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Port Perry Star, 2 Mar 1933, p. 7

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d|ada can be vastly extended by im-| = Bs, fist it early and frugally. "Better increase the ni ber of your meals than increase the quantity of food you take at each one. "As soon as you awake in the morn- Ing, rub the chest in the region of the heart. Otherwise, by getting out of a will take your business and professional "standing that the agricultural resources of Can- proved tillage methods. : ° That is the position taken by A. E. McKenzie Company, Ltd, in its new 1933 Seed Catalogue, just issued from the Company's hegdquarters in Bran- don. Considerable space is devoted to an explanation of the Exhibition and Conference and to urging attendance by the general public, as well as those directly concerned with agriculture. To arouse the widest . possible in- terest in the event, the McKenzie Com- pany announces two cash prize con- tests in which $5,216 will be awarded for letters, predictions of attendance, and so on. ' Many new and highly Interesting varieties are offered in the McKenzie Catal for the first time, among "The heart is to man what roots are to a tree. "If you decline from your original state of prosperity, say to yourself that what you have left will suffice for may take my prosperity me,' say to yourself, 'but they can Hi SLE peek i 8 | ditions and both answering a distinct them two which are of unusual import- ance--the Sand Cherry and Crested Wheat Grass, both plants ideally suit- ed to Canadian soil and climati¢ con- need. The former makes a new and wel come contributiod to the Canadian rural table in that it is a juicy, de- licious small fruit, suitable for baking and preserving, one which is easily grown with marked success in the western provinces. Crested Wheat Grass solves many of the feed problems which have con- fronted farmers in past years, It is a hardy grass, extremely long-lived and highly resistant to drought. It is in prime condition in early Spring and late Fall and may be used both as pasture and for hay. Stock are fond of it. It-is Canada's most newly de- veloped Forage Crop Plant, and now offered for the first time in commer- cial quantities for sale. mm rh Fools "Who's Who" New York.--George Jean Nathan, dramatic eritle, suthor,iconoclast and man #bout town, is either 61 or 37 years old, but he has to stop a min- ute and figure out which. "For a long time H: L. Mencken and 1 have had to bam-boosle 'who's who' a little," he explained. "We've pretended to be 14 years older than we were and maybe get some credit for profoundity." ee pee. *] have often said that all the un- happiness of men comes from not knowing how to remain quiet in a - _ Horizontal _ 47--Verse 14--Name for Negro 1--New Zealand bird = 43--Pretty. "17--To repair 4--Musical note §0--To fall fn drops 55 Goqgess of discord 6--Indlan savant 33-Fehisn poet, 23--Exclamation 11--To imbibe ~Behold 24--Pronoun : H 56--Comparative ending 13--Women's apartments 36--Approves 69--French artcle 15--Part of "to be" 19-Oue who carries on g1--Station 30--Cooky grudge 63--Piltered 32--Breakers 18--Parent 65--Was fond 36--Prepared 19--0ld pronoun 37--Oriental god | 21--Emperor 86--Pronoun 38--Found sum of 67--Consumed 22--S8core at bridge 39--Damaged 24--Existed Vertical 41--Prefix: half 26--Mistakes 1--Fdery queen 43--Color 28--Globe 2--Followed order 44--Conjunction 29--Revises 3--While 46--Musieal note 31--Traps 4--To worry 48--Swamp 33--TFoward 5--I11 treatment 51--Role 84--Lay 6--Cooked in milk 63--Group of nerves 36--To smear 7--Port of "to.be' b7--Welsh river 38--Part of "to be" 8--Wiles 58--Thus 40--Spikenard 9--Pronoun 60--Point of compass 42--A word of cheer 10--To reveal 62--To depart 45--Obstruction 12--Belonging to 64--Note of scale 256--Kind of jacket 27--To plerce chamber." " Answers to Last Week Puzzle Tokyo's Tramcars Speed Up 6 Kilometers Tokyo,--The speed of Tokyo's tram- cars has been increased from a maxi- mum of 24 to 30 kilometers an hour and 100 additional cars have been put into service to meet the increas- ing competition of taxicabs. Investigation by the Municipal Blectric Bureati, which operates the city's tramways, revealed that more and more tramcar patrons Down in Weight and Very Pale Mrs. Beare Thankful for Way In Which Dr. Williams' Pink Pills Helped Her Back to Health "I can truly re commend Dr, Wil Gained Weight for they did and Color | yiamg' Pink Pills, wonders for me," writes Mrs. Mabel R. Beare, New Westminster, B.C. "After a long and very trying illness, I was down to 90 lbs, in weight. I could not eat a hearty meal, In fact, I have had to go away from the table hungry, from a dinner I dared not touch. I was also very pale. I had often read about Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, so thought I would give them a trial I soon found I was able to eat with any one, and life began to look brighter. My weight came up to 118 Ibs. and my lips and cheeks had lots of color, I am more than thankful [ ever took Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, and I only hope others will try them." Dr. Williams' Pink Pills actually create an abundance of new red blood, which is the reason they have given new vitality and strength to have tdken to taxicabs because of their greater speed. Meantime taxicab operators an. nounced they will have to increase rates if the Govérnment grants a petition of the six leading oil com- panies of the empire to increase gasoline prices to 60 sen (about 121% cents) a gallon. th ds of such nervously exhaust- ed women. Equally helpful for grow- ing girls. 