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Canadian Statesman (Bowmanville, ON), 31 Aug 1933, p. 3

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TPHE CANADIAN STATESMAN. ErbWMAqVILE, THURSDAY, AUGUST 3lst, 1933 KHL3V SHE LOST 32 LBS. New Frocks No Longer Worried Her "Haw did she lose that 32 lbs. of fat?" is what you will be asking. Let ber tell you herself:- About 18 montbs ago I weighed 178 lbs-which I can assure you annoyed me very much. Everytbing scemed a worry to me. especially new clothes. Nothing would fit me com- fartably. and walking was unbear- a1ýle. I was advised by a friend to try Kruschen Saits. and I am very glad I did., too. During the first ten months I lost 28 lbs. of fat. Now, for the last 6 montbs my weight bas been 146 lbs.. and I feel much bet- ter in health. I have ahl my weigbt tickets to substantiate my state- ments.'-jMrs.) M. P. Kruschen contains those six min- erai saîts. proportionately balanced. found in the waters of those fam- ous European Spas used by genera- tions of fat people to reduce weight. Kruscben beips bload. nerves. glands and body organs to f unction properly-you gain new strengtb and cnrgy-feel years younger- look btter. work btter. At Your Doorstep HIEALTH For The Day And heaith for many happy years to corne, for milk is the best f ood for children- a.nd grown-ups, too. Used as a beverage or in creamed dishes, soups and desserts- miik provides the necessary nutritive elements for heai- th. It's the best food and it's most economical. Use more milk . for miik at its very best cal 446 or 703. Bowmanville Daïry - An Oul that is Prized Everywhere. -Dr. Thomas' Eclectric Oil was put upon the market witbout any flour- ish over fifty years ago. It was put up to meet the wants of a small sec- tion, but as soon as its merits be- came known it had a whole contin- ent for a field, and it is now known1 .~and prized throughout this contin- ent. There is nothing equal ta it. ZFAeh pad wil kili fies ail day ï-0 every day for three weeks. 3 pads in each paeket. 10 CENTS PER PACKET ai Druggasea Grocers, Ceneral Sores. WHY PAY MORE? THs WILSO~N LY PAD CO.- HamHIlton, Ont. Page OFIl Hints For Homebodies Written for The Statesman By Jessie Allen B rown A Normai Baby It bas been my privilege lately ta watcb a very perfect baby deveiop. The mother bas given this baby ev- ery care. Most mothers try to do this but they do not start soon enougb. They wait until the baby is born and then it is too late. This mther used ber intelligence. It« was a first baby and realizing that she knew nothing about babies she made it ber business ta find out ail that she should do. And she did what she was toid intelligently. Proper food. fresb air. exercise and plcnty o! sleep are necessary and she got them 5ail. Finding out that she must have plenty a! calcium (lime) and other minerai saits to give ber baby goad bones and not to rab ber own, as Nature will do for a baby, she ste the food that wouid supply them. Eacb day sbe took a quart a! miik, bad at least two cook- cd vegetables besides potatocs. ate plenty o! raw fruits and vegetables, used wbole wheat bread and cercals and went easy on pastry and ricb faods generally. Not sucb a difficuit diet, is it? She wasn't anc of those women %vbo say 'I get ail the exer- cise I need doing my bouscwork.* She made a point o! going out for a walk eacb day. As a matter a! fact she usualiy took two walks be- ing careful nat ta go far enough to get too tired. She took a good rcst cach afternoon and nine hours sleep mast nights. Her own health was good ail the time and the baby is a darling. It is perfectiy weil and is as little trouble as any baby could passibly be. Ail this perfection is not the re- suit o! accident but o! intelligent c are. If mothers anly rcalized the nccessity o! proper f ood. I am sure they wouid get it as most mothens wili do ail that is possible for the good o! their cbiidrcn. The