Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Bobcaygeon Independent (1870), 22 Jun 1933, p. 3

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rout e in Hate: t Comments spaper Trial: y Returned 'eam Fata‘ if )VI ses Increase ; 51: Sam mile: a?! districtgtnd I'imheqn mfrx-e )u Ma M Misfits fifth! wwrj 1% injured er's hook Mort o wil! wnic with :3 $68 :ienc M a.) )rob mdx ,xtxes That rsifl n of aver, at pace task for four BD )re 5 of .in 1t! :ted hen Y0“ 0g: thc an! 30ft )I )ei 1m: has RC. tht ide th! in; 101’- eat and am‘ thl 311‘ 0E nd In 13 at oi The improvement in this woman's figure, after she had lost 28 lbs. of un- wanted fat, can easily be imagined from the comparative measurements :which she gives below. Note also the 'other effects or the treatment she used. Her method is evidently a good one to follow. -.u.rg‘ vuv yv -vâ€"â€"' v . “I am 24 years of age; height 5 ft. 5% in.; and a short time ago my weight was 28 lbs. above normal. I was listless and without energy. Now, af- ter taking Kruschen Salts regularly I 'Ilave lost 28 lbs. in weight, and have much more vitality. Also I have a ‘very good complexion, and I do not have face blemishes of any kind. Sure- ly this must be due to my having pure blood, and I attribute the fact to my taking Kruschen Salts. give my measurements below: Before After Weight 168 lbs. Weight 140 lbs. Bust 42 ins. Bust ...... 34 ins. Waist 31 ins. Waist 26 ins. no In.- Iy this must be due to my having pure blood, and I attribute the fact to my laking Kruschen Salts. I give my measurements below: Before After Weight 168 lbs. Weight 140 lbs. Bust 42 ins. Bust ...... 34 ins. Waist 31 ins. Waist 26 ins. Hips ...... 40 ins. Hips 36 ins. “I made the above reduction uni-cf. months, during which time I must 't that I did not touch chocolates {u giweets of any description, pastries, I kept to 1....bén-u nr €11 9‘31" Kruschen combats the cause of fat by assisting the internal organs to per- form their functions properlyâ€"to throw off each day those waste pro- ducts and poisons which, if allowed to accumulate, would be converted by the body’s chemistry into fatty tissue. Un- like ordinary aperients, Kruschen does not confine its action to a single part ; a! the system. Its tonic effect extends to awry organ, gland and vein. Kruschen Salts is obtainable at all Drug Stores at 45c. and 75c. per bottle. WHAT IT MEANS TO LOSE 23 lbs. Sotatoes. butter Reduced Bust 8 ms., Waist 5 ms., Hlps 4 ms. GAINED NEW ENERGYT ‘ age forty~six times a. year, and each boy fifty-seven times. The 5 and 8 year olds were found to attend twenty- two times a year. By still another check it was estimated that the coun- try’s youngsters between 5 and 20, con- jtituting 31.5 per cent. of the popula- tion, made up 37 per cent. of the mo- Such are some of the findings in four years of study by prominent ex- perts on child welfare, made under the auspices of the U.S. Motion Picture Research Council. The Weekly Attendance The number of children attending was reached by the sampling process, by questioning 35,941 boys and girls between the ages of 8 and 19. Each girl, it appeared, attended on the aver- Scientific answers are now ofiered to the questions of how movie “thrill- ers" really affect children. Children in general are excited for more than sdults by what they see, even eight times as much, in some cases; the Ideas and action presented are large factors in shaping habits and judged by numbers, the younger members of the population make up a. dispropor- tionately large share of motion pic- ture audiences. Youthful Emotions Often Much More Stirred than Adults', the Payne Fund Study Reeals 28â€"C over 29â€"Incites 81â€"Drank 34â€"wrd Child’s Reactions To Movies Tested Language Sâ€"To terrify llâ€"Revolutionary general‘ lZâ€"W’anderéd 14â€"Dye 15â€"Plume 17â€"To leave 18â€"Cover Iiiâ€"Crouching 20â€"Perched 21â€"Exists 22â€"Spirits 23â€"Prefix: before 24â€"Narcotic 26â€"Sticks 27â€"8011 of Adam 1â€"South African imporGHti-Gold- HEAD OFFICE: 74 KING Assays among the best and the oh 37 ll Horizontal or sugan I kept OUR CROSS-WORD PUZZLE In West §hining Tree‘ lâ€"To exile 2â€"D1'y 3â€"Nothing 4â€"Preposition Eâ€"Not uniform 6â€"Tapestry 7â€"Rime maker Sâ€"To stroke 9â€"Part of “to be" 10â€"Representative best and the chief-mine i Write for particulars. 