PAGE POUR i. W/tt OI tw Acid Indigestion and Heartburn and their fre- quent sequels - Nausea, Headache, Bad Breath, Sleepless Nights-can easily be guarded against by taking a little Bisur- ated Magnesia (Bismuth in Magnesia) a!ter eat- ing .. .. The ovec-acid con- dition o! the stomach is improved by this protec- tive neutralizer. . . . Try it.... Poivder or To blets. At ail Drug Stores. I18G ....................... G........... £...5.. 1. ... ... ... ... ..... ..... ....... .. kd..b...l.. Its a Protectîve Neutra/izer- N OT a. Laxative A CLEAN UP 0f GoodValues Caeuor Velveeta Cheese...... 1/2 IL pkg. li c Fr'sCoo ..................'1/2 lb.ti21 Shirrif's or 0. K. Jelly Powders........ 5 foir 25c Crosse & Blackwell's Catsup, large.........i17c Christie's Soda Wafers, pkg ...............l10c Fine Quality Molasses, quart gem........... 20c Kellogg's Rice Krispies, pkg ...............l0c Cherry Jam, Harvest Brand, 40 oz. jar....... 29c Chicken Haddies ............... 2 tins f or 25c Corn Brooms ................. 40c to 90c each Gillette's Lye ................... 2 tins for 25c Qyster Sheil, 100 lb. bag ............... $1.25 Lawn Grass Seed .................... 30c IL Government Certified Seed Potatoes, Irish Cobblers, 90 lb. bag ............. $2.50 Ail Kinds of Clover Seed Spratt's Dog Foods - Garden Seeds Fresh Fish For Friday Harry Alliai, Grocer Phones 121 and 186 Bowmanville ICROOKED CREEK Easter examinations Crooked Cceek sehocl; narnes wth peccentages in order o! mient: V Clas-Dorothy Ogden 78. Sr. IV-Billie Hoskin 79. Sr. III-Lillian Hale 86, Lewis Stone 83, Laurence Gilmner 72, Sid- ney Burley 53. Sr. II-Raymnond Gilmer 85. Jr. II-Jean White 82, Lloyd Bur- ley 57. Sr. I-Aileen Ogden 92, Lois Tur- ner 78.2, Eileen Farrow 78, Francis Hale 61. Sr. Pr.-Joyce McArthur 84, Don- ald Burley absent. Eleanor N. Anderson, teacher. Examinatiofi Rudiments o! Music, Crooked Cceek: Dorothy Ogden I, Lillia.n Hale I, Bille Hoskin I , Laurence Gilmer C, John Thompson C, Raymond Gil- mer C, Lewis Stone I, Sidney Bur- ley F. I :lat class honors, 75c/ or over; C : Credit, 50% or over; F : failure, below 50%,. Mrs. Campbell, Music Teacher. KENDAL Miss Estel'a Little, spent Sunday at home. Mr. Evan Quantrihl is attending the Spcing Assizes at Clobourg. Misa Dorothy Crossley visited with Miss Doris Patterson on Sunday. Mr. Thomas Tweedies, Toronto, spent Sunday at their farm ces- idence. Mr. and Mrs. George Smith, Stark- ville, spent Sunday with Mc. Milton Robinson. There was a good turn-out Sun- day morning ai church. Mc. Mellor delivered a wonderful sermon. Mc. and Mrs. Jack Walker, Col- borne, spent Sunday with his par- ents, Mr. and Mrs. Peter Walker. Mrs. Norman Thertell and dau- ghters. Hazel and Shirley, Toronto, are here to spend the summer with hec father Mc. Wm. Sleep. The David Livingstone prograni was put on by the League in the chucch on Thursday night. Program was in charge of the missionacy con- vener, Miss A. Bell, Mc. Mellor acting as chairman. The stocy of David Livingstone's lite was cead by seven readers-Misses Dorothy Me- Mullen. Kate Stewart, Dorothy Crossley. Nellie Hill, Bernice Lang- staff, and Messrs. Arthur Thompson and Clarence Bell. Music in between ceadings was in charge of Mr. Neil Stewart, Duet was sung by Misses Bernice Langstaff and Wilma Car- son, "Try o carry Sunshine." An- Ithem by the choir "I shaîl have Ghory untold." Duet by Messrs. Neil Ste- wart and Stan Walker, "Saving Grace," and a solo was sung by Mr. Mellor "In the Garden." Meeting was hyn "We've a story o tell to the Nations" and Mizpah benediction. ( Crowded out hast week) Miss Eileen Little visited Mc. arnd Mrs. Wm. Little. Mrs. Norman Patton visited Mcs. H. Thompson at Newtonville. Mc. Roy Little has le! t foc Schom- berg where he has secured wock. Mr. and Mca. H. Hoye, Oshawa, spent Sunday with Mrs. Cecil Tebble. Mrs. Milton Robinson visited in Toronto and attended the funeral o! a f riend. Mc. Cecil Mercer and daughter, Misa Pearl. spent Sunday at Mc. Geo. Meccers. Mca. Wm. Henry o! Newtonville. a former resident here, is in Toronto hospital. