Grey Highlands Newspapers

Flesherton Advance, 17 Jun 1925, p. 2

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The Automobile CARE AT DUSK WILL CUT TOLL OK ACCIDENTS. It i» MitI that "reKiilution of street traffic" was on« of the duties indu»- triously ]>«rfori»«<i by Marcus Aurel- <u* Atitonious, Kmperor and Commis- th« driver and his car out of commis- sion for several days perhaps for sev- eral months. Uurrying to get ahead of a train, a street cai- or anotlier ve- aioner of Public Safety of the Roman, hide saves only a nionxnt or two at Kmpire, A.H. 161. Fv«r since those the ultimate destination. The nain is aiu-ielt days traffic hns bo6n getting! not worth the price whin there is dan- heavier and heavier until now it ! ger of accident. wovM seem that the iwint of traffic j The best drivers arc especially care- CROSS- WORD PUZZLE aaturation ha.s about' been reached. But there is a big difference in re- •pect to volume of fatalities that oc- cur in theue days as contrasted with ful at dusk. There is then neither enough daylight nor hufficiejit artifi- cial light to make objects distinguiKh- able at ordinary distance. Slow up r »>ibllity of any one getting serious :y hurt. Now, however, the man In •n automobile is operating a h«iiv7 •nd powerful vehicle which can read- ily become a medium of considerable mortality. About fifty deaths per day or 18,000 per annum, with 100,000 accldenU that deal out no death, only injuries, In the record of auto fatalities in America. The question that must be aswored is "How can these automo- tive disasters be redui-ed to m mini- mum?" The ansiwer is not so difficult as is the task of getting folks to rec- oiniize the answer and act accord- ingly. The answer to a Inrgo extent is "careful driving." People who oper- ate autootobilea must exercise more care if such accidents are reduced. But there is another answer and that Is, "careful walking." All the respon- sibility for auto accidents cannot be laid up against the drivers. Some ped- estrians are far more reckless than the most reckleu driver.-). They court death by the way in whi.'h they violate traffic rule.s. ONE OP CHIEF KVIL8 One of the chief ovil.s which affect the auto accident situation is drunken- nees. Other causes included reckless driving, speeding, under age, violation of highway law, causinpr accidents, couldn't read signs and wrong plates. If a motorist real'.y clesires to avoid accidents let him consider the follow- ing points: In the first place when go- ing driving he should be .sure his ma- chine is in first-c'.ass condition. That will insure better control in an emerg- ency. Then he can well afford to drive at a moderate rate of speed. A mo- ment or two saved by i-ockleas speed- ing iii not efficiency, fur speeding may result in a smash that will put both Roman Empire tlmee. Then a couple' tor all turns in the rojjd. Blind cor- of charlou might collide with little, nere arc dangerous. When it is im- possible to see what is coming from around the comer be pi-epared to stop. Sound horn a short distance Ijefore reaching the intersectiosi. Use chains vwhenevcr there is dan- ger of skidding. Install chains on both rear wheels or none at aH. One chain is sometimes warse than none. Drive slowly at bridges. A bad rut or a stone in the road may throw a driver's car against the structure. When attempting to pass another ve- hic!e going In the same direction start turning out to the left at least seventy-five feet to the rear. If you get too close your view of the road ahead is obstructed and you may turn directly in front of another car com-1 ing toward you. When you have pass- ' ed a car do not cut back into