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Canadian Statesman (Bowmanville, ON), 14 Jun 1917, p. 3

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- - : V \ Why gi Anuric M Is aa INSURANCE Against Sudden Death. "I AM'THE GOOD -* Before an Insurance Company will take a risk on your life the examining physician will test the urine. and report Whether you are a good risk. When your kidneys get. sluggish and clog, you suffer from backache, sick-heaa- ache, dizzy spells, or the twinges and pains of lumbago, rheumatism and gout. The urine is often "cloudy, full of sediment ; channels often get sore and sleep is disturbed two or three times a night. This is the time you Christ Came to Earth to Seek and to SaveJHis Lost Sheep and He Gave His Life For Them. should consult some physician of wide Dr. I > experience--such as Dr. Pierce of the Invalids' Hotel and Surgical Institute, Buffalo, N. Y. Send him 10 cents for sample package of his new discovery, n Anuric." Write him your symptoms and send a sample of urine for test. Experience has taught Dr. Pierce that R Anuric" is the most powerful agent in dissolving nric-^acid, as hot w^ter melts sugar; besides being absolutely harmless it is endowed with other properties, for it preserves the kidneys In > healthy condition by thoroughly cleansing them. Being so. many times more active than lithia, it clears the heart valves of any sandy substances which may clog them and checks the degeneration of the blood-vessels, as well as regulating blood pressure. r Anuric " is a regular insurance and li fe-saver for all big meat eaters and those who deposit lime-salts in their joints. Ask the druggist for " Anuric " put up by Dr. Pierce, in 50-cent packages. "Jesus, the Good Shepherd."--St. ! John, x. 1-18. j The Twenty-third Psalm and j;his tenth chapter of St. John should be studied together. In the Psalm, David, by divine inspiration, tells what the Lord does for His sheep. In the tenth chVpter of St. John Christ verifies David's declarations and adds glowing mercies to them. He declares Himself to be the Good Shepherd and culminates all the wonders wonders bf His loving care by saying, "I lay down My life for the sheep." The likeries^ of people to sheep and of children to lambs is one of the beautiful beautiful comparisons of the Bible, and it is so apt that even children can understand, understand, while it affords study for the wisest. "All we, like sheep, have gone astray," sings Isaiah, "I will seek out My sheep and will deliver them out of all places where they have been scattered in the cloudy and dark day," cries Ezekiel. And there is hardly hardly a passage in the Old Testament which has brought more comfort when read, or when sung in the oratorio of j "The Messiah," than that found in the. fortieth chapter of Isaiah: "He shall feed His flock like a shepherd ; He STRENGTH AND BEAUTY Come with Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical ; shall gather the lambs with His arm Discovery. This is a blood cleanser and alterative that starts the liver and stom- and carry them in His bosom, and alterative that starts tne nver ana stom- , in p-Pnflv Wd that btp with ach into vigorous action. It thus assists , stiali lead tnose tnat are with the body to manufacture rich red blood young. j Seeks the Wandering Sheep-, j It is well for us to recall some characteristics of the shepherds in the | Bible lands. The shepherd always went before the sheep and led them." He did not drive them. which feeds the heart, nerves, brain and 'organs of the body. The organs work smoothly like machinery running in oil. You feel clean, strong and strenuous instead instead of tired, weak and faint. Wood's Phosphodine, The Great English Hemcdi Tones and Invigorates the whole He called I them, even as Christ calls to us, "Fol- : low Me." He had a name for each nervou? system, -makes new Blood-. sheep and lamb, and knew them by Ve : ld old Veins, Cures Nervous Debility, Mental and Brain Worry, Despondency, Despondency, Loss of Energy, Palpitation of the Heart, Failing Memory. Price $1 per box, six for 55. One will please, six will cure. Sold by all druggists or mailed in plain pkg. on receipt of S ri re. Xctc pamphlet mailed free. THE WOOD 1 ED I CI NE CO., TORONTO, OHT. (Fwwriy WliiwO those names and called them so. So Christ calls us by name--that name : written down in the Lamb's Book of Life--and if we are true in our love for Him we answer as did Samuel, j "Speak, Lord, for Thy servant i heareth." The shepherd led his sheep ; where they could find pasture and I water. So the Lord feeds His chil- i dren with heavenly food and gives i them freely to drink of the water of I life. When the poor, foolish sheep - In all countries. Ask for our INVEN- , , , -- TOR'S AD viser, which will be sent tree, wandered away the shepherd left the ! flock in the fold and went out to seek MARION & MARION. 