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Honey, Milli- gan, spent Sunday evening at the Jackson home. Miss Helen Darlingtoii and Mc. Jack Glover, Newtonville, spent Sun- day with hec mother. 1Mc. J. J. Mellor is giving a ten minute talk in the S. S. each Sunday on Church Membecship. Mr. and Mca. George Quantrill and IMr. Evan Quantcihl visited Mc. Har- 1old Quantrill at Whitby. Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Peacock and farnily o! Elizabethville spent Sun- day with Mrs. A. Jackson. Mca. Anson Gilroy is in Oshawa 1with hec daughter whose twin sons are vecy sick with pneurnortla. Mrs. Milton Plunket and sons, To- ronto, who visited hec mother, Mca. George Quantrill, have ceturned home. Mr. and Mcs. Joseph Austin. Mrs. James W. Bamsey and Mc. and Mms Lawrence Bamsey, Welcome. spent Sunday at Mr. Lawrence Bell's. League on Thursday night was in charge o! Mr. Arthur Thompson whc gave a topic on U. E. Loyalists. A musical number was given by Mc. James Taylor and readings were giv- en by Messrs. Donald Little and Ar- thur Thompson. MATURITY-MATERNITY MIDDLE AGE News for the P Busy FarmerA Good Seed Pricesw This sprmng, Ontario is enjoying a s good demand for registered seed. l Brisk bidcing was witnessed in theL auction at the Ottawa Valley Seed v Fair, and in several cases prices rana to high levels. Four bushels of Gar- net wheat exhibited by farmers o! the Earlton District of Temiskarning 13 brought $1.90 a bushel. The averaged for alI the samples sold was $1.50 aa bushel. Care of the New Pigs The nursing sow and litter recauire care and good feeding in order that7 the pigs will be strong and.healthy,a and the 50w will be in fit condition 10 produce a second litter this year. ' Supply a milk-producing ration. 1V should consist of oats, rniddlings and skirn-m.ilk. Encourage the pigs Vo r start esting at an early age by plac- ing some feed in a 10w trough. As i soon as weather permnits, let thernt run outdoors in a fresh paddock. i Two Tomato Crops Yearly Is r Ontario Grower's Plan 1% Two tomato crops, under glass. isr the ambition of one progressive On- tario grower. It is the proposal that one crop should be ready for market f rom October to Christmnas, while, the next would sell in May and June, just prior Vo the outdoor pro- duct making its appearance. For the fall crop. plants would beý set in the greenhouse in July, fruit- ing by early October and continuing to Christrnas. For the spring crop, seeding would be effected in D_-ý cember. getting the young Plants de- veloped to about a foot igh by Feb- ruary or March, ready for the beds. Spring Lamb Market observations o! the Ontario Mar- keting Board would indicate that too many unfinished spring lambs are being off ered for sale at the Union Stock Yards. Toronto.t 0f the number of spring lambs. reaching the Yards, during the week o! April 2, it lis estimated that some fifty per cent were noV properly f in- ished, individual weights being less than thirty pounds. If producers are to profit through the marketing this otherwise ehoice product. it is cecommended thate spring lambs be properlY f inished to a weight of approximately forty pounds. This can be effected onlyc through extending the feeding per- iod.t Seed Grain Crops Early f The importance of early seeding cannot be stressed toc strongly. An experiment carried on for 10 years at the Central Experimental Farm, shows that wheat, oats. barley and peas seeded as soon as the land is ready Vo work give higher yields than when sown at inter dates. The av- erage increase o! grain swn early over that sown two weeks later