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Canadian Statesman (Bowmanville, ON), 18 Oct 1934, p. 9

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THE CANADIAN STATESMAN, BOWMANVILLE, THURSDAY, OCTOBER l8th, 1934 PAGE NINE After OperationI- She Grew Fat I. And Became Short-Winded A letter just receiveti from a wo- man states that she is wrting in thanks for the benefit she has re- Sceived. Her letter goes on:- "About 12 months ago everybody remarked how fat I was getting. I turniet the scale at 196 lbs. I was feti up at getting so fat, and it matie me short-winded. Why they notic- eti it more was because I was get- ting fat slowly since I had hati an operation for appendix. I went back to the hospital, and the Oloctor saiti that moat women get fat after that operation. I hati tried everythlng I knew of 10 try and get slun, so I thought I wrould give Kruschen Saîts a trial. I tarted at first te takej half the dose prescribeti, in my first cup of tea. Nine months ago, I turneti the scale at 19.6 lbs., anti at the time 0f writing I go 178 Ibs. I feel better than I have felt for a long time.'-<Mrs.) H. The formula 0f Kruschen repre- sents the ingredient saîts 0f the mineral waters of those European Spas which have been used by gen- erations 0f overstout people to re- duce weight. Gently, but surely, Kruschen rida the system of ah .fat- forming f ood refuse. 0f ail poisons anti harmnful acids which give rise to rheumatism, headfaches, and many other ill.. THIE SHAW- Business Schools have added much to our National Assets by training thousands of men and women during the past forty years to become leaders in Commercial Enterprises of our Dominion. The work is belng continued under best conditions for progress and results, and parents who have any problemn on hand regarding Educational plans for their young people are invited to write for our curriculum. Please address W. R. Shaw, Registrar, Dept. 1-2. Bay and Charles Streets, Toronto. Big Mystery Solved 1 Many have solved the mystery as to where yeur laundry may be done best and at lowest cost. The solution is Mar- jorain's Laundry, where Bow- manville labor makes an ex- pert job of everythlng you send, and at such a price that it is really cheaper to have us do your laundry. GOODS CALLED FOR A»D DELMVRED Marjoram's Laundry Phone 478 King Si. E. Bowmanville HEADACHE INDIGESTION quickly relieved by THAT DEPRESSED FEELING S IS LARGELY LIVER Waeup your Liver Bile -Witbout Calomel You are "feeinir punk" imply because your iver ten't pouring ias daily two pounde of liquid bile into your bowels. Dîgetion and elimination are both hampered, aud your entire ayotem is e9t you need in a lver timulant. Sorte. thing that goeefarther than salis, minerai a'ater, 0i, laxtive,.ady or cheing quoi or roughage whirh only niove the howele-ignoring the reaI cause of troubk, your liver. Take Camtera lt le Liver Pille. Purely vege- jahe. No harah calomel <mnercury). Suf e. Sure. Aak for theem by rame. aefuse subtitutes. 25e. it a&U druggieta. 53 THE FAMOUS RUBBING LINIMENT Rub on - pain gene. Get the new large econ- amy sie-Also avail. able iu smallcr. regular suce. MEDF (Editorial f rom TI The Church needs money to carry on its work just as any other enter- prise or organization needs it. That is the fact to be faced, to be faced honestly and straightforwardly and without any apologies or explana- tions or coverings up. Perhaps we have been too much given to these. If we have been it la tisse that we repented and changed our ways. How much money the Church should have for the carrying on of its work, andi how miuch of it you and I should contribute, are quest- ions not always easy to answer, but questions to be faceti frankly andi honeatly and intelligently. There la no use bogglîng over the matter, or 'of being afraiti of it in any way, or of refusing to look at it as if we feared it might make us feel un- comfortable. There la a reasonable andi sensible wýay of looking at such a matter and that is the one we shoulti be ready to take. The presumption is, of course, that we shoulId be ready to carry our share 0f the financial responsibility that existence of the Church would seem to lay upon those who believe in it. No one has a right te under- take te tell us what that share la, andi perhaps we may have a real difficulty in deciding the question for ourselves, but knowing ourselves as we do, we might almoat safely conclude that there is not any dang- er that we would greatly over-es- timate the amount of that respon- sibility. Perhaps we might even de- cide that there would be some chance that we would underestimate it. At any rate it would seem reasoriable that we take a good square look at Sunday Sehool Lesson THE CHRISTIAN AT PRAYER Sunday, October 21st Golden Text: "Continuing instarl in prayer."