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Canadian Statesman (Bowmanville, ON), 19 Mar 1931, p. 9

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TEE CANADIAN STATESMAN, BOWMANV]LLE, THURSDAY, MARCH l9th. 1931 PAGE 1411<1 THE HARDER THE TEST.,.THE MORE YOU'LL ADMIRE THE NEW QLDSMQBILE Corne in and see the new Oidsmobile. Get behind the wheel and drive it yourself. Test this depend- able car under any driving condition.. on smooth stretch, rough roads or steep grade. Thrill to the way Oldsmobile responds with a surge of power to the slightest touch on the accelerator. The taugher the pull the more you'Ii admire this dependable car. The longer you drive it, the more convinced you'Ilbe that Oldsmobile, at its new, Iower prices, is today's outstancling motor car investment. NEW ILENT SYNCRO- DOWN.DRAFT CARBURETOI MESH TRANSMISSION WITH MON-FLOOD CHOKE permits smooth, slent shift from gesncased power, higher first to second to high.. and =pe,atr acceleration and bock to second. greater smoothness. AUTOMATIC MANIFOLD INSULATED FISHIER 800198 H-EAT CONTROL dewre i.necoe warms up engine quickly and aewre nwne.coe gives it improved performance in summer, and exceptionalIy .t ailI speeds. quiet NEW EASY LIART NO NEW OUIET SECOND GEAI -starter when engaged, auto- assures smooth, swift accelers- matically opens throttle to tion rivalling high gear per- pro per starting position. formance in quietness. A- G E N E R A L e MèOTORS VALUE ROGER L. CORBETT Athol Street Osha kwa ce-" ADEQUATE PROTECTI ON With times as they have been one is apt to neglect their insurance. You cannot afford to sacrifice the protection of your home, store, build- ings or contents when the premiums are so reas- inable. Check up right now and see exactly what your position would be should your premises be gutted by a fire. Delays are dangerous-do it to-day. Corne in and talk over your insurance problerns with us. Je Je MASON & SON Real Etate and Insurance Brokers Phone 50) King St. E. Bowmanville 1031 47lLeS. IN 90 DAYS A True Story of Weight Reduction 1 have lieii t.I.ii.Z m11 isaIN ,,one the xver' y 1sisi salits that for li arfy 3i11,111 lis. 1l ,.iiîîelnature dentalil s for xuar ieiIli. tlki ig uit(.I%(* i ci%%,;l r i e r i Whe ii li t ake 1<ristlîiinSaf ts you not cverv îîîriling,. 1 tjIenr ,iîeî217 unly 't inilate \ nur Iiuwels, liver and ;~,iiu".'sas:1lav, lt i ei itldevs ti fliirit ilnniafarallv and lier- pullns n al , andul fwer part of fevtly, lbut ),oinsuiîîlv cvery iternal tice :îiif "iî îiiaid sies..organl. glailàl. erv e :md fiblre inIllhe " Now 1 'iik -,ladltu s' - yI aMn iawelIl ho( lywith ntulres iWli revitaliziiig yu i d n ii. iis i.-i 170 joîiiiîf. Tike hrii'.elieii ini a flls o ff iot w:ter I m i t <ls1,el lwtter. luit Ilu uk c'very Iiriiiggf'f e fbreaikfast- do bette r. su, iiini.' rii ilsa.1V ii t u e r-iat ci rrei-t vOurr duet--<ut I 1 hal lt1 l.î ' vii ls l ut Krjjtiis , q lît tllie ft -fi îoîrug fi,uds ',.et c me sauft'.. wil hile-vel u'e11'.e ilking nz m uf:îihy gent le. n'-.ril:ir <r i usi i îs few d(,s. andumore îluaiîgladl t Iîgîy lvlmuileii t o lue' t etivity and rt iîaiifit forth fe great gui id 1tblt fi -e g osu ti il e i î. lt. o'lfe je ii .' ( r'.. S. A. S'ilnion.) 