the road nor slow down too soon. BE CABEFUL WHEN BACKING. Always be careful when backing. Sound your horn,, sitfnal other cars and look back to see where you are going. Mirrors are valuable at .all times. Bumpers also have a safety feature not to be overlooked. Clean wind-shields give the driver a clear view ahead. Every car should have a wind-shield wiper which will pre- vent .snow or rain from obstructing the driver's view. When driving, do not attempt to carry on a conversation with others in the car. Small children should prefer- ably sit in the rear of the car and cer- tainly they should never be held in or between the arms of the driver. Safe driving demands the full and undi- vided attention of the driver. Be sure to signal when driving toward or away from the curb. The tiiiffic officer ha»' a difficult j<^ at the best,- and driv«»r8 should make every effort to assfst him. He is responsible for all accidents which happen at his .station. 1 r r r r â-  â-  r ^ 57 ^ â- r uK' ' " ii "5 I ih P •^ |«v i^ â€" â-  11 11 1 P I i â-  i u H ^ iJ- ST ST â- Â». kX '*'* r H Hb ^Ht m^\ r\ 5f P I â-  â-  w P â€" A W - (>y (A. 1 â-  mS IHTUNATIOMAi IVMDMATC. The Physical BasU. Dr. Bliot, of Harvard, s»ya that he has speol little time during bis ntua Glovec Through tfie AgM. Gloves have a curiooa aiModoUMe ef their own, eepeoially In regard to their derzdiis In tlilnkloK about bU state of j u^e as symbols. Periiap* the fact tliat mind ur body, and be advlseit yuiig ^ g-ioves we:e an tmpurtant item In tlM men not lu Indulge in the ingruwhiK i growth of luxury during the age of Do Not Pick the Flowers. Mr. Qoodell was reputed to be the lerg'ist landowner in the country, and it seamed selHsb In him to put signs on nis fences that read: "Do not pick lh» flowers" Surely he ought not to b^erudge a few flowers to the boys and tti'.s who loved to wander over his grassy fields and through his flower- besprlnkle'l wood.s. In fact, ho seldom saw his own tlowers, for his business In picking them and throwing them away withered, but In seeing them j growing In their nntunil surroundings. 1 We want the 'children to enjoy them, ' and we also want them to think of | other children who will come after | them." HORIZONTAL 1 â€" Early form ef an Insect 6â€" A kind of lily 9 â€" Qirl't name 10 â€" Lacking molatura 11â€" Note of the dove 12 â€" Ever (pott.) 13â€" Russian national drink 16â€" Changes In pealtlon 16 â€" An acetamatlon cf praise to Qod 81 â€" Sad or evil destiny 24 â€" Interjoetien S6 â€" ^Te have •xlttence 26â€" A tribs 28 â€" In the ysar ef our Lord (abbr.) SOâ€" Prefix ms«nlno"wUh'' 81 â€" Tho bird ef poaee 83â€" Beroft, without frisnds 84â€" Qained 86 â€" Oensratlen 87 â€" Suffix expreaaing quality or otato SBâ€" An Inland body ef^ater 4? â€" Trim, orderly 4S â€" Cenesptlon, mental Imaga 44â€" <|lrrs nimo 46 â€" Personal pronoun 47â€" Latin for "for tho aak* of ox- amplo" (abbr.) 48â€" Solitary 61 â€" A noted living Froneh phlloiophtr 64 â€" To move smoothly and oaally 66 â€" Unmounted, as a gsm 68 â€" Personal pronoun 66â€" Male ehlld 60 â€" Bsyis nims 61 â€" To go wrong 62 â€" Abounds ^f^ esâ€" To make fast, aa a reps VERTICAL 1â€" Leatf-eolorad >â€" Unnaeasaary aetlvlty Sâ€" WIralaaa * 4â€" Hebrew omamant (Otn. IV It) 6 â€" Stupor Sâ€" A horiaontal aurfaaa 7 â€" Pamoua Seuthom general (n CWtl War 8 â€" Malieleua burning of property 14â€" Fourth mualoal note 17â€" Inter Jeotlen 18â€" Interjaettonâ€" "Stand ae you aral" 18â€" Provliwa of Canada (abbr.) 20-rPoint of oompaaa (abbr.) 22- Poaaaaalva-^Mnoun 28â€" The Virgin Mary 26 â€" To oonvart from fluid to aoll4 27 â€" An Inaaet 29 â€" Racalvar ef a gift 80â€" A amall rail-bird 