Grimsby Independent, 21 Aug 1935, p. 3

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now? Is he still composing?" "WIil, no, madam,"‘ Gilbert teâ€" plied. "Just now, as a matter of fact, dear Baytch is by way of deâ€" composing." A wealthy lady remarked at a dinner party: "Oh, Mr. Gilbert, your friend Mr. Sullivan‘s music is really too delightful, It reminds me so much of dear Baytch (Bach). Do tell me: what is Baytch doing just Pep is the thing which makes the ambs gambol . with ‘glee, the colts prance with joy, the calves throw up their tails and run like fury, the birds sging in splitâ€"throat notes, the frogs eroak upon the creek bank, the in sects buzz and hum in the air, the milkman whistle as he jogs along, tie blacksmith laughingly beat the iron into shape, the plowman urge his korses with a *"‘geeâ€"up, there," the engineer wave a kiss to his sweet.â€" heart as he throws open the throttle, the wocdman smilingly plunge his axe into the giant tree, the banker and merchant rush»to. their work with a cheery "goodâ€"bye," the mechâ€" anic and the laborer fairly dance to their jobs, the soldier "goes over the top" with clinched jaws and courage that knows no fear, the live sales. man hie to his calls with shoulders squared, pride in his heart and nerves aâ€"tingle with anticipation of new suc. cess. ‘"Pep" is anything that puts kappiness in the heart, energy in the body, determination in the soul, and invis‘b‘e courage in the will. many + yantags ;gtI}L%IM neolitlâ€" . themyup to_the&#at staif by%fifl&? ing in advertising reading in the guise of news. When these are returned or do not appear in print, the readers. usually take it upon themselves to hurl abuse at the paper. They considâ€" erâ€" organization andâ€" humanitarian services rendered by their special orâ€" ganization as worthy as all the free space they can get. If these persons wou‘d only stop to consider where the paper would be if every organization received the same amount of "free advertising‘‘ they expect for: their ewn society, the. criticism would seass. There are still â€"people, too, who think the price they pay for their paper covers its cost of proâ€" duction. The amount paid does not pay for even the cost of materials used in its printing. A newspaper‘s chief source ‘of revenue is its adver.. iising. And if this is to be given free to every organization where members are enthused on a cause, where will the publisher turn for money to pay his expenses? | Inquiry of medical authorities tbrought a statement from ITago Galdâ€" ston, M.D., New York Academy of Medicine, that "undoubtedly proper mnotite will be takca of these reâ€" ported experimental data, but for the present no alarm on the subject is warranted." The Cornelians found the cod liver oil damage while searching for the best fcod for farm animals byr siving them synthetic diets. The two scientis‘s named as auâ€" thorities for a possible human angle are Eric Agduhr of the University of Upsala and Nils Malmberg of Stockholm. injuries in infants." The harm was traced to an unâ€" identified "fraction" present in cod Hvyer oil.. This "fraction‘ is not asâ€" sociated wi‘h the vitamins, for which the oil is given. It probably can be removed, the report states, and apâ€" parently is largely removed in cod liver oil concentrates. The writers state that their results have no direct bearing on cod liver oil in human nutrition. ‘"But they ‘suggest," the ~report says, "a careful reconsideration of the wisdom of the continuous use of the large intakes now recommended, particularly in view of the reports of Acdurhr and Malmbersg of heart The animals were goats, sheep, guinea pigs and rabbits. Their muscles degenerated. _ Paralysis reâ€" sulted. Hearts were affected, with evidence of fatty changes. Livers became fatty. The report summarized seven years‘ experiments, made in the aniâ€" mal nutrition laboratory at Cornell by Dr. L. L. Madsen and Professors ©. M. McCay and L.A. Maynard. ; Ithaca, N.Y.