Stratford Mirror, 11 Jun 1926, p. 3

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il i] 4 : ij ; | THE MIRROR » Cool on the Hottest Days! --that's Stillman's Pas- teurized Milk--delivered On. (every. Stieet every morning, direct from our big refrigerators, fresh | and cool. It comes in clean, sparkling sterilized bottles, withcream "inch- es down from the top."' CONSULT US About Your | Eye Troubles This old established Optical House will give you trustworthy service at a low cost. PHONE 770 | R. A. REI TICCMAN'S OCREAMP RIND | | | For 8 Years Stratford's Leading Optometrist. 'The Lovely Month of June (Continued from page 1) they played games of running, wrest- ling, tumbling, prancing, or whai not, as they tore madly round. The elder folk acted merely as spectators, set- tling as near as possible to the huge fire to enjoy themselves in another way, no one, however, quitting the scene till midnight, perhaps the mor- ning. ' They leaped over these fires not exactly to show their agility, but fol- lowed unwittingly a religious prae- tice of their pagan ancestors, who did precisely the same as a religious act. An old writer has said that the fire was kindled "the moment the year began, for the first of all years, and the most ancient that we know | of." It was accompanied hy vows and 25 DOWNIE ST. | sacrifices for the prosperity of ihe people and the fruits of the earth. And when the people left each took a firebrand away with him, while the ashes of the fire were scattered to be ™ a ae " | carried by the winds to the four corn- | ers of the earth. | AREAL BARGAIN || .. cmt The first three men in the world seth werea a gardener, a ploughman and a : grazier; and if any object that the $ 12 50 | second of these was a murderer, I de- ce] | sire him to consider that as soon as , he was so, he quitted our profession, will purchase a $45 Gramophone. This machine is in ee ee first-class shape and is enclosed in a high cabinet. The sincerity which attenuates and ever nullifies the importance of truth cannot be the same as the sincerity which is meant to find the truth.--Dr. | Enoch Miller. ' He [SC | Pretty clothes ! What indigestion, LIMITED / t (a | pasty complexions, irritable tempers, 97 Ontario St. { pneumonia, premature wrinkles and 3 a | actual misery are cansed in their * | name. : pe : ae = a ) ) : * And every business is judged | by the quality of its printing. | LETTER HEADS, STATEMENTS, ENVELOPES, TICKETS EVERYTHING FROM A CALLING CARD TO A CATALOGUE The Fletcher Johnston Press 1 23 Ontario Street ¥ Phone 115w By J. J. O'Leary, Mirror Sports Editor "Dingo" Haynes has certainly proy- ed his worth since coming to Strat- pitching and catching, ag well as a reliable hitter. His lates: feat was a circuit clout at Guelph, scoring the only run of the game for the Bards. Dan Mackenzie, the Bards' ener- getic manager, will take a chance. He has got in the winning column on two occasions. He will shuffle the players around un'il he gets a win- ning combination. Sid Gatenby, the Rattan's manager, also has the Juniors in hand. Sid works, these ponies nightly. RG. Van Every, lacrosse director, is on the job every. night at the Col- legiate Flats watching ihe Young Lions perform, Charlie Lighttoot has the lacrosse team in extra good shape. They will give a good account of themselves in j thelr next performance. Stratford Collegiate institute foot- ball team blanked the Listowel ele- ven. one to nothing. They carry a one goal lead for the next game. Peter Pigeon of the Stratford Colle- Ontario. The Junior City Baseball League will open next Wednesilay night at Queen's Park. Be sure and go and see the youngsters perform. Next week's isSue of The Mirror will contain sidelines on the rulings of tourist players as handed out by the O.H.A. executive, We have received a letter from Martin Burke. "Marty" extends his best wishes to Stratford's sporting public. Dufferin Fark Football eleven are keping Stratford on ihe soccer map. Their four succesSive wins to date stamp them as a real soccer team. (Bring on your tourists). Albert Smith's Classics have got in the winning column. The signing of M. Atchison was a. good move. Roy Brothers knows the 0O.H.A. verdict. Now the public will have the facts for perusal from now on, which will give plenty of discussion for all fans interested. 