82â€" A ahurah faatlval 93 â€" Symbola ef Eaatar 86â€" Daflnlta artlela 8Sâ€" Identical 40â€" A mualeal dlraotlon maanlnfl •Slowly" (abbr.) 41â€" A me««l 44â€" Lacking In weight 48 â€" Racket, row 49 â€" One of varlpua European thruahaa 60â€" A amall hallway 61â€" airl'a name (familiar) 52- Proeood 68â€" Without fooling, aa If dead 66â€" To give a deealtful Impresaten 67 â€" HIatorleal period and deleterious habit of lntrospe< tioii It Is sound and warrantable couiuol. What we all need to realUe Is that a good many major aud mluor worries dismiss themselves like a ground mist dispersed by the morning buu when we put and ktiep the bodily uiacUlue In ex- cellunt repair. Mi;ch of the disease of the soul which produces morbid aud lachry- mose mortals Is tho direct outcome of easily rectlfiabla physical conditions. The outlook on life is ilngued by the -••Hy we feel. Our neives react to a proper or Improper regimen of sleep and food. A man who getii lu a tan- trum and flings his job. along with a taunt, in the face of hts employer may be the victim of maladjusimenis In his home life which are not publicly adver- tised. The woman who Is dreaded anioug her neighbors as haviug the tongue of a fiend is like a puppet pull- ed by jangling and Intertwisted wires, moving her to gestures and postures that are really not essential In her na- ture. She does not rule her being; she is the unhappy creature of a physi- cal condition, and when that Is correct- ed, as If by a miracle the trouble dis- appears. A :t)an travelling amid high anow mountains was moved by their majesty and beauty to a sense of their eternal peace and illimitable strength and felt rebuked by a sense of his own llttle- nesa In the worshipful presence of na- ture. But when he came to snowflelds chivalry hae sometblug to do wIiU their promlaence over «H oih«ir article* «t wear in ragard to symbolic use. Uluves adorned wlib rubiae and sap- phires, K.nd perfumed glovea from Spain, were part of the outfita of tb« wealthy people at an early perloi lu our history, and stories of the convay- aoca of polsoh through richly orna- mented gifts of this sort brought with them the ill-omened phrase of "poison- ed gloves." Naturally the poets took an early op- portunity of making a prettier use of this article of apparel, and "O that I were a glove upon that band, that I might touch that cheek!" was only ona of many ooncelta of a similar kind. -^ From thia it was a siiort atep to the granting of a lady's glove to her cava, lier as a symbol cf his cbampions'hip, and the prize of the Queen of Beauty't glove In toirrnaments. The symbolism of the g'.OTe wna used again betv.een men at variance. A common way of provoking ah enemy to a duel was to flick a glove across the face. A glove, too, was sometimes a mark of fealty between friends. Then there was the custom of flinging down a glove to be taken up In defiance, of which the last relic In tbia country was the challenge of the King's Ohani> plon to all aud sundry at a coronation. Another form of syraboliam hgs passed Into our proverbs with Coo- per's "As If the world and they were hand and glove." Again, we bavo tb« / and glaciers the wind blew down bis ! phrasea about "kig-glove diplomacy" tent, snow six days on end whirled aud 'aoj -kid-jiove methods," which may whooped about hlra, the poetry faded out of the landscape. When Shackle- ton's men rowed 800 miles In an open boat across wild Antarctic waters to Klephant Island they lost the beauty of the sea; it became hideous. So our own condition changes the text in our reading of the world. Whether It Is a vale of tears or a hill of s\uirlse depends on our will to be- lieve, our