I, Tk §=¥9a58 i w Aw From 10 am. costs you absolutely ted , self to ; 7 pm. 0 nothing to LINE free tensday test supply 3 the herbal muscle-tonic "Plapao, p and to examine and have demon. i to you privately = a scien treatment, which so many s attest under oath rid them rupture and the knife, saved them AO--FREE Stuart's Playao-Pads are different {rom the trus ico-chemico applicato to keep the y rts, and to minimize ha During Plapa friction, and suceesstully t home from work. Rome; 0" to the affected a REN THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 26, 1930 bus 17 of them EE ied LH ih 0 » njont 3036 16% 1096 1998 +o BOB 4256 150 1 Lao #t, vrs 025 B12 264 2 t. Joan J on /] te 1028 cra ihine Unt see. 08 Tervifie'! BE Va isisisninneiiine 36 WM % A clear explanation of the work ings of one of these units is afford. ed by Df, Alphonse Lessard, Director, and Dr, Pmile Nadeau, Assistant Di Joon th obec Provincial Bureau of onlth, What is the "County Health Unit" system at present operating in the province of Quebec? It consists in the establishment, in a county or in two small neighboring countries, of what might be designated as a "Bu. reau of Health in Miniature," come of a full-time medical oMeer, two or more public health nurses, & sanitary inspector charged with the enforcement of the health regulations and with the education of the muni cipal officers, together with a secre tary to. bandle the clerical work of the office which is generally located in the principal town of the country, The whole population of the coun try is thus submitted to constant su- pervision on the part of this staff, Health education is intensively car ried on, a considerable amount of propaganda work Is done continually, and not a single municipality es capes the attention of the officers of that unit, The medioal officer covars all the parishes, meets there the civil and religious authorities, maintains cor dial relations with local doctors, give publie lecturcs (announced the pre di Sunday by the cure in the , bel n made con- er of abric to apply ~|8ny 8 thou- treated ut hin- Awarded Gold Grand Prix, Paris orable Mention, San Fran. of of support. "Be Sure to Call! ress for any and place, write for FREE PARES" X Plapio pulpit) has friendly talks with mo thers on the necessity of prenatal, post-natal and preschool hyglens, visits the school and looks after out. breaks of infectious diseases, The nurses examine the school chil dren and refer those defective in way to the family physician; they give the teachers instructions in byglena which they, in turn, pass on to their pupils; they go directly into the homes of the people to make them understand the necessity of fol lowing the golden rules for clean and healthy living, they advise young mo- thers how to protect their bables or bables to be, ete. The sanitary inspector visits the municipal enforcement of the health laws, looks after water supplies, sowage, nuisances, sees that quaran tine is observed in case of contagious diseases, eto, The secretary attends to the of floe work, handles correspondence, answers queries, keeps records, and, one | nt matter, collects from sends them Statistics fn 0 vienndB01 277 90. B4 ~ Death 4 FH EARILL , marriage and death ocertifl | on them, {f 'of each, and necessary, takes & of Vital to our Quebes,: rm ------------s 18 SOLUTION OF SOUL PROBLENS or of re was outlined Dr, D, N, Mer ho Social Bers of the United hig | Canadian 46 19 | discon u ly and sty the fact that the Christian Church in its relationship to men and wo- men of all natioalities, in all walks of life and under all circumstances, would be judged by this standard, It must be, as one writer had said, the application of the principles of Chirist or else the end of our civill. gation, This was the supreme thought of great intellectual minds today, and never was there a time in the history of the world when the words of Christ were more closely scruitinized than they are today. Perhaps this was due to ine ternational troubles, or industrial unrest, or to other causes, but nevertheless it was a fact, H of the Masses Continuing Dr, McLachlan spoke of the mental hunger of the masses in all lands, In the world today there were two or thres million people who were never. anything else but mentally hungry, There wete men, who seeking employ. ment honest and sincere, could not find it. Rightly they feit that they had a place In the world but their efforts to fulfil thelr God-given purpose had met with failure, It was the duty of people to solve the roblem of unemployment even if t meant smaller dividends and smaller pay envelopes. The ques tion of distribution was one which was forcing itself more and more on the Christian church today, In the Canadian Wost The speaker dealt briefly with the prob of spiritual hunger as it effected men and women of all lands, and more particularly In Canada~~in the great western pro. vinces where Bunday Schools were soarce 'and greatly needed. In Can ada today there were 500,000 chil~ dren who never see a Sunday School, A nation which provided only secular education and neglects od the spiritual was sowing the wind and would in time reap the whirlwind, "There was also the striking faot that from 60 to 75 per cent, of the non-Anglo-Saxon people of Canada with great eon tributions. 