â€"â€"Muscle and,. heart injuries, and sometimes death, from feeding large amounts of cod liver oil to herbivorous animals was anâ€" nmnounced recently in the ~â€" Cornell Bulletin of Cornell University. Mediâ€" cal authorities elsewhere indicated, however, there was no cause for "alarm""‘ respecting humans. ANIMALS KILLED RBY COD LIVER OLL Large Doses Produce Dégenâ€" eration of Muscles, Heartâ€" An Unknown Element. ecek Free Because a paper is constantly seek.â€" my~p<.â€"to make its columns interâ€" o ofi in o ie armmmmes¢ okdcrs, What is "Pep? Too Bad Advertising P99 The workman was engaged in exâ€" cavating operations. The eurious stranger was looking on: s The honeymoon is over, gentlemen, when your wives start complaining about the noise you make getting breakfast. Peggyâ€"Good Heavens, Gert! Ain‘t you ever been out with a sailor? Helenâ€"You say they arrested that dancer for no cause at all? s Ferdyâ€"No; for no gauze at all. Some woman can remember their husband‘s first kiss, while others can‘t remember their first husbands. Hordes of gullies now remind us we should build cur lands to stay, And, departing, leave behind us fields that will not float away. Then when sons assume the mortâ€" gage on the land that‘s had our toil, They‘ll not have to ask the question: "Here‘s the farm, but where‘s the soil ? Gertieâ€"I think its a shame to send those nice sailors to China. What will they do there? Happy inaeéd is ‘the woman ~who has as many changes®ofc‘othes . as she has of mird. Los t idns 109 Ardent Youthâ€"My dear girl, it would take the whole fire department to put me out. J ' Young Womanâ€"If you don‘t leave the house immediately, I‘ll call. the whole .police. department . to come and put you ‘out! f * Small Tin 35¢, Large Tin 60c, Extra Large Boitle 750 Boott & Turner Ltd., Neweastleâ€"uponâ€"Tyns, Eng. Distributed in Canada by McGillivray Bros. Limited, Toronto. _ 54 |â€"|A VE nc ooamrent o Los t Bm tors P s Cc ied T Reldes 4909 Nee oc f C es Ns oi h se on pol k oo at oi ce . ceainl P t se com ind ol Soten t » * +. P M o narn aperiet ced o( o &A «e ig O Faxr A ¢ c nsl i Nok Mg y > a 0 09 w2 8 w KE :>~ BA 5 hk ; 24 ® t m ; 1 k i 6 prg sood revngis t aatel ; M s 3 o i y J m\ Ew es e to Aird g o Ks ; \ t > 4 4 A 7 A k: Brv e s ht e Aug R | mm U ob Eo 5 48. & t _ Loudn #fy 29e hk w s A i râ€"f lc tas on ie e e n ce P aice vas t Fosct pke e 3 t k umt Par, 2+ y s n iess e s xx ¢ j a \ &9 L B 3 € ul B Â¥o: oR yA 6 I o § S <i Ceo) s mss e \ Sn i ogal # 3 4 CA Camiden, S &3\ | &2 e : B \ & J SS m w / ared 5 mt 16 5 ns seata adefari ui e e ie t oi niake. . oo P daipe s in fpie (hacsit i Pn aep ie ce herees exctean ts urARD SOIL EROSION y o U When playing a softball game on a field a half mile from camp this summer, signallers of the 49th Toâ€" ronto Troop wigwagged a detailed description of the play back to the camp. 1,500 Scouts, including some 20 units from Massachusetts, Vermont and New York, took ~part in ~the weekâ€"end International Scout Jamâ€" boree at St. Johns, Que. The Union Jack and Stars and Stripes â€" were brcken out simultaneously in an imâ€" pressive opening ceremony. There were woodcraft and campcraft comâ€" petitions and athletic sports. A big event was the lighting of aâ€" huge campfire with Indian ceremonial by Chief Red Eagle, of the Mohawk Tribe of the Six Nations, and ~the telling of a tale of adventure in the Far North by a tall scarlet figure in the