was 14 bushels for barley, 18 bushels for rwheat and 4 bushels for oats. Stimulat.ed Egg Market The satisfactory out-turn f l! ast year's storage egg deal and the new developmerlt of the export trade during the past year are factors which will lend a stimulating eff.ect Vo the egg rnarket during the corning spring. Another factor which, per- haps, has not been given sufficient consideration is that the dernand for eggs for the manufacture of f rozen eggs is much more active this spring than a year ago. At this time ast year, stocks o!f frozen eggs in Can- tada were fairly heavy and breaking and freezing operations during last spring were not very extensive. This year the situation is exactly ceversed. stocks of f rozen eggs are ow practically depheted and with busnes ingeneral picking up there will be much more activity in the egg breaking industry during the coning spring. It is quite possible that the volume o! eggs which will be used in the f reezing industry Vhis year may be such as to relieve the market o! practicallY the samne quan- tity o! eggs as was expocted during 1933. Persian Balm. Cool and refresh- ing. Soothing and protective. The perfect aid Vo beauty. Unrivalled in its sot tening and beautifying effect on the skin. Imparts a fresh and fragrant charmn to the hoveliest comn- plexion. Banishes roughness caused by weather' condtitions. Safeguards the skin and keeps it smooth, sof t and f lawhess. Use il for the hands and face. Always results in the highest expression o! beauty. * * A O w *Am 34. it50eSt/o~I0u ~.'.d oaoyaoo - 1+'s best/.,You- --.( babyloo, TYRONE tReceived too late for last week) Thse Wohelo Group of C.G.I.T. op- ened their meeting on Saturday April 7th, with their purpose and the C.G.I.T. hyn. Af ter the business meeting the following prograrn was given: Vocal duet, Mildred Bradley and Susie Thompson, 'When There's Love at Home"; reading, Nina Hodg- on, 'England-fromi PeePs at ManY Lands"; mouth organ selection, IvY Tabb. -There's a Long Long Trail Awinding." Meeting closed with games and sewing. League prograrn Thursday even- ing was in charge of Miss Helen rarm. Rev. A. M. Wootton led in prayer; Devotional was taken by M1iss Irene Cameron; prayer by Mrs. T. Dovvn; topic, "Lord's Day" by Mr. Albert Wood; reading, Mr. Walter Park; selections by Mr. C. Bradley, violin, and guitar by Mr. J. Osborne, accompanied by Miss Susie Thornp- ;on; readings, Messrs. Clinton Bige- low, Donald Thompson, and Misses Lola Richards and Edna Cameron; vocal duet by Misses Helen Trimin and Eva Collacott. Meeting closed with a contest and the benediction. Messrs. Harry and Frank Hather- Ly Mr. Walker, 0f Dixie, spent Sun- Iay with the f ormners' parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. Hat.herly. Miss Mae Carneron and f riend, Toronto, Sundayed with hier parents. MUr. and Mrs. H. Cameron. Mr. Levi Annis has returned to T'oronto after spending the holidays at home. We welcomne Miss L. Penfound, Toronto. to our village, who has pur- chased the late Thomas Curtis place. Mrs. Thos. Scott is improving nicely. The sympathy of this cornunity is extended Vo Mr. Simon Mcçoy in the death of his mother, Mrs. Hughi McRoberts, who passed away at the home of her son. after a lengthy ill- ness. on Thursday. April 5th. Mrs. McRoberts lived in this village f or a' number of years. A HEALTUH SERVICE 0F SH E CANADIAN MEO CAL ASSOCIATION AND LIFF INSURANCE COMPARUESý UN CANAU>A WIIOOPING COUGH Preventicin is alwnys more impor- tant than cure. One of the perils of life which children meet is who- oping cough. 