'Their children stood high in the schools. They came with great power of consentration and with a vision of the possibile ties of Canada, Dr, McLachlan made an earnest appeal for young people to enlist in the eo of the church and go forth to educate these people along secular * and spiritual lines in order that they © Lyons' Tea id a blend of the finest teas of India and Ceylon, lt makes you feel dpeclally blended as if it were iver jot hay build' into our national life and make raat contributions to on s In closing Dr, McLachlan spoke of the ministry of the church to those in prison, He pointed out that the nation which built stone walls and set within them iron cells for the imprisonment of men and did not seek to eliminate the pit- falls into which men fell along lite's highway was making a grave mistake, Brief reference was made to the drink evil which had made ftself more apparent in the pro- vinces where government control of the sale of liquor was in force, Vice could not be eliminated by vices, nor could temperance be pro- moted by Increa Hquor sales, The problem of the church was to feed the hungry, minister to the sick and weary and carry out its great mission as outlined by Christ, A ------------------------------r RLY PASSIONS SWEEP FRANGE Parisians Celebrate Centen- ary of Romanticism and' Impressionism Parls, March 3'=-A passion for centenaries is sweeping France, This year, it is the centenary of Roman. ticlsm, of Impressionism, of the first appearance of Hernan, In the hurly-burly of these exposi- tions, there is much prying into the rivate Jife of the great romantic. i not only once but many times, sts, Tristlan Dereme in a delightful criticism in Le Figaro, shows the! difficulties to be feared, "There is," he says, a kind of fury which seems to seize the literary en thusiast these days, which impels him to hunt in the secret drawers of the great writers, to expose thelr contents to the public gaze, It is « perfectly useful and deplorable prac. tice, It is characteristic of our time to try to find the wun behind his work, Vanity! Ragely ib the author worth his book, He is usually an ordinary man like the rest of us" Dereme has been a flood prophet, Again it has shown that it is not wise to know your hero too well, Res vivers of romanticism have been con. siderably embarrassed by thelr dis. coveries, Georges Sand Is reproached with foving fan better than God, with wearing masculine attire, with all the weaknesses of romanticism and some of the extravagances of femine ism, But her faults were romantic nature , Balzax is charged with the faults of realism, The redoubtable searcher after truth in the human heart who forgot the hue of the violet to find the worm gnawing its roots! It was not known till now that Balzac was ridden with the obsession of making a large fortune in com. merce, ¢ planned the creation of 8 grocery store, not the common corner grocery, but a great central unive.jal grocery. The idea was worked out with Georges Sand who was installed at the till. Dalzac also planned the floating of a company to cultivate pineapples, Each pineapple was to bring 32 cents profit, \ Georges Sand's answer to this proposition has been lost, per- haps fortunately, amartine was prouder, or affected to be, of his vinyard and wrote: "They say 1 am a great poet? Well Tam a great wine grower." De Musset was much piqued if eople did not admire his art as a uggler and his skill as an embrold- er. Yet to Victor Huge, he sald: "In a hundred years, people will still 'be repeating 'my verses, while vours will be forgotten," Hugo did not speak to him for 10. years after this remark, It is coms forting to know however, that they were reconciled. So much go that, one day, arri at the Academy of the Immortals, de Musset asked the secretary? "Is Victor "luge thére?" NO, "Oh then IL am going away altos gether" 'But' why 1" "Because," replied de Musaet, "there is no one, Hugo, it scems, was a great adept in spiritualism and was extremely laid to |' superstitious, never bitting down to table when there were 13, He had three things in ation bouquets, overcoats and ume elias, His pet aversions will not detract from hig fame, But Balzac a Georges Sand keeping # Jiroecey plore ~~ that was 4 painful 'find fOr the lovers of ro- mance California. Valley Outrivals Sahara The Imperial Valley of Cal fornia enjoys rather hot weather during the summer months, with temperatures well over 100 de« grees, El Centro, the home of T, R., Goodwin, is 50 feet below sen level and climatic conditions there during the summer months provide ample opportunity for any auto. mobile to show ity mettle, Each day during the summer Mr, Goodwin drove his Viking to and from his El Centro store and his summer homo on the crest of the Ban Liego mountains, 49 nWles dis tant, The difference in elevation is from B50 feet below sen level to 4,000 foet above, "There is pleasure in desert driving. in spite of the excessive heat, states Mr, Goodwin, During our hottest months the Viking and 1 left the store every evening about 0 o'clock. The temperature was usually bétween 100 and 110 de- grees, The only way we could get 8 breeze was to drive fast, and that we did, making the trip home in from 58 to 63 minutes, We would cover the return trip of 49 miles in the morning in from 065 to 08 minutes, ) Some people seem to think 110 dogrees iy hot, but there is some thing wrong somewhere hocausge In all our runs I never had to add a drop of water during the day, This certainly proves the superiority of modern mechanics over man be- | cause hardly a day passed when I did not liave to quench my thirst horrars Everyone likes to attend a big blowout unless It happens out on some highway.