firelight, Superintendt F. J. Mead of the "Royal Mounted". The Jamboree concluded with a memoriâ€" able Scouts‘ own service on Sunday. A summer good turn of the 22nd Regina Troop was voluntary waterâ€" ing of flowers and keeping stray aniâ€" rals out of gardens of neighbours who were away vacationing. Strangerâ€"What are you digging for ? When you speak to other people for their good, it is influence. When other people speak to you for your own good, it is interference. Workman (looking up)â€"Money. Stranger (surprised)â€"And â€" when do you expect to strike it? Workman (as he resumed his toil) â€"Battrday. The Sceouts of Coldwater, Ont., are developing what promises to become a local museum of importance. The most recent addition was a collectâ€" ion of Indian and pioneer reliss left the trocop by ~theâ€"~will of the late Peter Wray. : Sheâ€"Iâ€"showed the doctor the place where my garters had been pinching. Heâ€"And what did he give you? Sheâ€"Orchids. Brideâ€"Oh, Jack darling, it is all just like a dream, is it not? Groom (who has been hit with an old shoe. got rice down his neck, and .éfl% f E. vBHin § olsatit Tt s o lon® ichave dreamed of anyâ€" thing but you that I cannot really say. % The perfect example of will power, is the ability to eat one salted peaâ€" nut. ADVICE TO YOUTHFUL LOVERS: He who courts and does not wed May have to go to court instead. A brother to every other Scout, without regard to race or creed SCOUIINGi Here + There _ ;(. Every.wherc A recent Cornwell Badgq“lffi'rfi:"m:); was that to Scout JOBM & pition . of Eltham, England, in recogi a during ccurage and fortitude Show-’phospital. three years in a London fi\verxt 93 During that time he undeig qi« leg, operations for an injury t"?%nued is and at the same time conti} progress in Scouting. g,,,\ f A cruise up the SQS}j%IToBifi, River as the crew of the |_ * qmpany, of the Ross Navigation jaAppreciated Limited, was the greatly Cleps of the experience of Patrol Les hq boys 2nd The Pas Troop. MahM and in were assigned to watches:\lt stoker, turn acted as â€" enginee, ta gook, wheelsman, deck '1;"“_ m‘ H. Mcâ€" under direction of Capts#A Kinnon. 8 You may make childrem‘s dresses incombustible by puttin\f“,’jlin ounce of alum or Sal ammoniac in the last water in which they are rinsed, they will be rendered almost‘ uninflamâ€" mable, or, st least, will with diffiâ€" culty take fire, and if they do, will burn without flame. It is astonishâ€" ing that this simple precaution ts so rarely adopted. Remember this and save the lives of your children. Ten dollars was vote *‘ i Wynyard, Sask., lodge, %. 'e\‘ equipping the new hut helWhe of the 1st Wynyard Sceout I~ts, windows. A growing intere: shown in local Sceout units : of many orders in pra‘ér&, parts of the Dominion. It‘s funny how some felisws can always be wrong and never know it. Arrangements are being § for the training of Boy S rural and semiâ€" rural commes_ Quebec, to act as junior fi‘\ game wardens, under ausf:‘J the Quebec Fish and Game P Association. Youthâ€"At the beach last I flirted with a girl and sa an officer. o Wifeâ€"No, Hentry, I don‘t think a manicurist should marry a dentist, Manâ€"And why not? Je Wifeâ€"If they fought, it would tooth and nail. â€" 4;!“) mnceeNm__ /+ Va fl’i x . Avoid Risks Of The Polish Scout Jamborel‘\; the forests of Scala this sunM. attended by some 80,000 'S»’:i; these, 8,500 were from oth,'s tries. The jamboree was o\ the President of Poland. Â¥â€" Friendâ€"Lucky dog! I afso flm‘ with one last summer and she calle a preacher. » & Tteauy "TMHro.. _.