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The Colborne Express (Colborne Ontario), 10 Nov 1932, p. 2

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THE COLBORNE EXPRESS, COLBORNE, ONT., THURSDAY, NOV. 10, 1932 Woman's World By MAIR M. MORGAN "A Woman's Place Is In the H< The Best Medicine With winter snooping around the corner and rain slapping agaii now panes we are tempted to the Are and dream. It is a timely warning to write that the best medicine of all is fresh air. It is strange but even in these enlightened days, many people are afraid of it. They do not mind the fresh air of a calm mers day but immediately the air gets a nip in it or there is rain, hail, they huddle themselves up, shut all the doors and windows, and stay cut of the cold. This is the way to foster ill-health. If you want a plant to grow strong and healthy, you plant it in open ground and let the rain and win batter upon it as well as allow the sun to do its work The sun, no doubt, brings the blooms, but the rain and the \ make the plant strong and healthy and vigorous, enough to bring forth the blossoms which the sun or .mi Many people, when October sets in, exclude fresh "St from their homes, and fear Tresh air for their children. They take their children to school and ask the teacher to keep them draughts and not allow them to go into the playground in case they catch Sitting in stuffy rooms poisons the tissues of young and old, besides weakening the pores of the skin The skin reacts t„ the atmosphere. The pores close to atmospheric conditions, hermetically sealing the body against chill from the elements. This is only if the body is allowed certain degree of light and air Tc much sitting in stuffy rooms has weakening or demoralizing effect upon the skin and the pores do not react. Thus it happens that people who stay indoors a good deal are always suffering from cold or "catch cold so easily that they are afraid to go out. If they would be less afraid they would have bette-- health. Every woman in charge of a house should, now that the season of fires and closed-in rooms is upon us, make it a habit to allow fresh air to flow freely through the house at least twice a day. A systematic opening of doors and windows should be adopted morning and evening, so that the house is adequately aired in the morning after the night, and in the evening after the day. In this way the air can be kept fresh and the atmosphere ^prevented from getting stuffy. Daily walks should not be neglected, nor the children forgotten. A romp the fresh air will make a pale, listle child rosy and merry again. To wash metal lace spread clean white cloth after it has been shaken and brush all over with camel hair brush dipped in spirits of wine. Gold and silver tinsel and colored silk lace can be cleaned in the same When|washingjhandkerchiefs, or anything that will be better for a little stiffening, but does not really n starching, try dissolving a lump two of sugar in the rinsing water. You will find that this give- just the required finish. Here's a new way to cook peas: Place a few outside leaves of lettuce at the bottom of a saucepan, sprinkle with salt, put i-i peas, and shut the lid tightly. Add no water, as the lettuce provides plenty. Simmer gently till done, and before serving place a piece of butter on the peas. Serve very hot. Sprinkle a little sugar in the bottom of a tin in which biscuits are to be kept. This keeps them crisp and fresh. If you have to wear spectacles when cooking you may be troubled by the learn misting them. Rub t' lenses ith soap, then polish well and the glasses will keep clear. French Pancakes.--2 eggs, 2 oz. 1 r, 2 oz. sifter sugar, 2 oz. flour, pint milk. Beat the butter to a cream, add the eggs (well beaten), stir in the sugaj and flour, and when well mij add the milk (slightly warm). B :ture for a few minutes, put buttered plates, and bake in a quick oven for 20 minutes. Serve with lemon and sifted sugar. Eggs will beat rr.uch quicker if a little hot water is added to them first. This '-;o has the effect of making cakes an1, puddings much lighter. Biscuit time is here and here two old favorites: Campus Romance An ideal couple. Ruth Wenter, Northwestern university's beautiful co-ed, said "yes" to Paul Cummins--voted "ideal mai campus sororities--and they will marry in January. Health Give me health, and a day with Nature, and I will make the pomp of Emperors ridiculous.--Emerson. Styie Flashes We are well into the Autumn s< and naturally one's first thought is of .warmer clothing. It will be thrifty invest in a suit, and when selecting it be sure it does not commit a breach against the established rules of good taste. A smart tailor-made suit is best, made from a fabric that is not loud or gaudy, and with "this one hand-knitted sweater must be included. One's hat, this winter, must also be simple affair, small, preferably, and of felt fablic. Gloves are very important. Let them be of good quality--it will pay in the long rum \ Shre i Saying tin- s i pict Household Hints • When cutting the fruit for Christmas cake flour the cutting board and knife. This prevents fruit from sticking, and if the flour is sifted and measured, the quantity used may be included in the amount required in the Ants To drive out ants from a cupboard or pantry scatter a few cloves about on shelves or in cupboards where jam, honey, treacle or any other sweet things are kept. A Tin Stove-Lid When cooking with wood, remove the lid and substitute a tin pie plate; this prevents the pans from getting black and heats through very quickly. It is also very good when ironing or roasting bread. White Spots on Polished Table Cover spots with ordinary table salt, using plenty of salt, and moisten with cold water (a very little water will moisten quite a bit of salt). Leave on spot until salt is dry, then rub off briskly. Spots will come off with the in using a vacuum cleaner on rugs, lay the small rug on a Dne--the small rug will not slip, would do if it were laid on the .