spirit to fool; and tho first thing to do is to put under the life of the soul a corporeal substance that Is an effective agcnU And even a frail body can be made a remarkably good servant by compliance with the rules of the.greate3t of games: tlie thrilling adventure of living a day at a time, though our eyes may contemplate eter- nity. be Bet against that "mailed fl»t" ot which we heard too much In the flrat years of this ceatiu-y. In the city took all his time. Why ; ^^ g]| Freckie Facts. The presence of coloflng nmtter un- der the skin is not, confined to the Negro or colore<l races, but is common notable qualities 1 l"" POcket,«nd screwlng-It on the crip- 1 "o mor is and humor -Tu i Pl«- ""ed: "Now you know how Ii Than keep my umbrella should he deny them to thw rtiUdren? To tell the truth. It was Mrs. Goddell In the darker racns It is, of course, mucli more abundant, probably due to ^wbo was roeponail)I.« for tb« signs. She i ^^^^ fctli.i.ibtinB nclimi oC the sun. The had been an eager .student of botany ; pj^^jn^ni or coloring matlpr is found in the fourth of the flvo layers of skin of wliii-li the epidermis or outer skin is conipofe^l. It has loDK been thought tliat the In her school days. SIjp loved flowers passionately and wanted everybody elsfl 10 love them. Mrs. Simmons was calling on Mrs. Ooodell one afternoon when the con- ,j^„'^.„7„p „,- ,„„ ^"km ,3 .f..^ rath or to vwsatlon drifte.l «. wild flov.ert,. Mrs. ,^^ ^,„,,^ ,|g„^ „,3„ ,„ ,„ ^,^^^ ,„ ,.„. SlmmoiM had the reputation of asking ^^^j ^^^^ ,( ,,„^ been proved that this for what sh« wanted ..nd, true to that : ^^^^^ ,, ,.g„^p^, ^hleftv by Ihe ultra- repniation, she a.ked Mrs. Goodell I ^,^,p^ ^.,,.^ ^^^^^^^ ,„ „„,i,^ht. directly: "Why does >otir husband put | ^ •• up those signs? It does no harm to] let the children pick a few flowers! Sentence Sermons. when- there are so many.- j ^.,,g Puncluiil Man Wastes n lot of "I'm glad you asked the queatlon," „n,p ,valtlng on the inrdv ones. aald Mrs. Ooodell. "for I have long | ^ usuallv has good credit nt tho thought that the sigus were misuuder- 1 |,gpjj wood. Thej- were put up at my re- j ^.i,„,„ „ p„.,,„. ,„ ho the master of QiM.st, and not that the children shnald ' j,jb (|me be denied the flowers hut rather that j ^..^^.^^ mortgages tomorrow's sue they might have them. Flowers that, .^.,g ,„ ,„.,,„y.« ,,^|aj-,. Chlldran pick soon wither In their _ „„„^ „„j ponf,,,^ husv nr,R „iih hand* and are thrown away. '^'"' businesH seeds do not mature, and In a little , ^^j^^,., „ i,..,,^^ employee than tho whll.) the flowers are gone Tho large' iirnuan, ,„„„ y«llow lady's .llppors tl.al adornotl the j,,,^,, |,,„r„, ho;v to ellmitiatc the swampy places of my girlhood ''ome „„„.^,p„tlBls, aro almost gone. Tlia hloodroot, the wd.jd jincmore, ihe yellow violets and i """ tho iMi'cbman's brpeches are fast dis- j Wood In a Newspaper. appearing. i It lakes 11 block of wood (wo Inches ""Inless our wild flowers' are allowed | wide, three Inches high and four inchea to r»i>roduci; , :einsolve» by seeding long to stipply ilie |iiil|i In a twenty- we shall soon have none. Cattle. ] four-pfte iicwK;>iiiit:r. A cord of wood. hor«<!.H and sht-ep an- Ihlmiln^ them it is estlMij-Jel. inrorms 3,600 persons out. The greatest Joy In flowers is not ' of the day's news. How to Keep An Umbrella, t tl»at, although of fair quality, had no ! handle. The late chief justice of British Co- ! "That's mine," said the Judge and, , lumbla. Sir Matthew Balllle Begble, I t""*"* « beautiful silver handle from] combined with more uncommon shrewdness the small affairs of life. At .a time! when many complaints were heard of | the theft of umbrellas, from public i places a friend asked hlin how he man- i aged to keep possession of his -a very! handsome umbrella with a chased sll- ' ver handle. The judge evaded tho question, but a week later ihoy mot again in the' cloak room of a court. The judge call- ed his friend's liltcntlon to tho umbrel- la racli, which contained half a dozen! umbrolla.'i of oil so«t and conditions, ; and asked which of ihcm he consider- ' ed wa.