__ o that wife "Angel" because earthly good. ._ bridegxoam rbafi&y fl'l'xon._-.oz O lâ€"â€"_¢4SB ) CY t‘{ifane(i his con‘u; Sh ' : ,)_V the 'Otf* ... for ) s K;‘l\ irters t heLW O with ut "ots being tgre: L odges ,nlts d all Shewan BaskrlfiTobin, newan -SE‘:)L‘Tobin, _ Company, @apptreciated h:"ers of the M‘;The boys *â€"land in ives ,'ne)' & held in tmer was M,;outs. Of itr counâ€" isened by ‘ash and 1iaices of _rotective Lfi_award fant â€" of iition â€" of i during in .of Some folks might want to tell me that I don‘t know what 1 am talking abourt when I say that. Well, at alil events, I have the â€"backing of hisâ€" tory. Men have been successful in the past even when hard times had struck the world, but such men were seldom given a chance. They simply trained themselves to recognise op.â€" rortunity, and whenever opportunity ame their way they seized it and ade full use of it. slept, Were toiling upward in the night." You can follow their example by doing exactly as they did. Keep yourself fit .Train yourself to recogâ€" nizo opportunity, and by persistent effort, work and study, prepare your.â€" self for making the best of opporâ€" tunity when it presents itself. Do not relax your effort. Don‘t think any job bencath you or any task too menial so long as it provides an honâ€" est living. Obey the Scriptural inâ€" juncetion and â€"â€" "Whatsoever thy hand findeth to do, do it with thy m Success never comes by chance. A man just doesn‘t jump to success all at one bound. Success is only atâ€" tained by initiative, perseverance, push, and hard work. "‘The heights by great men reachâ€" _ ed and k4mt Now I recognise that times have been hard and that this is a queer world. The economic situation is still a little strained, and jobs are perhaps, scarce. Moreover, it is true that, to a great extent, machinery seems to have_replaced manpower, and thk%fjme:l'eate a modern diâ€" ficulty*"2dex ~â€"and this is what 1 try to impress upon all young folks who come to consult me, Initiative, Perseverence, Independence, Ingenuâ€" ity, Selfâ€"reliance, and Courage to dare and to do are not exactly outâ€" worn virtues in the world. Wherever they are brought into play they have their own reward. To this young man, and to others like him, 1 want to sayâ€"Don‘t wait for a chance. Go out and make a chance for yourseltf. "being given a chance" strikes me as one looking for a erutch with to hobble through life. gWell, a letter like that almost makes me smile. If some older folk had taken that attitude at twenty, 1 wonder what would have become of them. Where wou‘d they be today? Frankly, the fellow who talks about today A young man of twenty, in good healti and fine physical condition, left High School two years ago and has don'e, nothing since. He . writes to meâ€"‘"I don‘t know what 1 am go.â€" ing to dop with my life. There‘s no chance for a young fellow like me We live in a strange world. And there are two ways of going through it. You can either walk bravely through it on your own feet, or, deâ€" pending upon someone else, you can hobble through it on a crutch. Were not attained / by sudden flight; f But they, while their companions EVERY DAY LVIN( THERE IS EITHER A WAY OUT â€" OR UP 19 A WEEKLY TONIC by Dr. M. M. Lappin now"? The fact is that the name ‘"Mounted" is redolent with history and is famous throughout the world. The Ottawa Journal puts it thus: What matters it if in this mechanâ€" ical age "out of our force of 2,900 men we have only 300 mounted men Bault Daily Star. Naturally Sir James MacBrien‘s proposal to find a new name for Can.â€" ada‘s Royal Canadian Mounted Po.