1 liefu re thft i î i ' 'ip oi lfe I'S Ynma lzîiîîk 1anm exag- 1yeaccs-yotiiîiger cvi'. wilf friliten- Miting by writig siîmhl a lonîg letter,! stepgruIw sprigfitlivi -îîerves steaduier f rafy. 1 féel sa mdebted ta you for .Ieel l)cfîsouid, cijoy youmi a-is, putting out suefi wonderful safte tîat and îfter m liard day's work you'ilf be Icunisot Say 1noul." rcady for wfsofsomc revreatuion. Krusen Sat. are différent tram Krîîechen Saits is obtainable at ail eNtera ala-Kruachea in six sait& ini Drug Stores t 45c. and 7.5c. per bottie. FREE TRIAL OFFER 0F KRUSCHEN f ry Kru-lwia now lit our orpense. We have the test, and theli, Il fot entiref y convfnced is dfentutr-d ea greut many epeclf"' GIÂNT'" that Kruschen doe everythIng we dainc t t packages whlch miaks t easy for you to dotCe regular bottie fa .tIll a s od as 05w. Pro' t bausk. Your dnuIggst la authorliesd to roe Our latims for youuseff. Aok 70111rtum your 750. fumediatef y and wl tiout druggLet for the new - GIANT'" 76c. paokage. question. You have trled Kruechen tr" oat This consstofo our regular 75c. botte taother our expen.e. What ooud b. lafrer Y wth a eparataetriai hotte--suficent for &bout ManulacturedbyE.taIrrmTe Huonus,.Lt.. une week. Open the tria bottie rt, pUt t te O Maabao, eia. (Estabied 1764>. GETTING AN EAEZLY START Where one does not want to go to the trouble o! providing a bot bed, fair success is achieved by planting flowermng and vegetable seeds in sballow boxes inside. These sisould Ibe flled with ligist soil and weil wat- ered. Plant the seed in rows about an inch apart and then cover with burlap, or other coarse material, be- fore watering. Thse burlap will pre- vent tise water washlng out tise seeds and will also stimulate germination. Place the boxes in some warm, dark place and as soon as thse plants show the flrst signs o! 111e, remove the burlap and put boxes in some bright window. It is best to have a double window but if tis is not available keep boxes at least six inches f rom the glass, particularly at nlght, as they are hiable to sufer from cold. When the second set o! leaves de- velops. transplant to larger quarters and harden by exposing gradually to i tise outdoors before permanently planting outside. HELP MAKE CANADA BEAUTIFUL "Beautif y your home grounds and help make Canada more beautiful" is the slogan which bas been adopt- ed for a campaign to develop per- sonal interest in ornamental horti- culture througbout the Dominion. Taking the initiative in the cam- paign the Canadian Horticultural Council, with the co-operation o! tise f ederal Department o! Agriculture through its Experimental Farmsý Branch, bas had a booklet dealingl with every phase o! "Beautifying the Home Grounds o! Canada," prepared by a landscape architect o! outstand- ing abllty. Tis is essentially a practical text book on the subject, and not only provides plans and il- lustrations especialy sulted to Can- adian conditions but complete gloss- ary o! plants, shrubs, trees and or- namentals o! Canadian origin par- ticularly adapted for Canadian us- age. A f ee o! twenty-five cents is charged for this book, wbich is being distributed through the Publications Branch o! the Department o! Agri- culture at Ottawa. KILLING WITH KINDNESS Recently a young couple were sub- jected to tise ordeal o! a fashionable churcli wedding, and started joyous- ly on then' boneymoon. Tbey were a nice boy and girl. His only idea was te fInd a job at tise bottom of some good business where 'he could carve out a career for him- self. She bad dreams o! making a little home, keeping hlmn happily, lis- tening in the evening te the story of bis day's adventures, and helping him by lier love and entbuslasm te be a real success. They isad only one draw-back, or rather six draw-backs; two sets o! wealthy parents and two very ricli old aunts. While tisey were away the two aunts had an inspiration. They looked around secretly in the most expensive part o! tise city and picked out a swell apartment. They em- ployed the highest priced interior decorator, and gave generous orders at the leading furniture stores. When the couple came back te town they were met by ail four par- ents and the two doting old maids. In a big limousine they were wbisked up te the apartment. The lights were switcised on. Tise older peoplei waited expectantly for the exclami- ations o! joy