0f ail the communic- able diseases, th.is one effects most seriously the youngest members. of the family. Last year, whoopmng cough was responsible for 540 deaths in Canada, of which number 331 were those of children under one year of age. Twvo points of great practical im- portance should be known to ail parents. First that even the young- est baby may contract the disease, and secondly, that the younger the child, the greater the danger. The disease rnay occur at any age, but over one-haîf of the deaths which. it causes are those of chi.ldren during their first year o! life, and the other haîf practically ail occur before the flfth year o! life. Whooping cough is a germ dis- ease spread by the transference of 1 the germ in the secretions of the1 nose and mouth, in the acts of sneezing. coughing or kissing, and by contact wvith articles frpshly soil- ed by these secretions, such as est- ing and drinking utensils, the f in- gers. etc. From what has been said, it fol- lows that children who are coughing or sneezing should be kept away f rom other children and should flot be allowed to corne near a baby. We say ail children with coughs, sneez- es and running noses, because these symptorns are the early signs of the disease. and they appear before the characteristic w-hoop. At the time they are present, the child xnay pass on the disease to others. Af Ver the germns enter the body, there is a period o! Urne (usually frorn seven to, teîî days) during which the germs are establishing themselves. before there are any vis- ible signs or symrPtom-s of disease. Then appears what is usually mis- taken for a common cold. unless it is known that the child has been ex- posed. in which case whooping cough is suspected. L These syrnptoms do not clear up; they grow worse. and the cough be- cornes more f requent and more sev- ere, notably at night. Finally. the cotugh becomes paroxysral-a ser- ties of short coughs with inability Vo, catch the breath-the face may bc- corne bliie, and then there is a sud- den rush of air causing the char- acrteristic sound we caîl a "whoop)." w.ý THE REASON is that cheap name- -> less bulbs are flot quality built nor ý rigidly testcd like EDISON MMA LAMPS. To avoid costly burnouts look for the name on lamps you buy. EDISON MAZDA LAMPS MADE IN CANADA 10 C.XNADIAN GENERAL ELECTRIC CO., LIMITED 25-40-0 WATT BULBS, 25e EACH or 6 FOR S1.40 MASON £U DAME Phone 145 Hardware & Sporting Goods * /-EAL r~YEL~ -- ~ F1~AA K..BEC...allé in keeping apart f rom other IM TAIN& ~chihdren those vho have what ap- * I ~ THI~B~ ~ I AR OOWIN G TE 1 pears to be a cohd in the head. A 'r THIS E CAR * I snO Tm-Questions concerning Health, ad- A~NYTHING ARTGODUE5SN','OU NEW PERrPAt iR 4p dresed Vo the Canadian Medical As- SUE N EVT YU IF Y<OUVE GOING TW.A~T OPEW'ED ON uscato 18 Coeg Street, Tor- JABOT. jPRM 5PE OUT? CORNR.T onto, will be ansxwered personally bY ABUT THOMT . INEMAKE ANY CAWIl.letter. ,U REGATROUBLE' RUiffer romlteinti nadtî,,Uion ofbodyupite ise'inî Cu [. in intUy yu iftrn [roi eeak aUd wcary. or SUiffer héUOdadiUen andi UUdUCCSUoUU. The mure Uey[t- c.rre-t UUs ondUitUionin [o foiiow the Andrews ituies tofirivath. E.t rnideraWily. Cet enoighi sieep. f[net, air. and exerrise t,> matîety your body anid. onvUe oUr twjce each week take a braring, asparkliîniglgas& of An- dreas ive~r SUalt. An rems LiUver Sait wii kepyou in the îink of! condtion by heiping r, t é) [nkeet, yr synten iin thUrougli work- *uîg ,rder. Yur drugeint selle Andrews in tins ut 35c anîd floc and the new, large botie. 75c. Suie Agents: Jubia A. Huston Co., Ltd., 0%3.Turunitu. 0 THE CANADIAN STATESMAN%, BOWMANVILL, THURSDAY, APRIL 19th, 1934 BEE HIVE GOLDEN CORN SYRUP A GREAT ENERGY FOOD RETOND IMITATION THE marvelous flavor of Kellogg's - the original Corn Flakes - has never been successfully copied. You're sure of qual.ity when you buy Kellogg's Corn Flakes. Sold everywloere with the personal guarantee of W. K. Kellogg: "If you are flot more than satisfied, re- turu the empty red.and.green package and we will refund your money." Made by Kellogg in London, Ontario. ggf~4FOR QUALITT '"W11Y L so 1