864 University 6t., Montréal. the lost one, incurring danger and S Fours Smart--Economical F pur pnseeager Individual front seats 32 horsepower Cantilever rear springs TT is an ideal car for people of taste and refinement--the great sweeping success of the year. The Overland Country Club is the smart sport model of the small car class. Grey body, black and nickel trim, and the price includes wire wheels with one extra. Have a look at the Country Club right -and a demonstration. $1110 Overland Country Club Five wire wheels 4-inch tires Auto-Lite starting «(&d lighting 104-inch wheelbase Other Overland Fours The Light Four Model 8S-Four Touring Roadster Toeing 41250 - ' $1 -- * Roadster $1230 All prices f. o. b. point of shipment Subject to change without notice perchance losing, his life, David told Saul how he killed a lion and a bear when they attacked his sheep and perhaps perhaps carried away a lamb to devour it. So Christ came to earth, leaving the angels and all the glories of Heaven, to seek and save His lost sheep, and He gave His life for' them. The shepherd shepherd had a crook or staff with which he drew up a wounded -sheep from sobie pit into which it had fallen. So the dear Lord reaches down the staff of His pardoning mercy and lifts up the fallen. How beautifully Christ describes the wandering sheep whom He seeks, and pictures the joy of Heaven when the rescue is accomplished! accomplished! (St. Luke, xv, 4-7.) The hymn Mr Sankey used to sing has brought thousands to the Master, and I can never read it without feeling how tenderly the dear Lord must have felt, even when He died, for His wandering and lost children: COUNTIES PRESS MEETS W. A. PICKARD, Agent, Temperance St., . Bowmanvilie Phone 248. There were ninety and -nine that safely safely .lay . In the shelter of the fold; But one was out on the hills away, Far off from the gates of gold. Away on the mountains wild and bare. Away from 'The tender Shepherd's care." Evidently we have in this Good Shepherd chapter an assurance of Christ's love for us, a love which even our wandering away from Him cannot kill. No three words in all the gospel are greater than these, "God is love." If He is love then He is good and kind, for love can never be better. If He is love then He cares. And if He cares, then He will save; and He can save because He is God. Loving, He understands and sympathizes. Loving, He never leaves us, but keeps close by our side to guide - us. Loving, He speaks to us so low that, we only can hear. And loving, He will bring us at last to His home where He has prepared a place for us. The Love of the Master. Let us never doubt God's love. It may seem dark sometimes and the way be hidden. We may think we are alone and forgotten. Satan may try to makp us think that there is no God, or that He has turned away from us. But all the while the dear Father is there, right near us, waiting for the time when He can clasp us in His arms and comfort us. No •- better words can claim our lips when we go to sleep at night, when we awake in the morning, when we are in the busy "World, than just these three great words, "God is love." My Shepherd ! Yes, the Lord is my Shepherd. The melody of the Twenty- third Psalm is deepened into the wonderful wonderful harmony of the Good Shepherd chapter, and I know I cannot lack anything, anything, for He is a bountiful provider and my cup shall be full. If only we •will hear His voice! If only we ^ill follow Him! If only we will let Him feed us with the food which alone can satisfy! For in the midst of all this darkness that surrounds us and hides the light from the world He is standing standing gloriously on the waves and we can hear His voice if we listen: "It is I. Be not afraid!" My Shepherd, I love Thee. Lead on, O Christ;, and by Thy grace I will follow and not be afraid. Call me by my name, dear Lord. Get me see Thee before me as a great Light. Nourish me by Thy love. Seek me when I wonder. And at last, oh, Thou precious Savioùr, let me dwell in Thy House forever. Amen.