un! ort-- unate part is that tbey do nat know and botb mothers and ciidren su! - 'fer for this lack o! knowledge. Oven Canned Peaches and Pears There are a good many ways o! doing up fruit but ta my way o! tbinking ovcn-canned is the simp- lest o! them ail. Yau necd ta bave a thermometer on your aven but there is no special equipment re- quired. Look aven your bottlcs care- If ully ta sec that there arc no cbip- ped tops. Stenilize the batties in boiling water. It is wise ta use new rubbers cacb ycar as it is much cheaper ta buy ncw rubbers than ta 'spoil a bottle o! fruit. Prepare tbe f fruit. Peel, balve and core pears and pack tbcm into jars. Dip the peaches into bollng water and then into coid ta loosen the skins. Skin and cut into halves or suice as de- sined and f11l the botties. Cover the fruit withbobiling syrup. This synup may be made ta suit the tastes o! your family. Most people use 1 cup o! sugar ta 2 cups o! water for peacbes and pears but there arc some wbo prefer a richer sYrup and use equal parts a! water and sugar. <Pour the boiling syrup over the fruit, put on the top but do not 'screw tigbt. Put in a pan in a couple o! inches o! water and set in a slow aven o! 250 degrees for 40 minutes for pint jars and an bour for quarts. Remove !nom the oven, fil the jar witb boiling syrup. Screw tigbtly and tighten again when the jars bave cooled. Deliclous Pickles 2 quarts green tomatoes. i quart r ed tamatc, i buncb celeny. 3 large onions, 3 red peppers. Cut up green tamatoes, onionsi and peppers. caver witb 12 cup) O! sait and let stand aver nigbt. Drain and add red tamatoes and clcry cut in pieces, 1 tablespoon mustard, 2 iba. white sugar. 3 pints vinegar. Boil f rom 112- to 2 bours or until thick. Bottle wbihe bot. Pickied Beets Bail beets until tender and skin. If the beets are large suice tbem, if Inot, leave whale. Pack into bottles and caver wth a sauce made with 3 quarts vinegar, 3 lbs. brawn sugar and 2 oz. mixed pickling spice. 'rit the spices in a bag and let stand in tbe vinegar wbihe preparing the nterest to Women beets then bring ta a boil, remove the spce and pour over beets c 1. Green Tomato Mincemeat Sunday Scnool Chop on put througb gnînden L s1o peck o green tomatoes. Drain off L so in colander and ninse witb cold watcr until ail juice is out a! tom -___________________ ataes. Add 5 lbs. brawn sugar, 2 D A V 1 D chopped suet, 3 quarts chopped ap- pies, 1 cup vinegar. Boil a. few min- utes and add 1 tablespoon ground cloves. 2 tablespoons cinnamon, 1 grated nutmeg. Put in a covered crock or in jars. Marachino Peaeh Marunalade 6 lbs. peaches, 6lbs. sugar, 2 or- anges, 1 amail bottle marachino cherries. Skin the peaches and eut in small pieces. Put the oranges througb the grinder and cook for a few minutes ta soften. Cook the peaches, sugar and oranges for one hour slowly, stirring frequently. Add the mara- chino cherries cut in small pieces and the juice. Bottle wbile bot and seal. WEDDINGS Elliott-Trimble At the home 0f Rev. S. C. Moore, Toronto, on Monday. August 21st, the marriage took place of Audrey Clara. only daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. Jas. Trimbie of Bowrnan- ville, to Norman Edwin, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ellitt of Minesing, Ont. The bride looked charmaing in a gown of cocos brown crepe trimmed with transparent velvet~ and with a three-quarter lengtb coat to match. She wore matching bat, shoes and bose and a corsage bouquet of Jo- banna Hill rases. She was attendcd by Mrs. Ernest Hunter, ber cousin, who wore a royal blue crepe dress witb gray bat, base and shoes and a corsage bouquet a! Columbia roses. Mr. Nelson Trimble, brother of the bride, was groomsman. The bride and groom lef t immediately on a trip to Queboc and Northern On- tario. On their return they wiil re- side in Bowmanvillc. Werry-Love On Thursday, August 24th, at 1 p. m. at the home of Mr. and