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Canadian Statesman (Bowmanville, ON), 13 Jun 1935, p. 11

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THE CANADIAN STATESMAN, BOWMANVILLE, THURSDAY, JUNE l3th, 1935PAELEN '4 'g CORTC lOY NICH OS NVLL j ter, for many years district engin- ee r at Nelson, B. C.. and'now dis- ORONO j trict engineer in charge of the.Do OR NOminion Government Works ai ar Arthur, Ontario. Prom The News, June 6th Mrs. Marie Smith, who has been Miss M. E. G. Waddell, Toronto, is making ber home in the West, is holidaying here. occupying her own residence here Miss Myrtle Smith is visiting fri- formerly tenanted by Mrs. Wmn. ends in Toronto. Staples. Mrs. Earl Grady, Hamilton, is Mrs. Charles Lowden, and daugh- With her mother. ter, Miss Phyllis, attended the grad- Mrs. Isaac E. Chapman, 7th Con- uatiflg exercises o! her daughter, cession, has been il. Miss Doris Lowden at St. Michael's Miss Eileen Jones visited Mrs. Hospital, Toronto. Treleaven, Newtonville. Early Sunday morning a bullet Mr. Tom Lewis has returned home from a .22 calibre rifle put a hale from Toronta hospital. through the south window of Rus- Miss Evelyn Blagden a! Carlisle sell Maior's residence. opposite the visited Mrs. R. Henry. C. N. R. depot. narrowly escaping Mrs. A. Somerville of Toronto vis- for Mr. Major felt the bullett whiz ited oldtime friends here. by his head. Mrs. Chisholm, Toronto, is visiting Mr. Ed. Pinder and son Harry, lier niece, Miss Laura Allin. Tonnto, were visitors i towf. Harry Mr. and Mrs. Johnston. Gra!ton, is travelling for a line of ladies'1 Visited their daughter, Mrs. P. C. sports Wear. Mr. Ed. Pinder, Who Brown. ca rried on blacksmithlng here for Mrs. J. H. Osterhout has returned over forty years, is still hale and from visiting Mrs. A. E. Jones at hearty and in his 88th year. Lindsay. Mr. Charles Doncaster, Bawmnan- Mrs. Wood and son Harold of ville. who makes his home with his Toronto are visiting her cousin, Mrs. daughter, Mrs. Elgin Wight, dropped Fred Cowan. into tawn last week. Charley is a Milton and John Tamblyn at- native-barn Oronoite. but le! t the tended the Hostein plcnic at Wood- home town 52 years ago. Hlis wife, bridge, June 3rd. formerly Agnes Gibson, passed away MrS. Arthur Townley and daugli- eighteen months ago. Charley ma- ter, Miss Katherine, Fenelon Falls. tared into town with Mr. John Fish- vislted Mrs. A. A. Rolph. er, author and well-known promoter The east section of thie Mrs. Rus- of the plan of "Rural Indus try in sell Best residence on Park Street1 Action." was raised the past week. Durham Regt. band have been en- "Enthusiasm is the height o! man; Iaged ta furnîsh music at t.he it is the passing from the human tot Orange celebration In Toronto, July the divine.'-Enie1'son. 12th. Mrs. Duncan bas been appainted Barber's Itch and Ringworm are caretaker of Park Street Unted relieved by the use a! Douglas' Churcli, succeedlng the late John EgyPtian Liniment: ciuick, certain Green. resulta . Relieves t.he most obstin- Dr. and Mrs. John Chester and ate cases. famlly, and Mr. and Mss. Neil Mc- Kenzle. Toronto, vlslted their father, Mr. T. Smith. The twlns, Gerald and Jean Rain- ey, are enjoylng their flrst outing iti O their aunt's, Mrs. Wm. Hoar. R. R.RRO N 4 Bowrnanvllle. YA -O N Congratulations ta Keith McElroy, former Orono boy, on passlng bis IN S firat year exams in medicine at Un- iversity o! Toronto. A prominent business man of Maple Creek, Sask., Frederlck Henry Northcott, farmerly o! Orana, dled suddenly May 2nd at the age of 57. Miss Iva Linton, Mrs. Leonard Doncaster, Toronto, anid Miss Joy Doncaster, Port Arthur, visted Mr. ON G. M. Linton. Miss Doncaster isaa daughter o! Mr. Purcell E. Doncas- CONSIDER MAKING TOWNSHIP COUNCILj UNITED COUNTIES Your CRWIHT____ lnWul anai oot Cartwright Council met June lst 1aiWudMiti oot as a Court af Revision, with Reeve1 Markets For Local MlIk N. Green presiding