Georgetown Herald (Georgetown, ON), November 16, 1938, p. 7

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the georgetown herald wednesday evening november 16th 1936 pge7 1a diet promotes success proper foods more important after 40 forty t h 1 r t v t w en t y by betty barclay so much is being written these days about the opportunities jor an en and women who have reached the 40year milestone and how outstanding some persons beyond that agtvhave been in business and professions that my curiosity was aroused when at a tea party yes terday i was introduced to a well known publisher who has become identified with that subject it is really astonishing what a large percentage of the important accomplishments in business and the arts are being done these days hy men and women oyer 40 be said in answer to my question at one time the age of 40 was considered to mark the beginning of declining years now the con trary is true carefully planned meals hare played a large part in the lmprotement he added with a smile do american housewltes show much interest in the subject i asked and upon being told that it was now one of the most popular topics i said td appreciate some anecdotes for my readers where- upon this famous publisher talked with great enthusiasm on his favorite theme j take the story of mrs harriet packard of the town of kent ohio she took a course in writing at 50 she felt she could write she bad a wealth of material in the expert ences women of her age have had she learned to type her articles she has since written newspaper and magazine articles a book verse a book of remlnlscenc lately a novel tne famous alice foote mac- dongall of new york city became a remarkable success twice after she built up a chain of coffee shops into a i 000 000 business in six large restaurants at 68 she retired about two years later the restaurants failed she lost every thing started again at 6s worked hard for six years and now she ia back on top again want a mans experience hy friend arthur cremln director of the new york schools of huslc has told me that many musicians reach the height of their creative ability after 40 about oneofth of the students in the new york schools of music are over 40 walter damrosch was 41 when he organlted the new york symphony into a permanent orchestra at more than 80 he found a new career in radio and at 74 he wrote his opera the man without a country he told me about several others remarkable success stories that began after 40 knowing my in terest in food he assured me that most of these active people were careful about their diets getting plenty of vitamins and reinforcing the supply with some vitamin rich food like fresh yeast i asked hlra how important he considered the diet and he replied that judging from his record b these people realised that well balanced meala i vpi- little dissipation were the for their successful s a mental activities your eyes the long summer evenings are over you will be doing more reading and indoor work your eyes may need help for glasses op quality at new low prices consult o t walker ro optometrist eyesight specialist brampton who is at rosss dbug store georgetown the second wednesday off every month or yon may consult o t walker at his office in brampton 8doddd l j housewives t enjoy blu coal heating comfort proveforyourself moverlooooocanarjian housewives nave already proved that blue coat gives the highest available standard of heating value and satisfaction let us send you a too phone now w h kentner son phone 12 georgetown blue coa ibc modern fuel for solid comfort millinery see the latest in fall and winter millinery pelts velours velvets in all shapes and sizes 4 a great reduction in prices 1 also vests flowers ribbons misses claridge main street georgetown herald block upstair plan for thewoodlot by i o marrttt many farmers do not have a plan for the woodlot it is known as the bush and they cut their fuehrood and umber from it as long as it lasts they dont realise that if managed well it will produce fuel and timber yearly in perpetuity a common practice is to cut all trees of the more valuable species and the inferior species are left to seed up the open places the stock are allowed the run of many woodlots many farms are without a woodlot today because former owners pastured the woodlot and it is a sure prophesy to make that many more farms will be without woodlots soon as in many sections 75 percent of the woodlots are pastured the stock browse the seedlings each year and as a result there are no sap lings and small trees to take the place of the trees that are cut or fall as a result of decay a woodlot with out young growth is like a common ty of old people it will die out pas luring favors inferior species usually as stock will leave lronwood and cedar and browse off all the valuable maple beech white ash and oak a woodlot has a definite place in the economic set up of a form a it provides cheap fuel and umber also it is accepted as a fact that there should be a percentage of on agrlciil tural country in woodland because if there is not there is sure to be dls comforts and financial losses when the land is laigely cleared the first decision on the part of the owner is to decide on the part to be left in woodland the type of soil will be given consideration as swamps sand shallow soil and steep hillsides should usually be growing trees as their value for cropping and pasture is negligible another question that many owners will have to answer is should fine agricultural land be left to grow trees the answer to this question has often been no but to day many owners envy their neigh bors with their woodlots they real ize that it would have been a bettfr policy if all farms had reserved 5 10 acres at least as a woodlot in order to provide fuel as windbreaks for agri cultural crops as natural reserolrs for springs and as a help to prevent floods and to beautify the country side suggestions on woodlot manage ment 1 fence the stock from the area that is to be left in woods the trees will provide seed that will fall to the ground and soon there will be thous onds of seedlings reforestation by nature is much cheaper and more sure than by planting 2 secure fuelwood by cutting de fectlve trees and thinning second growth stands 3 reserve the healthy 4 inch to 10- lnch trees as they are ones tha will grow the maxlum growth of wood during the next flxty years rather than the saplings and old mature trees 4 utilize trees before decay starts as the decay lowers the quality of the wood and thus reduces the financial returns from the woodlot 5 the reproduction of the more valuable species should be secured possible and this object may be ob tained by cutting the inferior species and leaving some of the more valuable ones to seed up openings 6 plant trees in the open woodlot that has been pastured this speeds up the restocking of the woodlot and introduces valuable species that have disappeared or never grew there prt vlously these trees may be secured for by applying to the forestry branch parliament buildings toron many birds winter in canada contrary to the popular belief that a general exodus of canadian bird life takes place in the fall many birds remain in this country even in midwinter