35â€"Criminality 36â€"Note or scale 37â€"Equivalence 3Sâ€"Chief waterpipe: 39â€"Decay 40â€"Type unit. 41â€"Famous soprano 42â€"Mature 43â€"To deny 45â€"Lassoes 47â€"Norsemen 48â€"Avarice ll? Vertical this for four months, and lost 28 lbs. I honestly think it would not have been possible without the aid of Krus- chen Salts, because as my weight is now normal for my height and age, I am able to keep it without dieting, just by continuing with the Kruschen Salts alone."â€"(Miss) M. S. Perhaps the most striking revelation in the study is the great contrast be- tween the effect of “thrillers” on child- ren’s emotions as compared with adults. A “psychogalvanometer” was taken to the'movies by two scientists, Dr. Christian A. Ruckmick, Professor of Psychology in the University of Iowa, and his assistant Dr. Wendell S. Dysinger. “The human body,” explains Henry James Forman, writer of the popular piesentation of these studies, de- scribing the experiment, “is known to offer resistance to certain small elec- trical currents. The degree of this re- sistance, owing to changes in the chemistry of the body, is raised or lowered under stress of various emo~ tions. The electrical currents used are so faint they cannot be felt, but tion-picture audience, or 28,359,000 patrons a week. Mining Merger l2 Answers to Last Week Puzzle ST. E., TORONTO Measuring Emotions llâ€"Pertaining to apples 13â€"15 fond 16â€"Sea bird 19â€"Painfu1 spots 20â€"I‘owdered tobacco 22â€"Sedate 23â€"Above 25â€"Kind of beer 26â€"Aims 28â€"Destroy ing 29â€"Higher 30â€"Bozed larger 31â€"To cease 32-â€"-Rau away 33â€"Fruits 35â€"Openings 38â€"Companion 39â€"To get up ’ 41â€"Play on words ‘~ 42â€"Deer " 44â€"Note of scale 46~Conjunction is near production. E Limited After finishing with the Egypt. the Artiglio probably will be engaged by the Egyptian Government to seek gold and other treasures from N8.- poleon’s s__hips, which were sunk by Lord Nelson off Aboukir Bay in 1798. Brest, France. - The Italian sal- vage ship Artiglio has sailed for a final attempt to raise approximately $1,500,000 in gold still in the strong- room of the sunken P. and 0. liner Egypt, lying 70 fathoms deep off Point de Raz. In four previous summers of work, the Italian divers recovered $3,- 500,000 of the total cargo of $5,000,- 000 in gold and silver which the liner carried from London on her last voyage, May 19, 1922. The Egypt sank in 20 minutes after be- ing rammed in a fog by the French freighter Seine. Of the 44 passen- gers and 291 crew, 97 lives were lost. crooked. “Against this long record of disad- vantages the movie children are superior in two measures they are mentioned oftener than the others in the Guess Who test and are named more frequently as ‘best friends’ by their classmates. Tests showing no diflerences by this technique include honesty ratings and honesty as mea~ sured in and out of school situations, persistence, suggestibility and moral knowledge.” To Make Final Attempt To Salvage ‘Egypt’s’ Gold Following the line of least resist- ance is what makes rivers and men Stoddard and Holaday’s guess is “that pictures play a considerably larger part in the child's imagination than do books.” “We have found," they reported, “that the movie children average low- er deportment records, do on the aver- age poorer work in their school sub- jects, are rated lower in reputation by their teachers on two rating forms, are rated lower by their classmates on the Guess Who Test, are less co-opera- tive and less self-controlled as mea- sured both by ratings and conduct tests, are slightly more deceptive in school situations, slightly less skillful in judging what is the most useful and helpful and sensible thing to do, and are somewhat less emotionally stable. “The very youngest children," Mr. Forman reports “carry away at least 52 per cent. of what their parents would carry away from any given pic- ture, and the average for all children studied by Drs. Holaday and Stoddard is 70 per cent. retention, which is a very large percentage. Curiously, too, this percentage of retention seems to grow with time, and after the lapse of a month many children actually re- member more than the day after see- ing the picture. Children who are most frequent moviegoers were also tested by Pro- fessors May and Shuttleworth. How much do children remember of what they see? Not much, is the common assumption. Dr. P. W. Hola- day of the University of Iowa sought an exact answer. “Boys,” says Mr. Forman, summing up the results, ‘after seeing a movie showed an average increase (in rest- lessness) of about 26 per cent., and girls about 14 per cent.” In ndividual cases, he adds, the restlessness in- creased as much as 50, 