-Romans 12:12. Lesson Passage: Matthew 6:5-15. If radio's slim f ingers Can pluck a melody From night, and toss it over A continent or sea; If the petaled white notes Of a violin Are blown across the mountains Or the city's din; If songs, like crimson roses. Are culled from thin blue air- Why should mortals wonder If God hears prayer. -Ethel Romig Fuller. Public Prayer, 5 There la an incalculable amount of public prayer. No one can esti- mate the amounl of prayer around the world in one week, not even in Christian meetings. Il la, a supreme- ly tiangerous practice. Jesus kuew this. He hati seen people who had cosse 10 care more for publicity than for prayer itseif. There are subISe dangers for those who habituall leat inl public prayer accortiing 1< calentiar anti block. They may say wortis without feeling, anti care more for high sountiing phrases than for moral anti spiritual values. ro detect these dangers is the first step towartis overcoming them. Jesus warns against these diangers of public prayer but he tiesireti thai there shoulti be more anti better PraYer. Prayer focuaes social pur. pose anti leatis 10 uniteti action. Il ail the worshipers have preparea themacîves spiritually for the high act of prayer. the presence 0f the P-oly Spirit wiil bc felt anti the leader may bring alli mb the pres- ence 0f the Unsecn. Irs'ead 0f be- inig frighteued tg attempt public prayers because of its dangers anti difficullies, we shoulti discipline our- selves thal we may worthily ap- proach the Most High. Private Frayer, 6 Not ail are qualifiedti 1 leat inl public prayer, but ail may pray lu private. Here, 100, preparation anti training are necessary 10 receive the imaximum benefil f rom prayer. Quiet anti solitude enhance the val- ue of prayer. Il la possible 10 pray amiti explodiug bomba anti busy streets, but norssally we do btter if we have perfect silence. Special limes are a help, night or mornlng, or after the mititay meal for busy housewives with chiltiren. Sacred places atit 1 the sanctily o! prayer, places with personal associations, a certain room. a pew in a church, untier a tree or on a hill top. Jesus often a-eut alone for prayer. Early in the morning he would go out on the hillside t0 pray 10 the Patheri lu secret. Iu the Garden of Oeth- semane he prayeti on int the night. As important as sglilariness la men- tal detachmenl. Il la Itile toesecape from the busy world if we carry the world in our thoughls. Frayer le concentration, wrestllng a g a inul some one lemptation or for some blessiug, havlng unbroken fellowshlp with Got. The door o! mind anti heart must be closeti as weil as the door of a room. Privale prayer tioes MUGGS McGINNIS 9l 'he New Outlook) the matter and try to be perfectly frank about it. If supporting the Church is a rea- sonable and intelligent proposition, we oughtn't to neeti to be urged by 1any one to do it, and oughtn't to re- quire to be put in a corner and have pressure applied to us before we re- spond to what is a rather mariifest obligation. There should be some en- thusiasm and sense of privilege in this matter of supporting the Church, but if we do flot seem to be able to acquire that, at least we ought to make somethlng like a sen- sible business enterprise out of it and pay our obligations as regularly and as proniptly as we do a number of other accounts. That wouldn't seem like an unreasonable proposit- ion to make. But just think what a change it would make if aUl those who do sup- port the Church by whatever pro- cess of appeal and urging and pres- sure would do it freely and prompt- ly and in a