that would greet tis splendid lay-out. Too astonished to say anytising STANDARD FLOWERS The beginner is quite apt to be confused by the great variety of fiowers listed in. the catalogue. For bis sake a f ew of the good standard reliable sorts will be described ini some detail. It is best at ftrst to, stick to something you know until you find soil and management more suitable to some than to others. Do flot be a! raid, however, to tackle some new ones every year gradually building up your fiower garden Jike the best and most interesting librar- ies witb a few new acquisitions each season. First of the flowers to go in will be the Sweet Peas. There are absolutely unrivaUled for cutting, be- ing delicately coloured, long in the stem and of delightful fragrance. Make a careful selection of colours and varieties and sow as early as possible, selecting the flrst part of the garden that is fit to work. This flower requires open soul containmng plenty o! well-rotted vegetable ma- terial. It is advisable to dig a trench two f eet deep. In the bottom of this put a layer of loose stuiff, such as well-rotted manure or decayed leaves. On top, place a two inch layer of good soil and plant the seed 1in this about five inches apart, grad- ually filling up the trench level as the plants grow. This will induce deep rooting which is vitally necess- ary to carry the Sweet Peas success- f uly through the hot weather of summer. Provide at least three or 1four feet of climbing material in the form o! brush, strings, an old tennis net or poultry netting. Cosmos, late blooming and tail, with pink fiowers, goes in as soon as the garden is ready and also the much shorter yel- 1low and orange fiowermng Calendulas. Caliopsis which corne in bronze and yellow and grow to medium heiglit, is also sown at this time. These are ail remarkably easy to grow. After danger of f rost is about over one can put in Zinnias, flowers of red, yel- low and bronze; Asters, blue, white and plnk, and Mralgolds, yellow. All o! these fiowers are of medium i eight. For short stuif along the front of the border choose Alyssuni (white) and Lobeila (blue) or Pan- sies whlch corne in a great variety of colours. tise poor little rich children gazed about them. Then suddenly the bride covered ber face wth her hands and burst into a flood of tears. Thse older people thouglit that they were tears o! joy. In clumsy f ashion tbey began to comfort lier, to tel liher that what they had given ber was nothing in comparison wlth what they would like to do. Being a weil bred young lady, tise bride did not disillusion them. She mumbled some conventional words of thanks and held herself under con- trol until they had gone. She could net tell themn-and tbey would not have understood - that they isad done the cruelest thlng imaginable; that they had destroyed lier dream and robbed ber o! one o! 1f e's sweetest pleasures. The'y bad trled to be so very kind, and they succeeded only in taking f rom ber tise joyful riglit o! every girl te flx up lier own little home for hersel!. Most of us run no danger of hurt- ing our cidren in the same degree. We are, fortunately, too poor to rob them very mucli. Yet all parents need to be on guard a bit in this prosperous land. Let us have the good sense not te kill witb kindness. Let us give our kids a chance to enjoy tise same grand pleasures Jwhch we enjoyed-the pleasure o! selecting their own mates, making their own homes, and fighting their fway Up by themselves. jUc~ltk ~4tr47i(c 0F THE (~atabauiKbiat Aolitniatiri 81 t' dil.d«by GRANT FLEMING. MD. -. ASSOCIATE SECRETARY ECZEMA cared for. In babies, if there is too mucb fat in tise diet or if tise baby Eczema is an inflammation of tise is constipated, eczema may appear skin accompanied by ltching and as a