â€" lice is not meceting with much fayâ€" or. For young folk such as this young man there is always a way out. Reâ€" member â€" Satan finds some mischief still For idle hands to do", and look out for the little odd jobs that will keep you busy. Go in for some definite study. Keep the mind ocâ€" cupied. And then, when the opening presents itself, go â€" through it with the assurance that you have not only found the way out, but also the way upâ€"â€"â€"andâ€" climb,. for "there is ai. ways room at the top." â€" Note: The writer of this column is a trained psychologist and an author of sevgqral works. He is willing to déal with your prob‘ems and give you the bene. fit of his wide experience. Questions regariing problems of EVERYDAY LIVING should be addressed to:â€" Dr. I\&Z. M. _ Lappin, Room 421, 73 ‘Ad. m St. \,V, 'l‘Ol'Ont‘dy Ontario. }(Bu- close :a 3 cent stamped, . addressed envelope for reply. Even the most stubborn itching of eczema, pimples, mosquito or other insect bites, rashes and many other skin afflicâ€" tions quickly yields to Dr. Dennis‘ pure, cooling, lil%u’rd, antiseptic D. D. D. Preâ€" scription. Forty years‘ worldâ€"wide success. Penetrates the skin, soothing and healâ€" ing the inflamed tissues. No fuss â€"no muss. Clear, greaseless and stainless. It dries up almost immeédiately. Try D. D. D. Prescription now. Stops the most intense itching instantly. A 35¢ trial botâ€" tle, at any drug store, is guaranteed to prove itâ€"or money back. D. D. D. is made by the owners of ITALIAN BAaLmM. Would Keep might". You are in this world for some definite purpose. And there is a job for you to do somewhere. Your business is to find that job and then do it as well as you can. . . . That might suit the "prac. tical" and "efficient‘"‘ ideas of certain people; it would be re. pugnant to the ideas of the Canadian people, There is some.â€" thing of memory and challenge and inspiration; and The Jourâ€" mai‘s advice to the proper authorities, offered in every good faith, is that the name "Royal Canadian Mounted Police" be let strictly alone. ITCHING TORTURE Stopped Instantly DO YOU WRITE? DO YOU SKETCH? DO YOU ENTER PRIZE CONTESTS? DO YOU WANT THE BEST MARKET FOR YOUR WORK? OUR MONTHLY SERVICE IS THE ANSWEER. GIFF BAKER 39 LEE AVENUE TORONTO, ONT. D. D. D. Prescription Speeds Reliet Issue No. 33 â€"‘35 A Samgl_g S!neet for 10c. â€" A Month‘s Service 30c. 6 Month‘s for $1.00. 12 Month‘s for $2.00 4P BC $ sTi e e y satisfaction & #. 2}:::.‘\:‘"5 _*,â€" - _ }L-m::,‘ , ‘ ' ,‘;v e E‘ l 2s S 55 * & /\!\J < JV:.i.'-"-t;‘f" es & o e l 6 ts n / ) $5 C [3 <A4 Ety colh <G) ces xt i en C THE PERFECT Chewing Tobacco Old Name 46 F]NEST ANDâ€" LARGEST â€" SELECT herd in North America, genuine Labrador, Yukon, Northern Quebec, sold on grade. Model Mink Farm, Limited, offices, 132 North May Street, Fort William, Ontario, Ca(xnada, DISTRIBUTORS WANTED TO SBLL New Scientific Idea of Preserving EFruit. For full information write Karl Jahr, 195 Church St., Toronto. ~ ~uine leather ties. Fancy _ colored patterns, look like silk, washable, durâ€" able, wrinkleâ€"proof, sell on sight. Big profits. Write Dept. W, Emery Bros., P. 0. Box #71; Ottawa, Ont. There is a tradition of service at. taching to the name "Royal Cana. dian Mounted‘" of which any force in the world might well be proud and the name of which that tradi. tion is a part shou‘d be preserved in action. Classified Advertising cE No. 2388 Firestone LL â€""CEBNTURY"â€"~ORIGINAL "CGENâ€" Accept with ‘confidence the recommendations of these menâ€"Firestone are safe for them and safe for you. See the nearest Firestone Dealer today. IN AA N_ every _ community are records of individual sets of tires, but Firestone have been proved for sixâ€" teen years in the 5C0â€"mile Indianapolis Sp eed w a y Race. Fearless drivers who stake life and victory on tires choose Firestone as the safest and most enâ€" during. ' LGENTCS "CMLN EL

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