Mrs. C. Everett Love, Kedron, the mar- riage was solemnized of their eldest daughter, Lllian Lorraine, and Har- old Arthur, younger son of Mr. and Mrs. H. Fletcher Werry. Rev. Dr. J. R. R. Cooper, Columbus, their pastor. officiated, and Miss Bernice Werry, sister o! the groom, played the wedding music. The bride, wbo was unattended, was given in mar- niage by ber f ather and was very attractive in a gown of triple sheer georgette crepe in Monette blue, carrying Sweetbeart roses and fern. After congratulations and signing o! the register a dainty wedding lun- cheon was servcd by four friends o! the bride, Misses Claribel Wray, Ruth Cole, Flora McRoberts and Fern Ledgett. Among the guesis were Mrs. Hen- ry Love. Greenbank, great grand- mother o! the bride; Mr. and Mrs. W. Batty, Oshawa, grandparents o! the groom; and other relatives from Jolliette, Ill., Toronto, Osbawa and vicinity. Wind-swept showers persisted in a futile attempt to dampen tbe spir- its o! the Party, but late in tbe a!- ternoon the clouds began to break 1and finally the sun sbone f orth gloriously, making more pleasant the motor trip to Kingston. Before returning Mr. and Mrs. Werry are visiting Montreal and Quebec City. The bride's travelling costume was o! sand crepe witb brown check trlm and matcbing accessories. On their return Mr. and Mrs. Werry will be at home te their friends at Sunnyside Farm, Kedron. Heartiest congratulations and bost wishes are extended to the bride and groom as tbey build up new social and business relationships in the familiar surroundings o! home and~ commuflity. ANNOUNCEMENT Mr. Gardon E. Garnett, son o! Mn. and Mrs. W. T. Garnett. ife long residents o! Port Hope, and known tbrougbaut this district, is now as- sociated witb G. M. Bosnell, Op- tometrist. In addition ta bis Part Hope Office, Mn. Bosnel bas an office at 2143 Danfortb Avenue, Toron to. Mr. Garnett is a graduate o! the College o! Optometry o! Canada, Toronto, and was chosen to give the vaedictory addness at the gradua- tion banquet in the Royal York Hotel this year. He attended Queens University, taking a course in science, but became s0 deeply in- terested in Optometry that 11e de- cided ta, make it bis ie wark and was tnansferred to the Colege o! Optometry o! Canada. in Toronto. During the past two years, Mn. Gar- nett bas asslsted Mr. Bosnell in bis Toronto office. whiic 11e attended college, and is advanced much be- yond what bis yeans and etters wouid indicate in the knowledge o! the practical side o! bis profession. An 011 for Ail Men-The sailor, the soldier, the fisherman, the lum- berman, the out-door laborer and ail who are exposed ta injury and the elements wilh flnd in Dr. Thomas' Eciectric 011 a true and faithfuh friend. To ease pain, relleve cohds, dreas wounds, subdue lumbago and overcome rbeumatlsm, it is excellent. Therefore, it sbould bave a place in ail home medicines and be amongst those taken on a journey. The Proven Astbma RemeclY. Since asthma existed there bas been no iack of much beralded remed.les, but tbey have proved short llved and worthless. The ever-growlng repu- tat.lon of Dr. J. D. Kellogg's Astbxna Remedy bas given it a place in the field of medicine wblch no other can appraacb. It bas neyer been p'tshed by sensational raetbods, but has slmi- ply gone on effectlng relief and maklng new converts. Sunday, September 3rd Golden Text: "Man looketh on thet outward appearafice, but the Lordt looketh on the bart.'