75 and even 90 per cent. And for as long as four and five nights afterward the restlessness continued to be above normal. Need For a Reminder The presence of an adult to reassure the child makes the effect less serious, it appears. The investigators used the phrase, “adult discount,” to des- cribe the aid given by the occasional reminder that, after all, "it is only a picture.” It has, they report, a salu- tary effect in lessening the shock of horrifying pictures. And it is import- ant during the picture rather than af- ter, according to this judgment, as merely a happy ending is not enough. The intensity of the effect was measured in yet another way by chart- ing the restlessness of children after attendance at the movies. This was done by three investigators by equip- ping beds with special apparatus to register the movements of children during their'sleep. One hundred and seventy girls and boys of from 6 to 18 had their sleep records taken for 347 nights, both when they had been to movies and when they had not. Adults tested were able to muster an excitement only equal in galvano- metric language to 1.2. Adolescents registered 2.0. while the youngest group, including children from 6 to 11, registered a figure of 3.6, or three times as much excitement as adults. Effects on Sleep The writers of the Payne reports are not averse to occasional moments of excitement for children, but they be- lieve that such frequent orgies as a large proportion of America‘s children appear to be having through the movies amOunt in the words of Dr. Frederick Peterson, neurologist, quoted in the survey, “t6 emotional debauch.” “Stimulation,” he says. “when often repeated is cumulative. Scenes causing terror and fright are sowing the seeds in the ‘system for future nervous disorders.” in the presence of the varying degrees of emotion the body's resistance causes the delicately poised needle to the galvanometer to oscillate and to give an index of the amount of that resistance. Effects On Character ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO Out of ninety thousand women there will be eight-nine thousand, nine hun- dred and ninety-four who will read this. The other six will be blind. “That would be all right, sir," said the applicant. “I've had plenty of practice. You see, I used to work in the assembling-room of a big motor- car factory.” “So you think you would be a suit- able valet for me,” said the very old man to the applicant for the post. The man nodded eagerly. “I must remind you that I am a, bit of a wreck,” said the other. “I have an artificial leg that needs looking af- ter, a glass eye, and a wig and false teeth." The man who used to have his hair cut by his mother now has a son who has his finger nails cut by a mani- curist while the barber is shampooing his hair and the- porter is shining his shoes. What makes some men popular is the fact that they haven’t any opinions and can conscientiously agree with anybody. Bossâ€"“But you can’t afford to get married on your salary.” Hannahâ€"“Ir. must have beenâ€"to the monkeys.” Workerâ€"“Well, that ’s a good ex. cuse for me to ask you for a raise.” Merry-Go-Round Trousers for women is the latest fad! It has advantages! All the mar- ried men will have to do is to buy two- pants suits. The happiest bride isn’t always the one who gets the best hus- band, but the one that makes the best of the boy she got. The wise acre is the one that gets itself divided into building lots. If you sell what you produce here at home, why not do all your buying at home, too? Experience is a dear teacher, and it’s the woman who pay. If a girl's face is her for- tune there’s billions in a drug store. You can’t knock a cork down but it will bob up again. Be a cork. Few men or women out their wisdom teeth until after they get married. The longer some people live the more popu- lar they become with themselves. Georgeâ€"“I was up at the zoo yester- day watching the monkeys. It was very interesting.” Many men carry the impression of always winning, largely because when they see they are beaten, they retire quietly and with little noise. The Spotlight The sun shines\6n, not caring That clouds may hide its light; The stars never stop to wonder If they’re on view to-night; The river flows, and the green grass grows, And it's nothing to them if nobody knows. But a. :an must have admiring eyes Fixed on him when he labors, He works less for the joy of work Than to impress his neighbors. But he’d have more fun, and get more done, If