as is shown by the iin nuol surveys held around christmas by observers in various parte of the dominion the greatest variety ioi any area was found about toronto where the survey parties discovered no fewer than 9234 birds of 58 differ ent kinds on december 26th last these included seven kinds of wild ducks six kinds of hawks a mine four of gulls five kinds of owls four kinds of woodpeckers two robins two meadow larks eight cardinals and twenty five song sparrows hamilton ontario with 9511 birds of 57 dir ferent kinds was in second place for variety especially interesting b rds noted near that city were the winter wren and brown thrasher in this district we have the advantage of a comparatively southern position and of having large areas of open water near them so that our winter brd population includes large numbers of both water birds and land birds surveys have been taken at a time when the birds were stationary the southward movement was over and the northward flight was not yet un der way some of the birds noted in this district such as the snipe robots meadow larks wren and brown thras her normally winter farther south and those seen in canada during christmas week may be regarded as stragglers left behind a winter popu lation of ducks hawks gulls owls woodpeckers cardinals and song sparrows on the contrary may be regarded as normal along the shorts of the more southern great solomon by mldbed weus c whmlfr syndic wnu sarvlc cxlomon murmured the red haired girl there is no santa claus solomon splashed violently in the dim recesses of the tin pail and gasped at the blasphemy furthermore she continued as the street car lurched around a cor ner life is a delusion and a snare it was mean enough of mr perkins i tn sell you while i was out without making me be delivery boy solomon and the two otfier gold fsh being engaged with the ardu ous business of trying not td batter their tails against the cover paid lit tie or no attention to the latter re- mark the car groaned to a shrieking j stop discharged a crowd of passen gers and ravenously engulfed an- i other the red haired girl paid no i attention engrossed as she was in her ov n thoughts with a grunt and a scream the car reluctantly dragged itself into motion it was as she gazed absently at i the floor that they came within the range of her vision brown they i were and well polished the shoes short short story complete in this issue thrsads of life its odd a man thinks bis own will guides his own life but the jwprtd is fuu of human lives a man abound to blunder into some of them weave his own with them ln- dlsaohlbly or touch and drift amy and touch again or narrowly miss touchin and majfce never know the pattern is on the loom aod sometimes looking back you see a part of it a thread weaves tn and out and disappears it is not broken but sttll weaving is u incidence when it appears again un known or imoanactous forces ol a prosperous man and conscious of their social position draped tastefully around the top with the folds of nicely tailored trousers also evidently aware of their exalt ed status in a world of ready made suits haltmg in front of her the shoes settled themselves into the position of the shoes of an accomplished straphanger for a while she watched them absently then her gaze traveled slowly upward her expression was only that of idle curiosity but as she glimpsed the face under the soft hat she gave a start that sent solomon and his friends into splash ing frenzies solomon she confided ungram matically as she took a renewed grip on the tin pail solomon it s him it s clifford wayne himself in person he hasn t seen me after a second stolen glance or per haps he didn t know me she added as a less pleasant afterthought crash i the sudden impact threw the passengers into scrambling screaming confusion hoarse shouts of men and shrill cries of women arose from inside and outside the truck which had caused the acci dent roared deafeningly in its at tempt to drown out the others ex cited spectators gabbled and pushed it is at such moments of excite ment that we lose out heads solo mon was no exception bruised and battered he flung himself against the roof of his churning prison it moved slipped gave way the pail tilted and solomon felt himself be ing carried away bodily in a rush of water that swept him along in spite of his mad struggles to hold back there was no time to waste he must save himself from being trampled beneath nhe feet ofthe crowd only one way offered he must jump jump as he never had in his young days m the shop when they had been forced to cover the tank to discourage his aerial- ambitions and jump he did with a mighty ef fort a twist of his shining supple body a slap of his tail he left the foamy deluge and soared into the air as if released from a spring in a graceful gleaming curve he swept upward for a second the arch of his flight was a golden red rainbow then he came to rest in a place totally different from any which he had before known half strangled he wriggled fur ther into the retreat in which he found himself then resorted to ag onized twisting and gasping as that retreat seemed to be taken with violent convulsions something prodded at him tried to dislodge him he was choking the world was growing blacker he gasped in termittently with distended gills his struggles grew more feeble a fish the man stared blankly at the wet slippery body which he had with difficulty remo ed from be tween his collar and his neck what the redhaired girl was scarlet with embarrassment as she rose to her feet having released her death grip on the portly gentleman s knees he a mine the words were very faint as she held out the tin pail in which solomons panic- stricken friends were hiding motion less i m sorry he got out of here i say youre the girl i met at joan frenchs party who ran away before- x could get more than one dance with you no explanations accepted aa she laughed and start ed to apeak i know when iva been snubbed but tell me this where have you been keeping your- seltf rvebeen looking f you ever since solomon murmured the red- haired girl as the man sat down beside her disregarding the excite ment and confusion around them there is a santa claus you re ft r h thompson co fall hardware it i 1 genuine edison mazda lamps 25 40 and 60 watts 20 banner ash sifter electric sandwich toaster c each 298 195 i kv best grade vutr ing nail and cement included 1ply 150 p ro 2 ply 190 j 3 ply 225 1 r caulking cement black 98c gal grey 198 gal cocoa door mats 14 x 24 49c cocoa door mats i8 x 29 85c household axes with handle 1 39 window glass j 0 x 1 2 per doz 75c window glass 12 x 14 per doz 85c all sizes in block at lowest prices galvanized wash boilers 98c mossberg bolt action 22 cal rifles fr 900 up dust mops from 4c up chan wax clb rent johnsons electric floor polisher pease furnaces with fire pots guaranteed for 25 years plumbing healing tinsmithing and electrical work r h thompson co phone 46 georgetown ton will find us helpful in a score of ways rs4sk for a free copy of our booklet your bank aod how yon may ue it1 bank of montreal georgetown branch j r smith manager banking snvic mmmfmj ii glftfngh advertising pays try it

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