3ill Girby's Indians have tasted de- feat at. the hands of Brocks Motors ' but Bill states that there are more game 'o be played yet. ee awe. ap ore de ee ee He thought it safer to write to the girl's father, asking for her hand, He was an ardent lover, but a poor spell- er, and his note ran: "I want your daughter--the flour of your family." "The flour of my family is good," replied the oldman; "are you sure it isn't my dough you're after?" Dr. Michael Steele PHYSICIAN \ 21 DOWNIE STREET Phones--Office 466, Residence 423 giate is undoub'edly one of the best -- all round Junior athletes-in Western -- SPORT MIRRORETTES -- ford. He has met with success at - | & . ij A a ee oo, EPL pe, a e as well a charitable and _ cultured self-reliance that will prepare us for fellow- | every emergency of life. We need Keep On Moving The little red school house is not only a landmark on the village cor- ner: it is a fact of life. li is not only a relic of the good old hickory siick days; it is a perennial experience. There are periods in life and facts tha: fit them as a key fits a lock. Some facts are associated with the toys of childhood. Some experiences are only for growing youth. Maturity has tis problems and old age iis crowning glories. But education be- dongs to all stages of life's experience. Ths little red school stands on a certain corner. The cause which it represents reaches from the cradle to the grave. A great magazine has placed be- fore its readers this simple maxim, "Learn one new thing every day." This should be a whole life process. The more facts of experience we gather, the wider range of knowledge we possess. the more far reaching are the laby- rinths that challenge our investiga- tions. Education, like experience, is a great arch, "wherethrougn gleams the untravelled world, whose margin fa- Get the stations you want when you want them. | WILLARD | RADIO | BATTERIES will help you get them and help you hold them. They last for years, too. Cc. N. FULTON Stratford Battery Service Phone 800 ) 422 Ontario Street. The Willard Battery men "ES" J des forever and forever 2s we go." What is education? To like a bit of real estate or a vault of government bonds. It is a commo dity of commercial value. Some peo- some it is | ple with a lure for statistics have es- | timated that a high school education is worth 18,000 dollars. Dean Holmes | of |Pennsylvania State College declares that four years spent in college have a dash value of 20,000 dollars, Educa- tion} judged by this Standard is an assei of life as a new verandah to a home. It adds value to a person 4s | a néw barn does to a farm, It is some- | thing that may be quickly transmuted into) cash. Other people have an idea that ed- | ucation is knowledge. The person who-kiows is educated. By this test | the edicated man is a bureau of in- formation. His mind is 'a store house packed full of facts as 4 dictionary with words or a tin can with sardines. | His briin is juSt a powerful dynamo with an endless. capacity for generat- ing facts. Both of these conceptions are er- | roneous. A school or college training | may haye the highest commercial | equivalent and yet provide no guar- | antee ofia refined personality. The | mind may be packed as full of facts | as the desert is full of sand, but if | the spirit is proud and vindictive, if the heart is hard and selfish, if the emotions are cold and narrow, there | | | | | is no real education, | Education is the enrichment of the | whole life, It relates to the disposi- | tion as well as to the mind, It refers | to the spirit as well as the intellect. | It meats range of information and | resources of thought and adequate | equipment for life service. It means | spirit, a rich and winsome ship, a ripe and refined soul. Some- body has well said: "No person is truly educated whose culture of soul does not correspond wiih his culture of mind." And all of life should be a process of education. School days should ne- ver end. There is always new truth within our reach, new culture wait- ing to enrich our souls. We need ney intellectual stamina to clarify | our thinking and to save us from ver- bosity and platitude. We need a grow- ine fraiernal temper that will rise above sectarian and racial prejudice. We need a stability of character and the mental resources that come from carrying the keys of the world's lib- raries in our pocket, and the spirit- uai energies that can be released wilh generous enthusiasm and whole-heart- ed co-operation for the common ends of humanity. This is education and it is a life challenge. The self-conceit of the young is the great source of those dangers io which they are exposed.--Blair. There are no crown wearers in hea- ven that were not cross-bearers here lenses. afield. Phone 584 Vacation Preparations should include a second pair of glasses to be used in case of accident to the ones you already have. You can have your glasses furnished with glare-killing You'll find them most useful on road, water or The tints used in these lenses are invisible. PEQUEGNAT'S Opposite Post Office } | | eX) This is the time to buy! This new Model 92 ball- bearing Cadillac requires no oiling. Strongest suc- tion --getsall the dirt with- out injuring your carpets. Easy to run--a child can -EREE _-WITH CADILLAC VACUUM CLEANER== F RR ELE, This complete set of Attachments given with the Cadillac Ball Bearing Vacuum Cleaner, regularly $12.00, / for the next four weeks only. For the next 4 weeks only a $77 Cleaner $65 M. 1 HIGGINS ELECTRIC AND RADIO CO. Phone 30 Lf operate it. for 131 Ontario Street *

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