and members al Proilucers present. Ey s N. M:unt::. Mrs. T. Robinson Meeting the possibility af North- Eyes and Thos. Richardson appealed ag- umberland and Durham f armers ainst thi seseto andsteylsing their milk trade with the Tor- had purchased from C.P.R. Assess- onto milk market, due to the latter's ar's valuations were confirmed. insistence that their herds be T. By C. H. Tuck, Opt. Following changes were made in tested and within a restricted area, Eyeslght Speclallat the Roll: Dr. McArthur, Thas. Kear- members of the Counties Council at sey. N. Sublick and Mrs. Jas. Ma- their session on Wednesday nlght EYESTRAIN AT DUFFERENT Iho each allowed a dag off. Plan considered the proposai that the AGESI 92 Lot 64, chianged from C. V. Ellis Minister of Agriculture be urged ta, ______ta Mr. and Mrs. Brooks. include Northumberland and Dur- Part 14 On motion the Assessment Rall as ham in the restricted area now be- ______now revised will be the Assessment ing planned. Dr. J. B. Reynolds, Sympathetic disturbances m a yRoll for 1935. Court closed. noted agricultural authority, ad- show their existence through the Cuclte met in regular ses- dressed the cauncil, detaiing the eyes. Should the eyes turn sudden-so.Cuiain from Dept. of three methods by which herds may ly in aduIt life a suspicion of ît I Highways stated they had recelved bc tested and cleared of T. B. cause may be found in same press- amended bylaw re Road Supt. Under the supervlsed plan, appli- ure on the 'brain and may be det Wm. Venning requested the price cable ta grade herds, which farm an accident or ta some form 0 put on timber out of drill shed. On the majority, government inspect- growth. The turn or squint inI motion set price at $25.00, except ors loaked over the herds and pick- childhaod is generally of a differenti.t1ýe long sticks. ed out those with tubercular in- nature and become stralght througb Dr. McArthur presented account fection and removed them for training and develapment. re Mrs. Fred Moore, which was re- slaughter. But, there was no com- ferred to Road Supt. ta pay certain pensation allowed the farmer for the Eyestrain is very often new strain1 amaunt each month out of Mr. loss of his cattle. Compensation was through the use or abuse of the eyes. Moore's road cheque. available, however, under the ac- Unusual and rare effects may 1,e Orders were signed as follows' credited herd plan, applicable ta found reflexiy, dlstributed remotely 0. Wright. roads $ 390 .51 herds wlth at least f ive pure breds throughout the body because of H. Beacock, Sec.-Treas. in the herd. Those culled out for nerve connections. When the pat- S. S. Na. 5 125.00 T.B. were elai'ghtered but compen- ient's resistance is 10w a minar errar G. Wright, S. S. Na. 8 450.00 satian allow--thý.e farmer. wlll have as great an effect as a Port Perry Star, 200 falders 5.00-________ much higher error would have on a Hydro Electrlc. Mr. Lycett persan more normal physlcally. arrears as pald 24.40 enotn wrk depends on e ur Amusement tax tickets meet 34 TURED and IRT LE the fact that modern life is hard on 2nd at 7 p. m. TN you feel the eyes and often they are greatly W. Beacock, Clerk. LJweak and abused af ter wark and nat In proper .nrvous? Is your f orm when the day's work begins. housework a bur- (To be cantlnued) GETTING AWAY FAST ~ den? Take Lydia E. Pinkham's Twa negro boys were argulng :: Vegetable Com- abou ghats.One clalmed ta have,,rn raM MAJUING SURE The conductor came down the bus collecting ftares and stopped bef are a passenger who was sittlng wlth bis arms extended in f ront o! hlm. "lYour fare, pleat-e?" he asked. "lYou'll flnd a dîme In my rlght- hand coat pocket," said the man. The cnductar started at the man IlAnythlng the matter wlth your arms?" he asked. "Oh, no," camne the reply, "the Iwidth between my banda la the size o! a pane a! glaus Ilm golng ta buy." seen a ghasitas-iie passed te cern- etery the