symptom. burrsing. There are many !orms o! The skin o! sonse persons is par- inflammation o! tise skin, tise most ticularly sensitive to certain factors comsnon o! wisicis is eczema or saIt- which, in tiseir cases, act as irritants riseum. It occurs f requently among and set up an inflammation o! tise babies and old people. skin. As in any other inflammation, Some people can use only thse there is redness o! tise part. Tise mildest o! soaps; others cannot wear redness increases if tise part is irri- flannel next to the skin without hav- tated. Tise part itches and some- irsg trouble. times tise ltcing is almost unbear- Workers n certain industries, able. whose isands and wrists are exposed Eczema may be llmlted to one area to metals, may have skin trouble. sucis as tise face, or tise hands, or Eczema is also associated witis tise scalp, or it may spread to sev- wisat is called a generaily run-down eral parts o! tise body. condition. Thse person whose isealth An inflammation o! tise skin may bas sufered because of worry, lack f ollow some irritation f rom outside. o! sleep or f resis air, or f!rom any if tise hair-brusis strikes tise ear re- other condition which lowers bis peatedly, it may set up an inflamma- general isealtis, may develop eczema tion of tiese kino! the ear. as a result. Tise inflammations o! tise skln Eczema in old age is often assoc- whlcis are diflicult to deal wltb are iated witb this general loss o! pisys- tisose whlch are due to some internal ical fltness whlch is really old age. condition. Tise difficulty in treat- The ltcising which occurs may be ing tisem lies in tise fact that it is relleved by sooting olntments, but not easy to find tise cause, and It is cure can only be brought about by not possible to, treat any condition removal o! tbe cause. The physlo- properly until tise cause is known. Ilan's services are required in order Proper treatment always aims at tise to flnd tise cause and direct tise removal o! tise cause, otiserwise the treatment towards tise removal o! condition las ot cured and will llkely tise responsible factor. recur. Questions concernlag Healtis, ad- Improper diet or inability te digest dressed te tise Canadian Medical As- f ood properly may cause eczemna. I socation, 184 Coilege Street, Toronto sucis case, t la tise diet wich must will be answered PersonaflY by let- be corrected, or tise digestive system ter. Muier's Worm Powders do not need the after-belp o! castor oil or f any purgative to complete their thor- oughness, because they are tliorough in themselves. One dose of them, and they wlll be found palatable by1 ail chidren, wlll end the wor trouble by making tise stomach and bowels untenable ta the parasites. And not only this, but tise powders, wiil be certain to exert most beneflc- lal influences in tise digestive organs. BE'oasg rates on "Any- orne" (station-to-ssation) colis begn ai 7 p.. Nigi.' rates begm at 8.34 >.m. Just give "Lm Diance" the ,usm you want - it speeds #bd $#ere. ORONO (Prom The News March 12th) Fred W. Bowen, M. P., is in Ot- tawa attendlng session of parlia- ment. Musical Eckharts, Swiss bell ring- ers, were here Thursday evening and presented an attractive program. Mr. Fred Wood bas returned home from BowmanviUle Hospital and is makmng rapid recovery f rom bis re- cent auto accident in which lie had a leg broken and was otberwise pain- f ully injured. Mission Band of United Church will give a good program on Frlday, March 2th, consisting o! instrumen- tal music, dialogues, recitations and a number of slides. Mr. Newton Cobbledick and famlIy are mvoing into Orono, occupying a part of Mrs. A. E. Chapman's resi-I dence, Mill Street. Newton recently sold bis farm, lot 21, 6tb concession, whicb lias been in thse Cobbledick name for nearly a century,bhis! grandfatber, the