• floor; also, run the cleaner Lso, rather than lengthwise, of Tea Biscuits 2 cups special cake flour, sifted, 4 teaspoons baking powder, % teaspoon salt, 1-3 cup butter or other shorten-g, 2-3 cup milk (about). Sift flour ice, measure, add baking powder and salt, and sift again. C t in shortening. Add milk gradually until soft dough is formed. Turn on floured board, knead lightly, roll % inch thick, and cut v,:.h floured biscuit cutter. Bake in hot oven (450 deg. F) 12 to 1.5 minutes. jr'iu-s :it biscuits. f' v Baking Powder BiMits 2 cups special cake flour, sKted, 4 teaspoons baking powder, y2 teaspoon salt, 2 tablespoons butter or other shortening, 2-3 cup milk (about). Sift flour once, measure, add baking powder and salt, and sift again. Cut in-shortening. Add milk gradually until soft dough is formed. Roll y2 inch thick on slightly floured board. Cut with floured biscuit cutter.. Bake in hot oven (450 deg. F.) 12 to 15 minutes. Makes fifteen 2-inch biscuits. Difficulties To this day I thank difficulties. They weres more numerous than the nice, happy incidents. But the latter gave me nothing. The difficulties of life have hardened my spirit. They ave taught me how to live.--Mus- Watching the Pageant of India An Akali, a wild-eyed, wild-haired Sikh devotee in th,) bluechecked clothes of his faith, with polished-steel quoits glistening on the cane of tall blue turban, stalked past, returning from a visit to one of the independent Sikh States, where he had been singing the ancient glories of the Khalsa to College-trained princelings in top-boots and white, cord breeches. Kim was careful not to irritate that man; for the Akali' temper is short and his arm quick. Here and there they met or were overtaKen by the gaily dressed crowds of whole villages turning out to some local fair; the women, with their babes on their hips, walking behind the men , the older boys prancing on sticks of sugar-cane, dragging rude brass models of locomotives such as they sell for a halfpenny, or flashing the sun into the eyes of their betters from cheap toy Queer Mistakes of Smell Many curious disorders recorded by physicians in man's most neglected sense, that of smell, are collected by Dr. Ernest M. Seydell of Wichita, Kansas, in a report published by the American Medical Association. This is briefly summarized by Dr. E. Free as follows, in his Week's Science (New York): 'To one patient, himself a physician, violets always smelled like phosphorus. 'To another, the asphalt used in eet paving seemed to have a sickening odor. 'Still another thought that everything smelled like cabbage. To one more fortunate individual it seemed that everything smelled like heliotrope. A person who took a dose of the headache and fever remedy called antipyrine smelled a continuous odor of cinnamon. In another pati-i dose of the drug called santonin produced a smell of something burn-A sexton exhuming a buried body was oppressed by the odor of decay, until he opened the coffin and found it completely clean and empty. "There exist, also, persons whose smell-sense apparently is normal but who can not recognize what they smell until the odors are named; a condition which Dr. Seydell believes indicate disease of cercain parts the brain. Smell disorders should be more studied by physi-, Dr. Seydell believes, especially by post-mortems on the bodies of persons known to have had such disorders, so that corresponding abnormalities in the nose, the nerves, or the brain may be discovered." ■many boasts the largest soap A little later a marriage procession would strike into the Grand Tmnk with music and shoutings, and a smell of marigold and jasmine stronger even than the -eek of the dust. One could see the bride's rhooly, a blur of red and tinsel, staggering through the haze, while the bride-bewreatted pony turned aside to snatch a mouthful from a passing fodder-cart. . . . The crowd thickened as they near-l the resting plaice which ""*" the end of their day's joarj of stalls selling very food, a s.aek of firewood, a police' station, a well, a horse trough, few trees, and, under them, some trampled . ground dotted with the black ashes of old fires are all that mark a garao on the Grand Trunk if you except the beggars and the crows--both hungry. By this time the sun was driving broad golden spokes through the lower branches of the mango trees; the parakeets and doves were coming home in their hundreds; the chattering, gray-backed Seven Sisters, talking over the .day's adventures, walked back and forth in twos and threes almost under the feet of the travellers; and shufflings and scufflings in the branches showed that the bats were ready to go out on the night-picket. ... Then the night fell, changing the touch of the air, drawing a low, even haze, like a gossamer veil of blue, across the face of the country, and bringing out, keen and distinct, the smell of wood-smoke and cattle and the good scent of wheaten cakes cooked on ashes. The evening patrol hurried out of the police station with orders.