with the problem of excluding them.
When your stomach feels bad; when
Gas, Sourness, Nausea or after -eat-
ing pains make you feel miserable—
a single dose of pure Bisurated Mag-
nesia will bring you Instant Relief!
For Indigestion, the prompt effec-
tiveness of this special non -laxative
BISURATED form of 'Magnesia is
really wonderful. Even the most ob-
stinate cases quickly respond. Pleas-
ant and inexpensive to use. Ask your
druggist.
Shaw and Ellen Terry,
And Their Love Letters
While we are an admirer of George
Bernard Shay's genius, we doubt if
any play or preface which he has ev-
er written goes so far to show him
unique as the correspondence between
him and Ellen Terry. He is the only
man we ever heard of who in his old
agN would be willing to see published
the love letters he wrote as a young
man, and to a woman whom he did
not marry. If this falls short of being
unique,„ we add the additional fact
that Mrs. Shaw is living. Mrs. Terry's
son, Gordon Craig, has already pro-
tested against the publication of these
letters and suggests that Mr. Shaw
is something of a cad. To this Mr.
Shaw retorts, with Tess than his us-
ual 'brightness, that Mr. Craig was
consulted in every possible way be-
fore the letters were prepared for the
press. We do not know in how many
ways it is possible to consult anybody
but the inference is that ,l‘fr. Craig
was asked for his consent and gave
it. In any event Mr. Shaw apparent-
ly believes that everything he ever
wrote was worth writing, and not
only worth writing ;but worth publish-
ing, not only as. an additional source
of revenue for him, but as a contri-
bution to English letters.
A year or so ago he caused to be
pliblished a hovel which he had writ-
ten as a young man, and for which
at that time he could find no pub-
lisher. Now comes the correspondence
with Ellen Terry. She was at that
time nearly fifty and the acknowledg-
ed queen of the English-speaking
stage. Shaw was eight years young-
er, and just beginning to establish
himself as a critic of the theatre. In-
deed his letters, despite their amor-
ous phrasing, were intended by him
to convey his own general ideas about
English drama and players. Maybe he
thought that Ellen Terry, like nearly
all actors and actresses, never read
the newspapers. On her part, she was
much too sophisticated a woman to
be misled by Shaw's letters.Sheval-
ued them, because they were the
thoughts of a man who was growing
into a pretty considerable fellow. But
that she regarded, him as a lover save
perhaps in an epistolary sense, is
much to be doubted. She had known
too much of clovers. It is plain enough
from the correspondence that•oher
heart was set on Henry Irving, and
we can only hope that none of her
husbands was alive at the time;
• More
nourishing;
WIT AND WISDOM
Going off the gold standard seems
to have ;been Britain's most success-
ful calamity.—Sault Daily Star.
As long as armed peace continues
mankind seems to be marching to
some horrible doom.—Jan C. Smuts.
"Pollee Fly on Scent of Hold-up."
Headline. That is certainly the branct.
to have buzzing around cop headquar-
ters.—Brantford Expositor.
The real s6 -et of how to use time
is to pack it as you would a port-
manteau filling up the small spaces
with small things.—Sir Henry Hadow.
A motorcycle exploded and did no
damage except to wreck itself. Per-
fect! Let us have more explosions
like that.—Th S Florence (Ala.) Her-
ald.
'Her letters teem with reference to
him, as was, Of course, inevitable for
it was about the theatre, the plays
and the players, rather than the sub-
ject of a personal passionate love be-
tween Ellen and himself that Shaw
was concerned. Shaw did not like Ir-
ving as 'an actor. Perhaps he did not
like him personally. Perhaps .he was
human enoulgh, despite his vegetarian
practises, to regard him with jealousy
because of the privileges his position
gave him with his leading lady. When
*e saw Irving it may be that our
critical faculties were not" developed.
He dompletely enthralled us., But ev-
en then we remember hearing furtive
criticisms, which ie regarded as sac-
rilege, to the effect that Irving did
not so much play the great roles' in
which he was cast as he !flayed him-
self, and that his SItYlock, his Ham-
let, his Mathias, his Corporal Brewi`-'
star were merely different dramatize-,
'
'Many a man would feel embarrass-
ed to meet his grocer when driving a-
way from the filling statien.—King-
ston Whig -Standard.
If Abraham Lincoln has "periods of
mental diserder" some pnblic meh we
know would be better ,-for their at-
tacks.—Brandon Sun.
London has a new lord mayor, Scot-
land Yard is looking for a new head
and a parliamentary election cannot
be long delayed. !Only the poet laur-
eate seems inactive.—The Pittsburg
Post.Gazette.
The theory of relativity has shown
that we were utterly wrong about
space and time, and we are beginning
to suspect that we are still just about
as far wrong about matter and ener-
gy.—Sir James Jeans.
President Hibben, of Princeton, told
the incoming freshman class that su-
permen will be needed when they
graduate in 1935. It is to be hoped
that the class of '32 heard the re-
marks.—The Pittsburg Post -Gazette.
Doggerel's, Place
In Our Literature
There is a place in literature for
doggerel, and many of the best minds
have indulged in it occasionally. I
refer, of course, to deliberate clog-
gerel—a looser kind of burlesque poe-
try, and not to that mean type of
verse to which the term is more fre-
quently applied. As an illustration I
recall a very intriguing bit of non-
sense which appeared in that London
weekiy, Answers, many years ago,
and which has stuck in my mind ever
since., It goes something like this:
Cooks In 21/2 minutes after the water boils 1923
"The value Of your telephone is j st who you make it."
r-VHE few cents a day your
•I telephone costs are no
measure of its value. Its 1
value is in the use you make
of it — the rime it saves r
you, the safety and con- I
venience it gives you. Your
telephone is always ready*
always dependable.
seriousness In poetry—also in prose.