--Rev. Floyd W. Tomkins. WEDDING Elliott--H enry " On Victoria Day, (May 24th) at Bowmanvilie, Bowmanvilie, John Stanley Elliott, Principal of Dundalk Public School, was married to Jean Gertrude E, younger daughter of Mr. and Mrs. S. J. Henry of Bowmanvilie, by the Rev. J. W. Rae, Newcastle. The bride is the teacher of form I (primary) and the school will lose her good services at the close of the present term. The happy young couple will reside in Dundalk. Dundalk. They returned to town Saturday and are receiving the congratulations of their many friends--Dundalk Herald. Baker--Hie. On Wednesday May 23rd, at 5 p.m. a quiet but pretty wedding took place at the Methodist parsonage, Dunsford, when a sister of Rev. A. C. Hie, Miss Florence E. Hie, was united in matrimony, with Mr. Isaac Baker, of the Goodyear Rubber Co., Bowmanvilie. The ceremony was performed by- Rev. Mr. Hie, the young couple being unattended. The bride, who carried a bouquet of white carnations, carnations, looked charming in a cream silk crepe gown. Miss .Edith Mulligan, Lifford, Lifford, played the wedding march,,.while during the signing of the register Miss Nellie Thurston, of Dunsford, sang sweetly sweetly the hymn, "God Will Take Care of You". A dainty wedding supper was seryed, Mr. and Mrs. Baker leaving for their new home in Bowmanvilie the following following day. Wash That Itch Away There is absolutely no suffering from eczema who ever used the simple wash D. D. D. and did not feel immediately that wonderfully calm, cool sensation that comes when the itch is taken away. This soothing wash penetrates the pores, gives instant relief from the most distressing distressing skin diseases. Jury & Lovell. D. D. D. *ftoMns" Soon Relieved This Dangerous Condition 632[ Gerrard St. East, Toronto. "For two years, I was a victim of Acute Indigestion and Gas In The Stomach. It afterwards attacked my Heart and I had pains all over my body, so that I could hardly move around. I tried all kinds of Medicine but hone of them did me any good. At last, I decided to try tl Fruit-a-tives I bought the first box last June, and now I am well, after using only three boxes. I recommend "Fruit-a-tives" to anyone suffering from Indigestion". FRED J. CAVEEN. 60c. a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size, 25c. At all dealers or sent postpaid by Fruit- a-tiyes Limited, Ottawa. 1 Health Accidents To Children. Insects that have crawled into the baby's ear may be suffocated by dropping dropping sweet oil or castor oil into the ear, which after twenty minutes should be washed out by gentle syringing syringing with warm water from a fountain syringe, hung one foot above the child's head. Peas, beans shoe buttons or beads are sometimes put into the ear and nose by adventurous or /experimenting /experimenting children. Now the shoe button or bead will not swell ah does the pea or bean, and may often be safely washed out, but if it is causing pain and will not drop out of the ear, or will not be easily blown out, in case of the nose, see your physician at once. He has in his possession just the necessary instruments for its immediate immediate removal. To Treat Nosebleed. If the nose bleeds whenever it is cleansed, more than likely there is an ulcer on the septum which will continue continue to bleed if left untreated. The physician should heal the ulcer, and the child should be taught always to vaseline the nostril before cleansing it. In case, of persistent nosebleed, put the child to bed with the head elevated. elevated. Pressure should be put on the blood vessels going to the nose by placing two fingers firmly on the outer outer angles of the nose on the upper lip. While a helper may put firm pressure at the foot of the nose at the inner angle'of each eye. An ice bag may be placed at the back of the neck and another piece of içe held on the forehead at the root of the nose. As the bleedjng begins to stop, as well as during the bleeding, all blowing of the nose is forbidden, as it will only cause the bleeding to start afresh. It sometimes helps to hold a piece of ice in the hands. Caring for Burns. Burns and scalds are not at all uncommon uncommon with children whose eagerness eagerness to explore and desire to investigate investigate often leads them into trouble. 1. The simple reddening of the skin--slight burns and sunburn--simply sunburn--simply needs protecting paraffin and is to be covered with sterile gauze. 2. Burns which destroy the outer layer of the skin, producing a blister, are treated much as a wound would be treated. The blister if larger than a half-dollar should be opened near the edge with a needle which has been passed through a flame. The serum should be pressed out and the parts disinfected with an antiseptic solution and then some sort of paraffin preparation, preparation, such as those largely used in the base hospitals in the European war zone, may be applied with absorbent absorbent cotton. This protects the newly formed tissue cells and prevents destruction destruction by sticking dressings, which often happened in the old method of treating burns. 