he'd emulate the stars and sun. Customerâ€" I want to get something for my stomach. " Drug Clerkâ€"“The lunch counter is on the other side of the store, sir.” Sorry,” said the youngster, thought perhaps you might wish to dragged ashore.” One day, however, when the often- sive sounds were at their loudest, a young member strode towards the cul- prit and said: “May I help, sir?” “Help! repeated the diner. “I don’t need any help.” “Yes; and there was a time when you always called me ‘Daisy’; now it’s just plain Mrs. Brown,’ as if I were the merest stranger to you.” Hubby shrugged his shoulders. “I’ve since found out my mistake,” he replied. “Daisies shut up at night; you never do.” A member of a London club has the habit of taking his soup in a boisterous fashion. The noise upsets other mem- bers, but they are too polite to protest. Jenkinsâ€""I've been talking to both families.” Quite the Reverse She was trying to get the last word following one of their domestic quar- rels. Jenkinsâ€"“Too bad that Harry Har- per and Gertrude Hijinks aren’t good enough for each other.” Harrell â€" “What makes you say that?" The girl who sets out to ma money will findâ€"that most men the gold-digging standard. ISSUE No. 24â€"33 Well Qualified For Men Only sets out to marry for are off In the middle group of rocks on the west side of Treen Castle is the Logan Rock. This is the famous stone which, though it weighs 65 tons, can be moved and rocked by a child. But once on a time the mighty fell, and the story of that fall will never be forgotten. William Borlase, the mid-eighteenth century chronicler of Cornwall, wrote that the stone was “so evenly pointed that any hand may move it to and fro but . . . it is morally impossible that any lever, or indeed any force (however applyed in a mechanical way) can remove it from its present situation.” Years after, in 1824, this challenge was ac- cepted by a certain Lieutenant Gold- smith, R.N., a nephew of Oliver Gold- smith, commanding a revenue cutter in these waters. With the help of a boat’s crew, he managed to roll the stone off its base. It cost him £2,000 to have it replaced, with the aid of elaborate machinery made expressly for the purpose. There are other rocking stones 1n Cormrall and in Wales, but none pos- sessing the interest or dimensions of the Logan. Pliny tells of one at Har- This property has been for eight centuries in the undisturbed posses- sion of the Vyvyan family, as ownâ€" ers of the manor of Trevidren. It consists of about 35 acres of rough cliff land. Treen Castle is a very fine example of the fortified headlands which were known as castles. It is a < pe of three different groups of rocks, and seems to have been a sancâ€" tuary or fortress of the ancient in- habitants of the country. Colonel Sir Courtenay Vyvyan of Trelowarren, Cornwall, has present- ed to the nation, through the National Trust, one of the most fascinating and fantastic properties on the wild and rocky coast to the west of Mounts Bay, Cornwall. In- cluded in the gift is the mass of gran- ite known as the Logan or Rocking Stone. Sirf Courtenay Vyvyan has made it certain that the right .of ac- cess to the public and to the owners of adjoining land will be preserved for all time, and that no buildings shall ever be erected there, other than the little watch house which already stands there. THEORETICAL AND PRACTICAL INSTRUCTION le given In various trades. The schools and classes are under the direction of AN ADVISORY COMMITTEE. Application for attendance should be made to the PrInpraI of the school. COMMERCIAL SUBJECTS. MANUAL TRAINING. HOUSEHOLD SCIENCE AND AGRICULTURE AND HORTICULTURE are provldou for In the Courses of Study in Public, Separate. ContinuatIon and Wall Schools. Collegiate Institutes. Vocational Schools and Departments. Copies of the Regulations issued by the Minister of EducatIon may I. obtained from the Deputy Minister. Parliament Buildings. Torch“. Faxfious Rocking Stone With the approval of the Minister of Education DAY AND EVENiNG CLASSES may be conducted in accordance with the regulations iuued I! the Department of Education. , The Canadian Wool Company Limited 2 CHURCH ST., TORONTO “THE LARGEST HANDLERS OF WOOL IN CANADA" High School Boards and Boards of Education We are in a position to Pay you the Highest Possible Price for Your INDUSTRIAL, TECHNICAL AND ART SCHOOLS WOOL . Are authorized by law to establish Natural straws are getting to be his favorites. 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