~Petrolin Advertiser Tople, "Highland lassies, wear short skirts," remarks an American visit or, So do Highland landdies~London Humorist, These are great days for the road hog. He can make a splash almost any. place he goes.~Port Arthur News-Chronicle, It takes all kinds of pec, Lo make a world, Some will speak well of a fellow townsman who {sn't even sick! Border Cities Star, | Hyde STREETS WITH CHANGING NAMES | CONFUSE TOURISTS Business Is Lost and Shop| keepers Want Name Mergers it ---- London, March 26~-A revolt over street names is brewing in London, It Is caused by the many, many names which is pletuyesque London often clutter up a single wifle of thoroughfare, Shopkeepers In sections fre« quented hy foreigners and other transients find they often lose business because of the bewilder- ment of a stranger unaccustomed to looking fer a shop on a strest with many names, They are agitating for street name mergers in the interest of simplicity and convenience and pet- ter business, At present one can find Baker street by walking south along Park Road until it becomes Upper Baker Street, After being Baker Street again for a fow blocks it becomes Orchard Stroet, then Aud~ ley Street, then Grosvenor Square and finally South Audley Street, Baker Street, however, is only a mild example, There is Oxford fitreet, so important among the shopping thoroughfares of Lon. don, Yet Oxford Street is not the half of It, nor even the tenth of it. A stroll along this thoroughfare really should begin several miles to the west, ' where it hears the sporting name of Goldbawk rosd. After a while the street-signs indicate it would rather be known ay Bush Green; but it tires of that quickly and becomes Holland Park Avenue, then Notting Hill High Street, then Bayswater Road, then Park Terrace, Hyde Park and finally Oxford Street 4 | | Place, ugein, After seintillating as Oxford | street for an while, however, It onlls itself New Oxford Street, but quickly becomes Holborn, then Holborn Viaduct, then successively Newgate Streot, Cheapside and Poultry Lat then Aldgate, Fenchureh Street, Whitechapel High Road and wo amp suxious fo find good Box 821, Oshawa, Ont. Street, Whitechapel Mile End Road, Wo have a number of yory fme children ranging in ages from © months to 14 yours « boys snd girls «= for whom We can recommend these children, Given a fair chance they will make good, You owe thése good Canadian children that chance, Correspondence invited, Address -- 0, M, ALGER, Superintendent Children's Ald Society, EIGHT KILLED WHEN STRUCK BY GAS CAR Four Girls Yet Unidentified in Level Crossing Crash Near Auburn, N. Y. Auburn, N.Y.,, March 24.~~The bodies of ~ight victims of a grade crossing crash, four them uniden~ titled, were in_mortuaries here to day, while authorities strove to fix the identities of the four girls who rode with four yeuihs in a light sedan into the path of a gasoline coach on the Auburn branch of the New York Central Railroad at Shoemaker Crossing, five miles went of here, last night. The bodies were very badly mntilated. The coach, travelling downgrade at high speed, caught the sedan broadside, hurled it against a Voss 50 feet away afd scattered the bodies of Besaw and his com. panions for 300 feet, along the track, Identification in the case of several at least is expectel to prove difficult because of the mutila- tion, RETURN OF HYDRO ASSETS Oshawa, March 15, 1980, The Bditor, Oshawa Daily Times: The reports apparing in the press regarding the bill Introduced by the Hon. R. J. Cooke appears to convey a wrong impression, In the first place none of these reserves are being returned direct. iy to the municipalities but the re- serves will be used to take care of losses incurred fn the purchase of this system, in the way of intang- ibles also other losses incurred by sale of the different distribution systems to the municipalities, loss on price. of bonds selling below market value ete, These funds will also be used to build up the generating systems and take care of obsolete plants, The balance (if any) after these are taken care of will be placed to the credit of the system as a whole and will be reflected In the reduced cost of power to all municipalities in this system, Jt would appear that the main object of this Legis lation is to enable the Government to dispose of those assets, When they purchased these assets they re- quired special Legislation, There- fore, they require Legistation to fispose of them, F, L, Mason, Magnesia Best for Your Indigestion Warne Against Doping Stomach With Artificial Digestants Most people wha suffer, either occasior ally. or chronically from gas, sourness and igeation: have mow discontinued disagree able diets, patent foods aud the use of harmful drags, stomach tonics, medicines and artificial indigestants, and instead take teaspoonful or four tablety of Disurated Reagnesia in a little water after meals with the result that their stomach no longer troubles them, they are abls fo eat as they lease and they enjoy much better healt! Koss who use Bisurated Magnesia never dread the approach of meal time because they know this wonderful anti-acid and food corrective, which can be obtained from any good drug store, will instantly neutralize the stomach acidity, sweeten the stomach, prevent food fermentatich, nnd male dimes tion easy, Try this plan yourself, but be certain 10 get Visurated Magwesia especially prepared for stomach use, Eh | "yp NLL LL " i 4m dl i LL Ym ol Taal JRE "A GOOD INVESTEMENT i | Advertise In The Oshawa Daily Times \ lL -