-1 Samuel 16:7. Lesson Passage: 1 Samuel 16: 4-r 13; Psalm 78: 70-72.t The Son of David Very dear the Cross of Shame Wbere He took the sinners' blame, And the tomb wberein He lsy t Until the third day came. t But He walked the self -same road, And He bore the scîf-same load, E Wben the Carpenter a! Nazareth Made common things for God. -Walter C. Smith.t Suspicion, 4, 5t Comest tbou peaceably?" askcdt the elders o! the town of Bethle-r hem wben Samuel arrived unexpect- edly. Samuel's purpose was to of- fer sacrifice before choosing a suc-t cessor to Saul. but the people o! Bethlehem were on guard until they knew definitely what bis errand was. It was a rude, nough time, in the days wben the judges judged. Tri-s bal skirmisbing was the rule and peace was the exception, but the at-1 titude o! suspicion bas remfained un-1 tii our day. Wben two men shake1 bands upon meeting. it recalîs the1 days wben swords were worn and two men could not bave confidence until tbey bad demonstrated that tbey did not intend ta draw their swords. It is only a formai social customa now, but the bsndshake is a bangover o! figbting days. When General Balbo o! Italy flew with bis f leet o! airships !rom Rame ta Chi- cago, it caused much more comment in France than in the United States.9 Severai European powers interpret- ed it not as a courtesy to the Cent- ury o! Progresa Exhibition, but as a tactit declaration by Italy that she dlaims supremacy in the air. Wben the United States Congreas passes a naval estimate, the newspapers in Japan feature it as news and cam- paign for greater naval expenditures by Japan, clalming that their safety is threatened. These international suspicions will endure until we learn to tbink peace as naturaliy as we now tbink war. In personal rela- tionsbips we bave langely overcome the fear a! attack and greet people as f riends until they show them- selves hostile, but we are far f rom this attitude o! confidence between nations. Muscle or Mind, 6-10 Atbietics are finding an increas- ing place bath in education and in i! e generally. Sports are good as a means ta an end, but tbey are nat an end in tbemselves. Wben tbey contnibute to bealth and character tbey serve their intended purpose, but wben they are given more space in a newspaper than politics. educa- tion and religion comblned. tbey are receiving more attention than tbey deserve in tbemselves. Even bealtb is not an end in itscîf but merely the basis upon whicb bigber buman values may rest. Some nenawned athletes bave been behow the aver- age o! buman intelligence. There bave been candidates for the pugil- lstlc championship o! the world Who could barely read or write. Mind is more important than muscle in modern life; brain gives power ra- ther than brawri. The development o! the biceps muscle o! the arm a i very secondary to the cultivation o! memory, imagination, reason and will in the whohe personality. Sam- uel was attractcd by the physical set-up o! Eliab. but he was told not to look upon the outward appear- ance as the Lord 1ooks on the beart. A strang body and a fine personal appearance arc assets o! great val- ue, but the permanent tests o! life are decided by mental training and character qualities. Young people need to be warned that athetics are anly incidentai in educatiafi. The bigger goals are in a diff erent direction. The youngest Son, 11, 12 David bad a fine physique, but 11e had more. Tbough 11e was tht youngest son and was not tbougbt to be o! mucb value yet as a fight- ing man, 1e bad devehoped qualities o! initiative and independence. He couhd take cane o! a flock o! sbeeP as wehl as older men. Wben danger appeared in the form ofo a lion or a fYour- Laundry DONE THE THIFT WAY 9 Lbs. for 75c 7c per lh. additional Ail flat work finisbed. Goods called for and deliv- ered. Work done by Bow- manvîlle people. Satisfac- tion guaranteed. Marloramu's Laundry Phone 478 King St. E. bear 11e could act with courage and efficiency. Hand and eye coordin- ated when he used a sling. He had cultivated skill in music and had a good understanding of human nat- ure. Though David was lef t with the sheep, 11e was nlot sheepish. When he was called before Samuel, the issue was flot in cloubt for a moment. Samuel knew that before him was the future king of Israei, the successor of Saul, clestined to be Israel's greatest king until there shouid appear the King of kings. David