-i leapt likely to be taken "'by ! mistukr." The filend pointed to one ' A Smile. A single thought of kindliness. And one small word of cheer. Do more to help a man along Thau preaching for a year. A fingle act of friendliness, A handshake, firm and true. Do more to help a lam« dog on most advloa will do. Houses for Our Souls. Make yourselves nes.ts of pleasant ' thoughts. None of us yet know, for I none of us have been taught in early! youth, what fairy palaces we may build of beautiful thought-proof against all adversdty. Bright fancies,* satisfied memories, noble hLs^orles. faithful say- ings, treasure-houses of precious and restful tljoughtfi, which care cannot disturb, nor pain make gloomy, nor take away from us But just one word of sympathy, U With Just cue sunny smile. I Will mae a fellow square his jaw â€" I And things seeiu worth trts while. â€"P. X. Hart Scott. Children of Jewish parents are, as a rule, wrell fed. well clothed, and, age for age, slightly ahe:»d of Christian chi'.drtn of thu same sociul clase in intelligence. As a general rule, arts live from Sentence Sermons. Nothing Worth Whileâ€" Was ever ac- complished by watching the clock. â€" Can be expected of one who is al- ways telling hard luck stories. â€" Ever resulted from passing the buck. â€" Is accomplished by tha one who will not earn more than he la paid. "" â€" Was ever settled by a religious controversy. • ; â€"Ever needs to be prOBio^ by fraudulent advertising. . â€" la ever gained by ((eSinjt- oii! « friend. T The Folly of Worry. How serenely Nature rebukes tha Impatience of the fretful worrier. A man plants corn, wheat, barley, pota- toes â€" or trees, that take five, seven years to come to bearing, such as the orange, olive, walnut, date, etc. Let him fret ever so much, worry all he Ukee, chafe and fret every hour; let him go and dig up his seed s or plan to urge their upgrowlng; let hlra even swear lu his Impatient worry and threaten to sm-ash all hi* machinery, discharge his men, and turn his stock loose; Nature goes on her way, quiet- ly, unmoved, sereuoly, unhurried, un- disturbed by the folly of the one ci^ea- ture of earth who is so senseless as to worry- viz., man. â€" George Wharton James. poverty take away from us,â€" lioiues , .j.ight to ten years, although specimens built without hands, for our souls to in captivity have been known to >-each live In.- RuBkln. the age of fifteen. Origin of Ozark. Ozark la a corruption of the French word* aux arcs, meaning "with bows," a term descriptive of the Indians who inhabited Ihe country. Dcrtolirrti.n iiiarV.! this view of King's Bay, on the west roast of Splizber- gen, 630 miles from the North Tole. where Amundsen's two seaplanes will take off In their sensAtlonal Arctic dash. Two salesmen met in the outer of- fice of rt prospective customer. The one coming out said: "No use to see him to-day. He is not in a buying mood." The other one E.iid: "While I am hsre it is my duty to see him.' Ho got the order. iir.wer to I". ; week's pu/.zlo. |TlO|M|A|TlOHOHL|MT|TlE:lrtl â-¡ QQ BQQSB BB â-¡ MUTT AND JEFFâ€" By Bud Fisher. Romance Enters the Little Fellow's Life. rJ&FF!wHAT) A (16 tow r DOIN&f J m^ . f -\

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