- Snap Shots Sunday School Lesson Human hair is half as strong as the steel used in structural work. Six newspapers printed in modern Arabic are published in New York. Three tons is an average load for an adult elephant to carry on its back. - Gt. Britain's national stock of fowls November 13. Lesson Vll-Making a and ducks is increasing, but they have ^'V'"g_*m°s \11! 15;M tLuk,e fewer geese and turkeys. I 16"f . Gold_e" Text-Not slothful It costs the United Kingdom on ln bUEmess- Romans 12. 11. an average $300 a year for every per- ANALYSIS, son sent to a prison or similar institu- j exploiting personality, Amos 5: tion. H-15. Statistics show that in the matter of IL developing personality, Luke 19: adoption girls are four times as popu- 11-26. lar as boys with foster-parents. | Some new sources of petrol suggest- , Introduction--After many years humiliation at the ha.-ds of her enemies, Israel began to recover. Under Jehoash (2 Kings 13: 14-25), and still i..ore under Jeroboam (2 Kings 14: !3-29), her fortunes rose to great ed by scientists are a certain variety of seal, the wood of plane tre cotton-seed oil. When their Majesties travel Royal train about forty persons ac-1 heights. During this era of peace and company them, including ten mechani-' expansion the upper classes became :rts ready to tackle any break- increasingly wealthy, careless Agricultural produce sold from farms in England and Wales in 1930-31 as valuer7 at £197,400,000. This was drop of £18,830,000 on the previous )uth Afrii Amos 2: 6-8. The downtrodden lower classes became increasingly poor. Meanwhile external religion flourished. The sanctuaries were crowded. The people were self-satisfied and proud. They congratulated themselves that it was to them God had said, "You only have I known >f all the families of the earth," Amos Knots Identify Crooks Knots in rope, cord, or string nected with a crime are now are carefully preserved as finger prints by criminologists who have found thi the type of knot often gives a clue to the identity of^ the criminal. This is due to the fact that different types of people, as well as people in various occupations, from force of habit tie particular types of knots. Says Popular Mechanics (Chicago) : Textile workers, for example, use ie weavers' knot, cattlemen and people used to horses often use the Texas bowline, lumbermen and truck-the timber hitch, physicians the surgeons' knot, farmers the Tom Fool's knot, and seamen use several distinctive ties. These and many others are carefully tabulated and placed on exhibit where crime investigators compare the specimens with clues, such as bundle wrappings or knots used to bind victims. s case, where nearly all the evidence pointed to the theory that l had been thrown to his death from a boat, an alert detective proved likely by showing the knots tie the victim's feet were the work of a landlubber. In another instance, knots used n tying bundles or narcotics together led to seizure of a gang of dope pedlars, because the knots were similar ; UIlkeeP o£ hospitals. But th to those used previously in a smug- inot define what gled shipment in which the shipper was known. Not only c casional knot, but he can also tell something of the person who tied it. He knows if the knot is right or left-handed, and he studies it for additional kinks or twists often put in by force of habit by the person making the knot. In such instances, a detective may build a conclusive case against a suspect by merely asking him to knot a piece of twine. ! personality, Amos I Cycle-stealing is Becc •alent in Cape Town, that the police want machines to be 3: 2. sed and officially stamped with : mber to aid in identification. 11-15. Tibetan mastiffs, of which there are Into the midst of this godless so-specimens at Whipsnade, are said to ciety, the herdsman and vine-dresser be the worst=tempered dogs in the of Tekoa hurled his denunciation, world. Keepers approach them in r™ven awav bv th3 -^"^ priest pairs, so nasty are their dispositions. , »t Bethe1 Aunos committed ms mess-Out of 6,500 unemployed boys and . n£er be accused ot indul girls recently examined by .the British ing ;n :nat gafe but futne poaching Ministry of Health, ninety-three per'wi,icn deals with general principles cent, of the boys and nearly ninety- without making the obvious applica-four per cent, of the girls had no phy-| 1 ons; or with vague denunciations of sical defect. Over eighty-four per sins which touch no one. He was in mt. of the total had good health. I earnest and courageous, therefore de-There are now more than 4,00 public! finite and practical. The rich (v. 11) telephone-boxes, including kiosks ln I were wealthy landowners. They made shops, in the London (England) area. | ™S ^Sot of their Thefts from these have been costing ivory.ado.rned stone houses rose tha