business-like way! It would be very difficuit to vision the change that would result both in the spirit and the method of the whole enterprise. There la need, we are sure there is need, of a somewhat radical change of attitude toward this whole matter of supporting the Church or. the part of many of us. It isn't se much that such a change would help greatly to f111 empty coffers, though it would do that, but it would change the whole nature of the en- terprise and give it a new sense of dignity and worthiness. The almost constant begging for money that the Church seems compelled to do does- n't look well, for one thing, and as well discredits and damages its in- fluence in many ways. breaks upon our darkness. Here, as everywhere else, our supreme exam- pIe is Christ. To pray as he prayed and for the thlngs for which he prayed is to find in prayer an open door to God. Questions for Discussion 1. What prayer habits have you found most helpful? 2. Which do you find more pro- fitable, public or private prayer? 3. How may we correct the ab- uses or misuses of the Lord's Pray- er? 4. In prayer should we think of ourselves or of God? 5. Is prayer psychology auto- I ORONOI (Prom The News, Oct. llth) Mr. andi Mrs. Jack Graham and son Carl, Misses Sharpe and Dickie, Lindisay, were guests 0f Mr. Orme Gamsby. Orono Branch of the Women's Institute la celebrating the 25th an- niversary of its organization on No- vember l6th. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Poster have returned home f rom a visit with members of their family at Toronto and Hamilton. Mr. anti Mrs. E. J. Osterhout and Mr. Douglas Osterhout of Ottawa, visiteti their parents, Bev. andi Mrs. J. H. Osterhout. Misses Marlon Dickson, Campbell- crof t. andi Margaret Dickson of Uni- versity of Toronto, were at home over the holiday. Mr. anti Mrs. A. Rosa Robertson anti daughters, Dorothy and Jean, of Toronto, were holiday visitors with Rev. andi Mrs. J. H. Osterhout. A number of the members of Or- ono Womenà's Missionary Societyvis iteti Kirby branch Wednesday af- ternoon and assisteti in the progrM. At a meeting 0f the offcia' board, Park Street Unitedi Church, Mr. W. j. itaueuwas auPPjinted treasureî in succession to Mr. A. J. Staples, -not always neeti to be long, but It resigneti. tioes need te be intense. Mr. A. J. Staples, genial township Fraye Lanuage,7, 8 clerk and treasurer, returneti Satur- Prayr Lnguae, , 8 day evening from St. Michael's Hos- Every interest in if e develops its pital, Toronto, and la looking and own vocabulary. Motoring, flying feeling better. anti radio have protiuced phraseol- Members of Orono Horticultural -ogy 0f their own. There la a Ian- Scey y niainofMs .W guag of raye, wrds f beutyRolph, spent an enjoyable evening. with heightened feeling anti aug- Tuesday, at the Rolph summer cot- gesting pictures. 0f course, colloqui- tage at the lake. al language is 0f ten useti in prayer anti earneat people pouring out their Mrs. A. Townley anti family, Pen- lt hearta to Goti in a crisis may not elon Falls, Messrs. Milton anti Lloyd pause 10 select devotional woris. Walker, Toronto, Mrs. M. Veak and 5.Yet a life 0f prayer does leadt t the daughter, Winnipeg, Man., spent use 0f a certain f orm of language Thanksgiving day at Mr. A. A. containing many echoes of the Bible 'R.olph's. prayer books, poems and hymna. Mr. Dave Cathcart of Gladstone, There la a classical literature of Man., la visiting with relatives anti prayer hantiet down f rom saints frientis in the olti home district of anti mystics with which we do well Kential. It la 43 years since Dave to be familiar, anti there are moti- became a resident of the Prairie em books of prayer that repay our Province. stutiy. Oue thlng te avoit isl any A sample 0f the 1934 Clarkete - suggestion of what la crude or_________________ coarse. Nor shoulti we use 100 of- ten the same words anti phrases. no r. malter how beautiful they be. Pray- er is a process of moral anti mental discipline even as te choice 0f words - ianti ideas. Through practice some-- t tevelop a natural rhythm in pray- JOL -er. The most important thing la _ d that the prayer shoulti be sincere. 