Even the sublime Milton could be
Sportive on occasion, and Tennyson
would have been a greater poet if
he had written more in the vein of
"Amphion," in which he rhymes
"hornpipes" with "forlorn pipes."
Browning 'must have' had a twinkle
in 'his eye when he rhymed "fabric"
with "dab brick," and he, certainly
chuckled when he coupled "promise"
with "from mice" in the "Pied Piper."
Coleridge was responsible for one of
the most exquisite pieces of non-
sense in the language, in that little
known sonnet on "The House that
Jack Built"—here it is:
A flimflam flapped,from the fila.maloo
Where the pollwoy pinked so pale;
The night wind warped a petulant poo
To the garrulous gawp of the gale.
Oh, woe to the swop of the wither-
ing swipe,
That boomed in the bo lin bay!
That sniggered and snared at the
• snoozing snipe,
That lurked where t1he 41amprey
lay.
"0 swither the swipe with -a Welter -
in gswoop!"
She sighed as she swayed in a
swoon;
And the dbleful dark danked over
the deep.
To the lay of the limpid loon./
While this is utter nonsense, it
is a clever bit of verbal and emotion-
al fooling and it has its place and
and purpose. A little more parody
of this kind would have a sanitizing
and sanitary effect upon our modern
writers. Poets are apt to take them-
selves teo seriously, due to the lack
of a sense of humor, or to the sup-
pression of this , very important
faculty. A good live sense of the
ludiarous is esserrtha to the highest
•
• ,
,c11'Ktc..rtV7',.
And that reft house is that, the which
he built,
Lamented Jack; and here his malt he
piled.
Cautious in vain! these 'rats that
squeak so wild.
Squeak • not unconscious of their
• i• father's guilt. •
Did he not see her gleaming through
the glade!
Belike 'twas she, the maiden all for-
lorn.
What though she milked no cow with
crumpled horn.
Yet aye she haunts the dale where
erst she stray'd;
And aye beside her stalks her amor-
ous knight!
Still on his thighs their wonted
brogues are worn,
And thro' those brogues, still tatter-
ed and betorn,
His landward charms gleam an un-
earthly white.
Ah! thus through broken Clouds at
night's high noon •
Peeps in fair fragments forth the
full-orbed harvest moon!
Lewis 'Carrol provided us with
many choice examples of doggerel,
such as the "Jabberwoky," with its
mock romance, mystery and tragedy:
'Twas bring and the slithy toves
Did gye and gimble in the wabe:
All mimsy were the borogroves,
And the mone waths outgrabe.
And yet Prof. Dodgeson, for that
was his name in real life, the author
of "Alice in Wonderland," was a very
serious person.
John Keats, of all poets the most
serious, was responsible for the fol-
lowing poetical patter:
•
Two or three posies
With two or three simples—
Two or three noses.
With two or three pimples—
Two or three wise men '
And two or three mimiies—
Two or three purses
""II",it4tics•;;;III
4,
And two or three guineas—
The same poet who rhapsodized ora
the nightingale was stung by a gad-
fly—possibli while he was waiting for
the "dryad of the trees" to begin his
song—and reacted thus:
All gentle folk who owe a grudge
To, any living thing
Open your ears and stay your t(r)udge
Whilst I in dungeon sing.
The gadfly he hath stung me sore --a•
0 may he ne'er sting you!
But we have many a horrid bore
• etk.9,
may sting back and blue.
Has ny here an old .grey mare
With three legs all her store? '
0 put it on her 'bullocks bare
And straight she'll run on four!
These verses and others,of the same
kind written ,by Keats were classified!
by the poet as "doggerel," and he was
not ashamed to publish them. They
were written probably as interludes of
relief or reaction between the flights
of fancy in "Endymion" and the pro-
found imaginative brooding which pro-
duced that stupendous fragment
"Hyperion"—to my mind, the great-
est of all Keats' poems, and the great-
est thing in the grand manner sine('
Milton. The explanation is that we
can appreciate tragedy in drama just
in so far as we can enjoy -the lightest
comedy—and vice versa. Shakespeare
compasses the entire gamut of our
emotions. He could never have writ-
ten "Macbeth" and- "Hamlet" had he
not been capable of producing oThe
Merry Wives of Windsor" and "A.
Midsummer Night's Dream." One cog
the most delightful of Shakespeare's
lighter 'lyrics is that on Winter its
"Love's Labour Lost":
When all aloud the witd doth blow, '
And coughing drowns the parson's
saw,
And birds sit brooding in the snow,
And Marion's nose looks red ami
raw,
When roasted crabs hiss in the bowl,
Theft nightly sings the sta, Turingwitiozl,
Tu -who, a merry note,
While greasy Joan doth keel the pot.
It is still true that
A little nonsense, now and then,
Is relished by the wisest men.
This is evident from the popularity
of some of the nonsensical stuffbroa&
cast on the air in these days, and
which is enjoyed by otherwiise• Saner •
and serious people. Life for the most
part is a serious business, and these
lighter interludes relieve the tension.
Dignity and frivolity mai be poles
apart, but they fm the axis. upon
Which this old- ;world spins..
„,
1 •
(,LN COAST
Forget Old ManWieter, spend a week.
• A' fortnight or.a month in *Florlda or
the Gulf Coast. Only a 40 hour trip \"""'"'''
via swift comfortable trains. You'll
enjoy the semi -tropical elimate; the
golf, sun -flooded beaches, deep sea
fishing ''and Motoring. Oceanside
• hotels. villages and private homes to
• suit every purse. You'll have the time
of your life there,
piTickets cant full information from any
11110air 41.111.1111' agent of
‘.C7kNAD1AN NATIONALTO.
1 . I
,8".t,t,"%;31,4,A •
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