3. When the tissues are injured in the more severe burns the surrounding surrounding flesh is/carefully disinfected with Dakin's solution, and - the same dressing dressing applied as described for the "blister "blister burns." Burns may become seriously infected. infected. In that, case they require the care of the skilled physician. If a child's clothes catch on fire he is instantly to be thrown on the floor and any heavy woolen fabric, such as a curtain, table spread, blanket or rug, is to be thrown over him (beginning (beginning at the neck) and the flames thus smothered. The clothing is now cut off, and if more than one-third of tiie body is burned the child should be ■'taken to the hospital for constant care. Great care should be taken in keeping, the unburned portion of the body warm, as there is a great tendency for. the child to become very cold as 'fie: weakens from both the nervous shock j and from the absorption of toxins'. OBITUARY Your Liver has important work to do. Under Under favorable conditions it does it well If sluggish, relieve it with (t Sale of Any Medicine m the World* »ld everywhere. In boxes, 2 Sc. UNIVERSITY KINGSTON ONTARIO ARTS EDUCATION MEDICINE APPUED SCIENCE Mining, Chemical, Civil, Mechanical and Electrical Engineering. HOME STUDY Arts Course by correspondence. Degree with one year's attendance. ; Summer'^ School Navigation School July and August December to April GEO. Y. CHÔWN, Registrar 15 Keep Furnace Pipes Clear. In order to recover small articles dropped through the floor régister grating of a - hot air heating system without the necessity of removing a section of the pipe mesh gratings may be fitted into place. No. 6 gauge wire mesh may be used in places just large enough to. fit into the metal box below the register. The best time to do this is as soon, as the fire is out. -You should always keep a bottle of Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets on the shelf. Thé little folk so often need a mild.and safe cathartic and they do appreciate - Chamberlain's instead of nauseous oils and mixtures. " For atomach troubles and constipation, give one just before going to bed. All druggists, 25c, or send to CHAMBERLAIN MEDICINE CO., TORONTO 10 / Otir columns have been crowded so much ot late with.letters and local 'happenings 'happenings that some articles have beeri held over.' Midland Press Association met in Port Hope on May 25 when the newspaper newspaper publishers decided to increase the price of their papers to $1.50 per year, as 168 country papers_have done already in this Province. Mr. Arthur R. Allqway was the speaker of the day and said many very pertinent things. He said women who are kept at home most of the time have a right to know from a local paper what is going on around them. Mr. W. S. Given, Millbrook, is reported assaying that in Cavan township in Durham county there are 100 families who do not take a newspaper or magazine in their homes. This is. a startling statement if true. Editor Editor J. O. Herity of Belleville said the rural newspaper should give a faithful reflection reflection of the news of the district fit to print. The newspaperman does just as hard work and is just as useful to the community community as the doctor, lawyer, or dentist, but is not as well rewarded. If business men sold with as little regard to cost as the newspaper men do they would soon be in the bankruptcy courts. Mr: M. W. G. Purser, Port Hope, and Mr. T. X P. Lancaster, Lancaster, Havelock, moved a vote of thanks to Mr. Alloway for his admirable address. Officers were elected as follows: Hon- Presfdent--J. G. Keefer, Register, Norwood; Norwood; Geo. H< Wilson, Post, Lindsay. President--C. A. Goodfellow, Gazette, Whitby; Vice-President-- H. S. Keyes, Express, Colborne; Sec-Treas-- D. D. C. Dawe, Examiner, Peterboro; Executive-- J. J. Lee, Gazette, Fenelon Falls; M. W. G. Purser, Times, Port Hope; W. S. Given, Given, Reporter, Millbrook; T. P. Lancaster, Standard, Havelock; and J. W. Deyell, Warder, Lindsay.- --' A The Select Family Hotel Vj \ourl Centrally located--Just off Yonge Street y _ Rates : American Plan--$2.60 up per.day. European Plan--Single 51.25 up per day--Double-fl.50 up per day. Write for descriptive booklet. 71 Grenville Street, Toronto, Ontario est minster Hotel, Toronto "A Real Hotel Without a Bar Bright and attractive. Fireproof. Every bedroom bedroom has a bathroom. Elegant furnishings. Splendid cuisine. Easy access to shopping districts districts and theatres. Free taxi service from Union Station and wharf. Ask for Provincial Motor taxis. RATES: Single room, with Jxath, $1.50 to $2.50. • Breakfast, 25c#to 50c. Luncheon, 35c to SOff Dinner, 50c to 75c. Inclusive rates, American plan, $2.50 to $3.50 a day. Write for booklet to 240 JARVIS STREET, TORONTO. 