1 n~ hot from the heart anti conscious of o -the majeaîy ofGoct. A study of the Sprayers 0f the Bible wiIl enrich our A d vocabulary for prayer. n ýe The Lords Frayer, 9-13 BLSFRTEHM Y' Our best example as to prayer la BLS O HEHM 0 the prayer that Jesus taught his W. E. Graves, Bowrnanville Ydisciples 10 pray, the Lorti'a Prayer. >e It is ignificant that there la only Much intereat can be hati by grow- z one thing that we know the discip- ing buibs in pots anti bowls. Growing 3les asketi Jesus 10 teach them to do. iu pots la an entirely different thing ;t They asked hlm 10 teach them 10 to merely forcing them into bloom. 1- pray anti the Lord'a Frayer la the A long season of bloom la. possible, 'iresuit. Il is very brief, only a few as well as attractive shapely pots ,dozen wortis in English. Il la a of plants. While the bloom 0f the rsocial prayer-no singular personal bulb can lie founti right in ils heart, -pronoun is useti. It is a missionary anti while there la suffilcient footi fprayer beseeching the comung of storeti up in the bulb .'cales t0 pro- Goti's kingtiom. It la a spiritual duce foliage anti flowers, some root-. Iprayer dealing with the deepeat re- ing medium is necessary. Potteti alities of the muner life. Il la a Goti- bulbs provitie a gooti growing con- centreti prayer addressecl 10 our Fa- diltion. The fir-st thing necessary ther in heaven anti willing that his ia gooti bulbs. This does not always will be tione. The Lorti"s Prayer is mean large bulbs, but weight. ac- a miracle of condenseti expression cording 10 the aise la the factor that anti expanding trutha. Though il counts. Care of the buibs when pur- has been repeate i many billions of chaseti must be given. Pailure is limes lhroughout nineteen centuries* msmetimes due te, the fact that thee il is nol shopworn or out of date. j ulbs are purchased very laIe. Good It repays our study when we think garden soil la quite suitable for bulbs il through. Alwaet, as we pray il, in pots. Manure la not necessary, if we shoulti think It, anti we shoulti the soil la loarny. Hyacintha, Tulips refuse, lu public prayer, to gallop anti Daffodils are the three most lhrough il as lhough the chief alm popular kinds grown lu pots. In the la to make record lime. An actor actual potting, the sali below the once recitedti he Lorties Frayer anti bulbe shoulti be matie but moder- a Christian man saîi, "I neyer ately f irm. This encouragea root ac- heard that prayer bef ore." The pul- lion. The soul round the bulb shoulti pit may learn a lesson f rom the be presseti firmly. Hyacinths may be stage as 10 noise anti dignitylI grown in a pot. although three orà speech, more, accordýng to the aise 0f the Frayer Principles, 14 pot is very effective. Daffodils andti Praer s s naura an intrut-more in a pot. The bulbe ahoulti ive thal we do not needt 1 be taught neyer teuch each other lu the pot,t 10 pray, but we do needtol be taught anti wheu the potting is completet, how 10 pray. To talk te Got is as the tops shoulti be just a litt!e befow simple an acl of devotion as for a the surface. Give a gooti watering child te talk 10 its parents. Ils ual- when potting is finisheti. uraîness has been comparedti t hat o f breathing. The resuit of prayer The principle of bulb culture lu depentia upon our sincerity anti real- pots la 10 gel roots before the topss ity in prayer. If we pray for for- begin 10, grow. To do this, Il la usualt giver.ess for ourselves whlle nurslug te keep the pots in a dark place fori hate against others, we defeal our several weeks. Th2re are two or threet own prayers. But if we are readyr methotis. Que la te, bury the pots1 10 live more nearly as we pray, we in a trench in some sheltereti place st lu motion powers anti forces lin the garden. Another la 10 covert that tend 10 answer our own pray- the pots with several inches of peatt ers. Il' we are natural anti genuine lu a cellar, where proper moisturec inl prayer, wllhouî pretense or self-ieau be maîntaineti, andti b put ar deceplon, we bring health to Our atout boardi on them. The reason fort A Realist Ship potato crop may be seen in the wintiow of the Mac Carleton shoe &hop; two potatoes, their weight.be- ing slightly over 6 lbs. They wvere grown on the William Layton farni. Mr. W. H. Barrett la excavating for the foundation of a new resi- tience on hla property, S. Church Street, atijoining his two other houa- es. The new reaitience will be a one- story bungalow design, and he ex- pects te occupy it himiself. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Rickaby and daughter Helen, of Hamilton, Mr. anti Mrs Haroldi Rickaby and son John, 0f Oakville, Mr. andi Mrs. Ad- dison Rickaby, daughter Marion and Son Jim, Mr. andi Mrs. Charles Cum- ming andi son Harold, Mr. and Mrs. Perce Rîckaby andi taughter Joan, Mr. andi Mrs. Jack Rickaby, al 0f Toronte. spent Thanksgiving at Mr. Heber J. Souch's. Mr. Robert Foster receiveti the sad news of the death of his sister, Mra. Daniel Eagen of Philadelphia, Pa. Mrs. Eagen waa in her 86th year andi was the only other surviving member of Mr. Poster's family. Mrs. lEagen's late husband was presitient of the Bethlehem Steel Works in Philadelphia. Deceaseti was born in Essinghan, Yorkshire, England, andi came te Canada about 50 yeara ago. Pollowing her marriage ahe moved to the United States. S. Cutteli, 0f The News, receiveti a pleasant surprise when several re- latives. residents of Cavan town- ship, dropped inl on hlm last Mon- day to renew olt f rientiships. They were Messrs. Ediwin anti Cyril Moore, Miss Blanche Moore, F'rank Match- ett and Mrs. Thos. Armstrong. They were much pleaseti with the general appearance of the village. beautiful residencea anti grountis. public build- ings, and more particularly our beautiful Community Park with its swimmmig Pool, tennis courts, etc. ONE IS INJURED WHEN CAR SKIDS Miss Gertrude Wagar, Bowmanvflle, Receives Broken Wrist and Minor Cuts Miss Gertrude Wagar received a broken wrist and minor cut.s about the face when a car driven by her sister, Miss Pauline Wagar, crashed into the back of a parked car owned by Bruce Elliott, Newtonville, after skidding in front of the Bell Tele- phone office in Port Hope, Satur- day week, as the party was go- mng to the rugby game at Cobourg. The back 0f the parked car was badlY dented and the gas tank punc- tured, while the windshield was broken out of the Wagar car and the bumper badly bent. Another sister, Miss Marion Wagar, who was also an occupant, escaped without injury. Miss G. Wagar waa attend- ed by Dr. H. W. Benson who stated that her injuries were not serious. 1 arn capable of handling any job, large or smali, at reason- BERT PARKER HEALTH SELDOM COMES BY CHANCE TO PERSONS OVER THIRTY - Good health cannot lie taken for grantedany more than a good Income can. So for persons over thirty it la juat as smart and busi- ness-like tplan to enjoy good health as it ia to plan to enjoy a good income. Lnd it's just as mucli a matter of plain common sense to check up on yourself. In bealtji, your shortcomings are, at first, likely to be those annoying, not-exactly-well feelings. At sucli times, if your blood were tested, it would most likely bie found "low ln count". This means a shortage of red corpuscles and the corpuscles thernselves short of baenioglobin. Mnke up this double shortage, and you'Ul corne up to normal health agaul. Neglect it and serious resulta mnay foUlow. Observing, in his practice. the importance of keeping the vitalitY ofte blood up to normal, a Canadian autbority originated a blood- building preparation which has been belping run-down people back to health for nearly half a century. This preparation, now known the world over as Dr. Williams' Pink Puis, definitely increases the blood "count" in the majority of cases, thereby restoring vitality, stendying nerves, imparting strength nnd toning up the whole sys- temi. So the person over thirty whn finds good bealth slipping. la well advi-ed to take at least a 80-dav treatment of this excellent remedy. The elernent of chance has beeu practically elimintited in such a treatment. because tests reeently made by an authority in a clinic of 40 people. prnved ennelusive1y by individual blood *'count" that Dr. Williams' Pink Pilis céerta-inl'y improve the health by enriching the blood. Pull size box 5e 83G Â M? andt 1 preveut the bulbe being push- et up as the roots forin. Iu a few weeks, the pots wîll probably be quite full of rools anti