'Try them. At your drug- gist's in the new glass container, 50c. ---- "Ice Water Test" Detects - High Blood Pressure The latest results of experiments with an '"ice-water" test" that may serve to detect a tendency towards high blood pressure early in life, was described by Dr. George E. Brown, of the Mayo Clinic, Rochester. The cause of this type of blood pressure known as primary hypertension 1s not definitely known, but the new test is believed to reveal an inborn oversen- sitiveness of the nerves which go to the blood vessels and this may be the cause of that type of high blood pres- sure, i Everybody is subjected to hedt and cold, worry and fear, and some to joy, and whereas the normal person meets those conditions and emotions without permanent harm, the person with an oversensitive system may not be able to stand the wear and tear. The strain may lead to hardening of the blood vessels and premature aging. All this, so far, is more Philosophy If the the holes they Owl Laffs r the 5-day week the next goal probably will be the 5-day week-end. | are in. iE little boy. You in the end." 80, That's 'where Most men dug A woman who keeps house is apt to turn up her nose at the woman who boards--but she envies her just the same, " iA Movie Director--"Mills wants $600 for playing the part of an Indian in our new film." ; 4 Manager--"Offer him $300, Tell him it's only a half-breed." Pausanius--*I hear that Nero was torturing the Christians' again last night." : Demeter-- 'Some one ought to take that fiddle away from him." Short Pants The girl with personality has it on the pretty one because she doesn't have to look her best. When a baby {appears in a printer's family naturally he wonders what t¥pe of child it's go ing to be. If you haven't been de- nounced by something or somebody, you're really not popular yet. The only thing a man acquires these times without considerable effort is a birth- day. We often allow ourselves to get get very mad about things that really don't concern us at all, Polly--"Every time I catch my hus- band flirting 1 make him buy me some: thing to wear." Dolly--"What a wardrobe you must have, my dear," "She was only a photographer's daughter." "Yes, she sits in a dark room and awaits developments," Doctor--"Don't get so despondent, my dear young lady, you'll soon pull through." Girl--"Oh, it isn't that, Doctor. But just think of the money I've spent on apples to keep you away." Don't think for a minute that women do all the gossiping. The worst gossip is a woman, Sometimes a boy runs a girl ragged to get married, then expects her to go practically in rags after they're mar- ried. Ginsberg--'"Mista Ottist, I vant you should make me a doughnut sign." Painter--"Certainly, Mr, Ginsberg, but I thought you were a butcher, not a baker' Ginsberg--*Sure, Iam a butcher; I vant it a sign 'Doughnut Hendel de Feesh'."" The fisherman does not figure that he has bought the string of fish he caught even though they cost him ten times the market price, Struggle On You may not be doing as well as you would like, but you aré accom- plishing more than the one who gives up and refuses to try. A girl can think up a dozen reasons for getting married, but a boy never even stops to reason. nal truths, trivialities, with flies.--M, Nisard. ein Time and Life We live in deeds, not years; thoughts, not breaths; In feelings, not in figures on a dial. 'We should count time by heart-throbs. He most lives Who thinks most, acts the best feels the noblest, rere It's Hard--- To apologize, To begin over, To admit error, To be unselfish, To take advice. To keep on trying. To think and then act, To profit by mistakes, To forgive and then forget, To take a deserved blame, But it always pays. emai "I am so well off that everybody nard Shaw. / For COLDS "I always use BABY'S OWN TAB- EE a © dye That cd cong on 4 0 BACK FOR 2 WEE - Then Active for 10 Years : It is humbling to mankind to con- template men capable of grasping eter- fencing and debating in like gladiators fighting in ~--Philip James Bailey. prétends I am much more respect. able than I really am."--George Ber Time and time again we have seen it beyond doubt that rheuma- "| tism simply cannot resist the regular "little daily dose" of Kruschen, This is a case that has just come to our ce, "Some years ago now, I was taken ill with muscular rheumatism, and was on the flat of my back for 12 weeks. My daughter bought a bottle of Krus- chen Salts, and I took a dose every morning. I found relief ,and finally recovered by persevering, From that day, which is 10 years and 8 months ago, I have never missed one dose. I would sooner go wthout my best meal than go without my dose of Kruschen Salts, I am now free from all muscu- lar pains, and have never felt any signs of rheumatism since, recom. mending Kruschen whenever people speak about stiffness or pains in the joints.,"--J. N. If your kidneys always performed properly their duty as fliters, poison- ous uric acid would never be allowed to pass into the blood. And this would Kruschen now at our expense, We have distributed a great many special ' GIANT * packages which make it easy for you to prove our claims for yourself, Ask your druggist for the new *" GIANT " 