4619 E-W The Gold Dust Twins 9 The Terror of Asthma comes like a thief in the night with its dreadful throttling, robbing its victim of breathr It seems beyond the power of human aid fo relieve until one trial is made of that remarkable preparation, Dr. J. D. Kellogg's Kellogg's Asthma Remedy. Then relief comes with a rush. Life becomes worth living, and, if the remedy be used persistently persistently the disease is put permanently to rout. Take no substitute. T HE floors and doors appear to wait until the dust germs congregate congregate ; the housewife hails each dawning day with grim and harrowing dismay. Says she : "My work will NEVER end; o'er dusty stretches I must bend, until, with aching back and hands I finish what the day demands." The fi Floor-and-Door-a 99 x Girl Then Mrs. Jones, one afternoon, dropped dropped in, at time most opportune. An optimist, she knew the wiles of household household work--its sighs and smiles. She told of how she polished floors and wood work and the endless doors, until when Hubby saw them, too, reflections said; "Why, howdy-do!" Mr. Henry Hodge, Grenfell, Sask. A former highly respected résider t of Darlington passed away near Greenfell, Sask., May l6th. He was the youngest in a large family being born near Launceston, Launceston, Cornwall, England. He came to Bowmanvilie in 1880, and settled at Enniskillen where he worked at his trade as a mason. Later he went west and pur- chasecUand near Wolseley, Sask., where he became wealthy, owning several sections sections at the time or his death. He was 67 years of age, A brother Mr. Simon Hodge lives near Burketon and one sister (Mary Ann Hod ge) formerly Mrs. John Manning, Tyrone, survive. "The Gold Dust Twins," said she, "I find, help leave the woes of dust behind. Each mark of sticky hands on doors, each tread of muddy feet oAfloors, all fade before the slightest touch of Gold Dust, and the work is such that, when the woodwork has been done, I "find said work was only fun." This line of reasoning must show that those whoVe tried it OUGHT to know. If you, in one day's duties, find that there's a Grouch in ev'ry Grind, invite the Gold Dust Twins to share such tasks as tire and fret and wear. It is a Liver Pill,--Many of the ailments ailments that man has to contend with have their origin in a disordered liver, which is a delicate organ, peculiarly susceptible to to the disturbances that come from irregular irregular habits or lack of care in eating and drinking. This accounts for the great many regulators now pressed on the attention attention of sufferers. Of these there is none superior to Parmelee's Vegetable Pills. Their operation though gentle is effective and the most delicate can use them. Editor H. S. Fry of The Canadian Countryman, Toronto, has a good article in a recent issue on "Cutting Labor Costs in the Orchard" based on "Gibson and Johnson methods" the article stated the first method, of which Mr. W.H. Gibson of Newcastle may be called the "father", is the one sometimes used in Ontario. By this method a strip of sod of varying width, usually six feet, is left on either side of the tree row, thus reducing the area cultivated cultivated to a strip from thirty or forty feet wide to eighteen to twenty-eight feet between between each two rows of trees. A new floor brush, which holds water in its handle, and is constructed constructed very much on the order of a fountain fountain pen, permits any desired amount of moisture to reach the bristles. From kitchen floor to bedroom suite, these tireless little chaps make neat, and best of all, the gum expense is measured up in meager cents. They put both dust and dirt to rout and run the last old microbe out. Usually the man who kicks the loudest about the rich is the man who has always knocked off work as soon as he had a couple of dollars to spend. The Englishman, as a rule, makes a just and impartial judge, and a cor rupt British judge is almost unknown. --Sir C. R. Lucas. * ,J K- % As toothsome as the name implies. X Delicious, lpng- lasting. The third of tije VPrigley trio of refreshing confections. Good for teeth, breath, appetite, appetite, digestion. Seated Tight- Kept Right I Three of a kind Keep them in mind Chew H after , every meal / r X ft - f v .» ] ◄ 5 > :v MADE IN CANADA ON SALE WHEREVER CONFECTIONS ARE SOLD The ^Flavour Lasts J JF-13 1 -ÿxLrX ; ;vxy

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