the coveriug can be removed. We are Presuxning that the ssajority 0f our readera have te tiepenti upon windows or sunrooms 10 grow their plants. With this in minci, we ativise keeping te pots lu tee dark for a tisse allter the remnoval of the covering. on no ac- count. allow the pots te become ORDER BLUE CGA tiried out. When the plants have BEAT THE FIRST C( matie an inch or two of, growth, il la wise 10 place them near the light, but very strong heat is not necesaary. You've got to be ready The best blooms are produceti by luwngi a mocierate temperature. advance, if you're goini suggested, will protuce gooti results. The =maller buiba such as crocuses clean, dustless, Blue coal and scillas, make charssing pots of you better heat; elimine bloom anti neet the anme kint of treatment alreatiy describeti. The Musa. only difference we shoult ativise la tee use of shall*ow pans, rather than CLEAN HEAT pots. Bulbe In bowls are now very f ree- Blue coal means a dlean- Ily grown. Some o! them will open er baaement and les their blooms lu gravel anti water. chance of dust gettlng Some o! them will grow weil lu a iste your hanse. glass especially matie for tee pur- pose, anti fileti wlh water only. A LP R The methoti usuaily adopteti, how- A LP R ever. la to, have a mixture of peal Blue CoaIle alwi anti grave] wlth a little charcoal. best purpose. StL This is matie moderately molat anti the bulbs are packed in It lu the bowl. Any bowla that happen te be avilbl cn e ad musretfr h p ard& Cil] avilablpe. ca efumat erve fors b vefor with no drainage Shrp- vision, the peal mixture mlght easily PHONE 15 become bo wel. Where gravel only la useti, the atones are packeti round the bulbe te keep theni steatiy, antid I sosse waler kept lu the bottom o! iler's Worm Powders wlJ uot the bowl. Crocuses may be bloometi only expel worsss fromn the syatem, lu a saucer by merely coverlnig thee but wili nduce healhful conditions boltom wlth the bulbe anti standing o! the system under whlch worms lu a cool place wlth no water. Some can no longer lhrive. Worms keep weeks laler, lhey may be brought te a chulu a continual state o! reat- the llght, when, wlth a lite water less ness anti pain, andti here cau be lu the bottom o! the saucer, they wlll no comlfort for the 11111e one until cosse Inb bloom. It la wlsee b re- the cause of aufferlng be removed, member teat bulbe in bowls shoulti whlch can be easily doue by the use be brought gradually Into bloomi, for jo! these Powders, than whlch there Ihey will not stand forcing. 1 la uolhlng more effective. By WALLY BISHOT) Lb~'RlGw*4T:BUT I puTr I-v4 srEAsKE1 AMD Ï Ë ,i 1 l i , 4ORE HEAT 1!? ýL TO-DAY ,OLD WAVE for Winter in kg to t>e warm on. Put in aur l now. It gives ites basement PROPER HEAT Large lumps give a. low flarne, even heat because they buris slowly from POSE FUELS wa." speclfled for its Love, f urnace, boler. J Lumber Co. Ltd. 130VVBANVIILE It wlll Relleve a Cold.--Colds are the commnonest alments of manknd and if neglected may lead to serlous conditions. Dr. Thomas' Eclectrlc 011 will relleve the bronchial pas- sages of inflammation speedly and thoroughly and wlll strengthen themi agalnst subsequent attack. Anid as it eases the inflammation it wilI us- uallY stop the cough because it al- laya the irritation ln the tlu-oat. Trry It and prove it. MEALTI MEANS CHARM AND HAPPINESS uak ami f spa o ealth and vitaliey. Ciea, skia atracs. The is bath happy and popular. Perhaps you are not reaily 111 à et when the day's work is dame you ane ton tired to enter into the gond times dtha atiier women enolo>. ot extra energ1e t Lydi .Pinkhmms Vegeta e Comund Ittones Up yOur genermi c iam. es you more pop-mone Remember that g9onof i 10 women report benefi. Le t i belo Fou ton. G L Supporting The Church -il BEE HI1 GOLDEN CORN SYRUP A GRPEAT E NE RGY FOOD Better Service 1 have opened a store, one door west of Martyn's Bowling AiIcy, where 1 arn prepared ta give effic- lent service in plumblng, heating, tinsrnithlng and repairs. The response te rny openlng announcement has been most grat- ifying and it is with this in mmnd that my uptown store has been PAGE NINE PHONE 1 LANVILLE

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