had ail that open air 111e couid give him, a fine complexion. an open countenance, a strong body, but it was not for these that.he was chosen as prospective king. His mental, social and religious capaci- ties were his real qualification for the position. The Effect of Responsibility, 13 A position may help to make a man. Having a standard to main- tain may draw out latent powers. A man in public office sometimes surprises his supporters by display- ing ability that they did not know he Possessed. The task brings forth the talent. It is sometimes found that a young preacher called te some famous pulpit measures up, because 11e feels the challenge of his Place. After David had been anoint- ed with oul by Samuel, as a fore- token of his kingship, the Spirit of the Lord came upon David f romn that day forward. This is the Heb- rew way of saying that David took his responsibility seriously, that 11e used bis time for great purposes, that 11e sought to learn f rom. those who could teach, that he looked te God for daily help. There would al- ways have been something distinct- ive about David had he remained a shepherd. but the assurance that 11e was to be king made him put his best foot forward and do bis level best. Could youth but know the op- portunities of middle age, school books wouid not be tossed in a cor- ner with disgust. Doing homework is doubtless one of the authentic signs of the presence of the Spirit of the Lord. A Shepherd Still, Psaim 78: 70-72 The Hebrew people gloried in the fact that David was a shepherd king. His later royal prestige did net make them forget bis lowly origin. They attributed to him many o! their fin- est poems, the twenty-tblrd psalmn included. They felt that, as king, David retained his shepherd heurt, caring for the nation as be bad. car- ed for the sheep. It is true to tb.ls day that the world's greatest lead- ers corne f rom, humble homes and f rom the common people. Ini Beth- lebem was born a greater than Day- id, often spoken of figuratlvely as the Son of David, who labored at a carpenter's bench until 11e shoud assume the role of the Messiah Klng Questions for Discussion 1. What is the place of athletics; in education? 2. Whicb is the best age for de- ciding life's vocation? 3. Is moral character usually botter before or after twenty? 4, What may we do to have Gèod's spirit dwell in us? if you want to commit the crime of killing tîme, be sure it is your jown. JUSr cnjoy a howl of Kcllogg's. For breakfast, lunch, thec childrcn's supper -these crisp.îoastcd flakcs are perfect. Kcllogg's are rich in encrgy and vcry .asy ta digest. No trouble :o prepare. Economical. Always oven-fresh. Made by Kellogg in London, Ontario. T HE new Ontario honey crop is now coming in - apd le's wonderfui honey! Ontario honey le healthful as weil as delclous. Are you en- joylng It as oftcn as you should? Honey is deiightfui as a spread for bread, of course, but there are many other ways af using it. Write today ao Ontario De. partment af Agriculture, Parlia. ment Buildings, Toronto, for H-oney Recipe Bulletin, No. 374, expiaining 59 ways ta use Ontario Honey - sent irce. CORN ~ FLAKES 59 ways to use Honey - Beverages Rails and Bread Batters and Dougha Quick Breada Griddle cakes and W&fflse Fruits and Vegetables Preserves, Jeily, Jame and Marmalade Salada and Salad Dressinge Pies, Desserts Cakes, Cookies snd Srnal Cakes Candie& Gelatine and Fiomen Desserts Recipe Bulletin Frec Big' Fur Sale Three Days Only Mr. Chaplan, oF Toronto Has a beautiful selection of SAMPLE FUR COATS ON SALE Thursday, Friday and Saturday, AUGUST 31st, SEPTEMBER lat and 2nd at Couch, Johnston and Crydernian's Store. Corne and see this wide range. Orders taken for rernodelling and repairing. Couch, Johnston &Cryderman Any time you' re hungry Ontario Department of Agriculture COL THE HON. T. L KENNEDY, Fairbairn, Minioter

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