nlght before. "What was dis ghas' doin' whenl yu las' seen hlm?" asked the doubt- f ul one.1 "Jes f allin' behin'; falim' behin' rapld." A.Ke 'ly 0- Woodstock,New ~ Brunswick, says, 11 was weak and rundown. A neithbor broughg me your Vege- table Comipound. It helped meusc mucb that 1 amn taklng 1: now at the Change." Got a bot*kNO W. It may be lun the medicine YOU need. - - v-e- A NEAI.TN SERVICE or TNE CANAOIAN MEOICAI. disSOCIA"TION %ND IJPE STATISTICS The crlt.iclsms whlch are heaped upon statisticasbahuld be directed at those who attempt tu interpret the statisties rather than at the statis- tics themselves. Af ter ail, statisticO are merely a record o! facts ex- pressed in t.he form o! figures.ý Facts are facts, but the Interpreta- tian o!f facta may be f aulty. Many people are lnterested in bload pressure. For one thing the want ta know what is the nra rate. The truth la that there is nu such thing as a normal bload pres- sure. Statistics give us the average pressure o! persans who are appar- ently normal. Individuaily, we are not average persans, and we may still be normal even if we do net canform ta the statistical average, It is only somne f if ty years ago that a practical apparatus was devised whereby physicians could measure the blaod pressure. The use a! the sphygmomanameter is now a regu- lar part o! the medical examination. It la one of the most useful alds which the physiclan has at his com- mand. The blood must be under pressure in order that it may circulate. The pressure dependa upon the heart, the bload vessels, the blood itself and the condition a! the organs through which the blood Passes. Not only may the blood pressure be affected by changes in ail or any one o! these, but it la also lnfluenc- ed bY the emot.lons. Ini certain cases, lncreased blood pressure, or hypertension, Is f ound ta exist wthout any apparent cause. The persan hlmself la uniaware o! It, and it la fortunate for hlm if it la detected at a perladlc health exam- ination befare any harm has resuit- ed. Such hypertension la knawn as an essential hypertension. It accurs most commonly amang those Who live a strenuous or worrylng and en- ergetlc life, takilng nu time for re- laxation. Statistics show that men wbo are above the average welght. are frequently victlms. Prevention lies flot in drugs, but in good health habits. Avoid over- eating and Sa avaid over-weight. Eat in moderatian of a wide variety of foods, maklng sure ta include milk, green vegetables and fresh fruits in the diet. Moderate exer- cise at somethlng which la enjoyed provides a part of the relaxation- Physical. and mental-which is re- quired by ail. Sufficient sleep is es- sential. Ail of this may be sunimed Up by saymng-live a reasonable, hy- gienic life, farget statistics and so contrai your blood pressure. Questions concerning health. ad- drezsed ta the Canadian Medical Association, 184 Callege St., Tor- onto, will be answered personally by letter. Miller's Worm Pawders are a prompt relief from the attaks of worms in children. They are Pow- erful in .their action and, whule leav- ing nothing ta be desired as a worm expellant, have an in(vigorating e!- fect upon the youthful system, rem- edying fever, biliousness, loss of ap- petite, sleepleEsness, and other al- ments; that fallow disorders caused by worms in the stomach and bowels. 5-M7...to rab ont pain and affleas; to re- li 1ev. aisandi apraine; to huai up cuts, wourids, hurma, chappedi skaadinsect bite&. SCheck vryour kit eo b. murs Mimard'a Sle tSie. . us ne bie thi"a enhaving a doctor &long. Made for 50 Y"." b? Minuds Liniment Co., Led, Yarmouth5 N.S. s5 Irale.aAgunsa: SHarold P. itce & Co. Ltd.,Toroiute CHEVROLET MODELS READY FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY Se. t'he new Standard Series models priced os Iow as $712 Delivered oi Factory. Oshawa PAGE ELEVEN 13 bk"l iL 0 -l 0 C

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