75¢. package. This consists of our regular 75¢. bottle together with a separate trial bottie--sutficient for about one week. Open the trial bottle first, put it to mean going to the end of your days without knowing what rheumatism is. Simply because it is the presence of uric acid in the blood-stream which causes rheumatic conditions. Now the physiological effect of the numerous mi 1 salts in Kruschen is to arouse all the organs of elimination (including, of course, the kidneys) to healthy, regular action, so that they promptly expel through the natural channels uric acid and other danger. ous waste products of digestion. Let Kruschen do this for you. Buy & bot- tle to-day, and begin the "daily dose" in the morning. Kruschen Salts is at all Drug Stores at 45c. and 75¢, per bottle. H1 FREE TRIAL OFFER OF KRUSCHEN the test, and then, if not entirely convinced . regular bottle' la still Et ss back, Your a Authorised 0 ly and Withoup ons, Lids a 1788, urn your 75¢ question. our expense. Manufactured by EB. Literary Tribute To Lady Nicotine Poets and Prose Writers Ex- press Mankind's Debt to Good Tobacco Since the day when Sir John Haw- kins, Ralph Lane, Governor of Vir-, ginia; Sir Francis Drake and Sir Wal- ter Raleigh introduced and popular- ized smoking tobacco in England, to- bacco has formed the inspiration of literary men and artists. King James 1st is said to have voiced early objection to smoking, re- fusing to permit his mouth to be "used as a chimney," but despite his royal prejudices, smoking became popular in England and, indeed, throughout Europe. Poets, prose writers and philosophers from the sixteenth cen- tury on have extolled its beneficence and acknowledged the comforting sol- ace of the "blessed weed." In modern days among those who have found a congenial theme in to- bacco have been Sir James Barrie, the novelist and playwright, whose tender whimsicalities have made him a beloved figure in English letters wherever English is spoken and read. "My Lady Nicotine" will remain a classic of its kind. Rudyard. Kipling, the Poet of Em- pire, creator of "Kim" and "Soldiers Three," devoted several famous verses to the cigar: "Open the old cigar box, "Give me a Cuba stout, "For ways are runnng Crossways, "And Maggie and I are out. "A million surplus Maggies "Are willing to bear the yoke; "And a woman is only a woman, "But a good cigar is a smoke." One of the most enthusiastic of modern eulogies on cigars comes from the mouth of a character in Thomas Mann's novel, "The Magic Mountain: "With a good cigar in his mouth a man is perfectly safe, nothing can touch him--Iiterally, It's just like ly- ing on the beach, When you lie on the beach, why you lie on the beach, don't you? You don't require anything else in the line of work or amusement, either." i Women Are To Make Most of Appearance New York.--The majority of wo- men today do not know how to dress properly according to Professor Lillian H. Locke of the Department of House- hold Arts, Columbia University. "There are always two things to be considered when a woman dresses," Professor Locke said today. "First, she should dress to make the most out of her physical appearance and bring out her best points; second, she should dress to bring out the best traits of her personality. The two are quite different things. The first has to do with the size of nose and lips, and shape of hips, while the second has to do with charm and grace." Professor Locke listed five prin- ciples, as follows: Avoid repetition of color or lines; avoid clashing op- posites of color or lines; try for transition of colors; subordinate the entire costume to the central color note; and try for symmetry of lines. rrr een: Well-Dressed Men Are A Law Unto Themselves Many of the best dressed men in London are a law unto themselves in the matter of clothes. They pay 20 attention to. what tailors, manu- Classified Advertising PATENTS. Al OFFER TO EVERY INV SNTOR. List of wanted luventions ang full information sent free. The Ram: om- pany, World Patent Attorneys, 273 Bank Street, Ottawa, Canada. BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY. PECIAL REPR ESENTATIVA wanted; must have $260 capital for exceptional opportunity, all-Canadian Company; exclusive territory allotted, Apply Dominion Sales Specialty Com- pany, Bank of Familton Building, To- ronto, Ont, : BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES. SLICATESSEN STORE; FISH-C business; Keys-lock shop; To stationery store: . Bakery; = Tet Rooming house, real moneymaker, ticulars, Homestead, 2 SAA AT HOME "t hk OFF COLOUR? HOW IS YOUR LIVER? Wake up your Liver Bile --Without Calomel Your liver's a very small organ, but it errs tainly can put your digestive and eliminative organs out of kilter, by refusing to pour out its daily two pounds of liquid hile into your bowels You wou't completely correct mich & condition by taking salts, oil, mineral water, laxative candy or Sewing um, or ou hage. When they've mor your bowels they're througli--~and y Beed a iver stimulant. i ne rou Carter's Little Liver Pills will soon bring back the fritahing inte your life. They're purely veges table. Safe. Bure, Ask for hem by name. Refuse substitutes. 25c at all druggists, 48 Racking [PI in Old Age PITT BY SCOTT'S EMULSION § of Norwegian Cod Liver Qii NERVOUS WOMEN ) Take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable

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