the telephone service more than $1500! dark shadow of poverty, made even month in lost receipts, without reck- darker by their heartless oppression, oning damage to instruments. j God had planned that these people Among the new "-- officially adopted dictionary by one apple," a bomb; ra pation, whether legitimate or.t in which money is made; and "racket-,! acteristic of our own dav is the "apex-one who is engaged in an illegal 0f atheism." The rotten social struc- "gangster" words' should be "brothers a'I." but a rela-into the American ' lively small group of the strong, ag-> expert are: "pine- j gressive members of the family had occupation such a of Israel, unheeding the prophetic warnings, fell. What about our own, already tottering? II. developing personality, Luke 19: 11-26. Jesus, discovering that his hearers '"1 vere still expecting an earthly to be set up immediately, told Taximen Ordered to Rest Madrid -- Madrid taxidrivers ha ie day of rest every week, whether they like it or not under a new city All drivers "wdrk Saturdays and Sundays. The iniiial of the "day off" is lettered on taxicab doors as follows: L for Lunes (Monday); M for Martes (Tuesday); X for Miercoles (Wednesday) because the M has already been used for Martes; J for Jueves (Thursday), and V for Viernes, (Friday). a "V" cab driver forgets and goes to work on Friday, he is promptly shooed off the st'eets by traffic "Hot Dogs Not a Meal" Declares Montreal Judge What constitutes a meal was one _- the problems which Judge Cusson, .. of Montreal, had to decide a few days kingdi ago. An act of the Quebec Legislature1 thl'? Pf™ble m order to stimulate their provides that every meal of «c^[^^^^^^ or over shall pay five per cent, to the death of Herod the Greatj his son, Provincial Government towards the ( Archelaus, went to Rome to secure his unkeep of hospitals. But the act did on appointment as successor. At the j__ j not define what was meant by a meal. | same time the citizens of Jerusalem ,|r I Hot /dogs and pat&tes frirtes are popu-1 sent a -strong delegation to oppose him I ar along Quebec's Highways, and the ■ (vs. 12, 14), but they were unsuccess-:pert tell an oc- question frequently arose whether'. .Y- 1f- , , f . , ... they should be taxed if the amount I Llfe' Jesu* IT' dealV alrIv ^ of a purchase came to 35 cents. Fin-1 T^' ^hll%s°me hw? . \ 1 ., , advantages than others, yet, in the ally the Treasury Department decided m0?t imp0rtant sense, all are born on a test case. This time the inspec- j w;th an equal cha«ce. "To each man tors selected sandwiches and beer. In he gave a pound," v. 13. "I had no each case the bill amounted to 35 opportunity," some one cries out, poor, cents, but the hotelkeeper did not col- ill, suffering from some h-.ndicap. lect the tax and was therefore sum- "Nonsense," replies conscience. "You moned to court ' J-ad an equal chance with your more After consulting many dictionaries,1 "chly-tndowed neighbor-the chance English and French, Judge Cusson j L d£_y°ur best * not affect a i if i Winter's Icy Breath Felt Already in Dakota ith the gifts you hat I He had no more." The world measures ... that the legislation did vou bv the rung ,.f the laddcr < v,-h=ch odd glass of beer, a sand-j ;t finds you. God, your own -con-wich or even a hot dog. He conclud-' science, considers how far It was you ed that a meal is food taken by a per-! climbed. son at regular hours. Hence, he adju-1 The man who gained ten pounds (v. dicated, a motorist who stops on the i 16) is th'; one who used his ©ppcrtun-highway at 3.30 in the afternoon, goes! lties to tho tulL Note the prair-, 'be-into a restaurant and orders a glass j cause thou hast been falthful-of beer, and a sandwich priced at 35 ! uThe five-pound man (v. 18) made a cents is not eating a meal, but is mere-"* showing with his lite that the world ' atisfying what might be a false \ £^t$Sffi& ffLS ;er promoted by tresh air. The have done twice as well had he really case against the hotelkeeper was ac-1 DUt him.-clf into his work. He did not cordingry dismissed. That seems to, have the joy and satisfaction that have been a sensible finding.--The To- com&. from the knowledge that a man Mail & Empire. has done his best. The praise of v. 17 is missing. * The man whc wa- afraid to trust his money even to the bank (v. 20) represents the great number of people, endowed with gifts of hand, heart and brain who make no use of them. They know that life's law is "use or loss" (vs. 21, 22) yet they refuse to develop their possibilities. -Failure to do so brings, not an arbitrary loss, but an inevitable loss. The muscjle unused becomes eventually impotent, the brain unused deteriorates, the soul unfed It w£o the Master's intention that these men, each in his own place in life, should develop all his powers. It is our Father's will that the world's business should be carried on so that men may grow to a full, well-rounded An economic system based on the profit motive prevents that. It is estimated that only one-third of the population, in our highly-industrialized countries are comfortably above the poverty line. A Christian social order will so distribute the rewards of labor that every man who does his best will all that God intended.

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