late William Cob-i bledick, succeeding his brother Sam- 1 uel who was the original settler onj the f arma. The dearfl or a former resident of this section, Francis J. Sheppard, took place on Monday, Marcis 9tb. Deceased, before leaving Orono sec-' tion for tise Peterboro district, was a tenant on the Ruddock f arm, north o! this town, and was recogmuzed as a progressive farmer and a man of sterling qualities. He was in bis 7lst year. His wif e predeceased hiM~ by a year or more. Frank was a son o! the late Thomas Sheppard wbo for many years had charge o! the toll gate which stood a littie north o! Trickey's corners. Thse carnival at Agricultural Rink on Wednesday, tise 4tis, drew a good attendance and thse special attract- ions aroused mucis enthuslasm. Prize winners were: Ladies' most original costume, Miss Dorothy Rlckard, prize donated by C. G. Armstrong; Gents' ditto, Mr. Tyler, donated by Neil F. Porter; Barrel jumping, 1 IKen Dean, 2 G. Watson, by M. Breslin and H. Challis; Girls' most original costume, Ethel Stark, by Jas. R. Cooper; Boys' ditto, Kenneth Cain, by 0. W. Rolpis; Relay race, G. Watson and team, by Wm. Rlddeil; Oldest lady on skates, Mrs. W. Watson, by Publicity Assoc- iation; Oldest gent on skates, Wm Barrett, by A. A. îDrummond; Coat race, G. Watson and Rosaline Gams- by, by J. J. GilfIllan; Youngest girl on skates, Marion Cooper, by R. Cornfortis; Youngest boy on skates, Jim Power, by Dr. Kerslake; Boys' race, Geo. Rowe, by F. 0. Cooper; IGents' race, G. Watson, by J. Henry & Son. The prises for the hockey game were given by E. R. Rainey and John Cornish. Judges: H. ChaI- lis, 0. Hooey, N. Porter. Mr. and Mrs. Angus Watson, wbo are leavmng the section for Kirby, isaving taken a lease o! thse Waddell f arm to the souili o! that village, were given a farewell and presenta- tion by a number o! their intimate f riends and nelghbors who gathered at the home on Frlday evening, Feb. 27th. Mr. E. J. Hawke officlated as chairman and an address was read by Mr. Wilfrid Hawke, followed by the presentation o! a handsome Sec- retary and Fountain Pen. Thse ad- dress was slgned by Colin S. Colville, J. E. Hawke, E. Syer and H. N. Scott. food with real nourishment àa wbat your family needs, snd you can get afil of this when you serve Crowm Brand f Corn Syrup and Benson's Golden Syru> ~ Physiciana rcommend them because of their great energy producing value and because they are essily digested. I Have a jug of one of thesd famous k syrups on the table at every mal. Est ail you wsnt. They mn eol heslth . .~~ ..................for less m oney. J'i The CANADA STARCH CO., ULfited ...... EDWA1WSB1UG CROWN BRAND BSENS0N' EiOIEUSYBII Send t ~Oda our famsouz recip book i Cana, sPeRec&pe" Fit out th.COU- I Spon anid enclose loc. ta cower mailing cSs. »Me CANADA STARCH CO.. LA.îlted. Meetesal Dee fCanadea resReI.=.!oI endeaeiS INamne ity~4 junmy had been ailing for a couple of days . . . but she didn't think it was serious - tili this afternoon .she called thse doctor . .. hospital tonsorrow.. just a mainor operation, but it couldn't wait. WVhatever would she do? She musi be with Jinuny .but there was the baby too. If mother were only there . . . but a letter couldn't reach mother tili late ïO tornorrow. bmg ,$bar Then she thought of the telephone. In two minutes she was speakung to ber mother. Yes, she could catch the evening train -would be there at 8 in the morning. What a relif 1 Now abe could go about ber prepara. tions for the morrow. The telephone had made everything easy. And the cost of the call had been less than a dollar. Quzcîc lq Q UAKIER OATS Cookes in 212 minutes a.ftethe. water boils- THE CANADMN STATFM£AN, BOWMANVUliE, THUREDAY, MARCH 19th, 1931 PAGE Nffl 1

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