Prescott-Russell en Numérique

Russell Leader, 21 Jun 1933, p. 3

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

[0 SEE HER F AT GO OUR CROSS-WORD PUZZLE - - 1 2 3 4 5 Cost This Woman 75¢ ws ide If you are curious to know what is 11 12 13 M 0 R E ®mappening to her bust, waist, and hip measurements, read her letter: -- 14 16 17 "I was 186 lbs. when I started tak- 0 Y M E N ! ing Kruschen three months ago, and 18 am now 162 1bs., and I hope to reduce 2 my weight still more. Regarding my 33 : measurements before taking Kruschen: 25 I was 41-ins. bust, 38-ins. waist, and Pg Yotzeeo losss & logger 49-ins. hips, and now I am 39-ins. bust, i j > : 36-ins. waist, and 45-ins. hips, my age 2 = 78 nore Shjeyinont o being 29 years. A 75c. bottle of Krus- } chen lasts me a month. I take one 29 30 We Money. BUY the 3 i half-teaspoonful in a 'tumbler of hot : Vv still more water each morning before breakfast. 31 f 32 33 i To Apart from losing weight, I feel so much better in health. I do not wake 34 35 36 up in the morning still feeling tired, and do not get headaches like I used 38 39 40 / 41 to. I cannot thank Kruschen enough." ~--Miss) M. A. H. 42 Kruschen contains those six mineral 4 4 45 salts, proportionately balanced, found 46 in the waters of those famous Euro- 48 49 FULL c pean Spas used by generations of fat WEIGHT Va th . PLUG 7 0 people to reduce weight. 50 51 . Kruschen helps blood, nerves, glands To and body organs to function properly-- a wi 3a Som Dow strength and energy-- Horizontal 36--Snare 12--Meat 'dring (pl) . o-oo FATENIS. 2e8} younger--look better, work | 1--Bag 38--Operated 13--Skinny S = - 3 N OFFER TO EVERY INVINTO j s ; 6--Rents 39--Species of parrot 16--Mud S M I L E S A Last ot yaar od luyenilo Ho So i 2 --T§ : nformation sent free. e Bam:a pve : 11--Sends forth 41 Title : 19--Hellenic 909 pi pez, World Patent Attorneys, 273 Ban First Newspaper 13--Head coveri 42--Exclamation 21--Antennae be treet, Ottawa, Canada. ] Al ns ering 43--Law maker 23--Musical sly Sh own in New York 5 Jews: 45--DMausical note 25--Unlawful rquisite SLapIol: svrss 17--F, th 46--Total 27--Golf mou LOWERING GLADIOLI BULBS, oi inh Tote of scale 4g p° 5 28--Evergreer : Beeted. ig PR Ronee Gutton, : all. . . i] London Press Club Collection Poti OL OTE 3 baod 200%) colds 3 Sn" With Items 300 Years Old | 21--mide 51~Tempest 31--Deity of lia 5g = oh : 32--Sonth Amean BABY CNICKS OUT OF THE --Evolution of Press Re- 22--Terrible Vertical shrub SE -- 24--To wee --_-- ports from D D 1--Sang we 5 LL "TOP-NOTCH" BARRED lf | Jeath of 25--Obtains 2--Egyptiamgod over ~- Rock Chicks are Government Apc > 20 Be rE 1d that 1 1 housewife proved, from blood-tested parents an a 2 ronoun #=To rave We are to at a loca are sired by approved cockerels from resent --To release 4--Quid 37--Refractinglass has painted the following suggestive 3. OiF i Eb ah New York--Two hundred rare id Bruin sticks 5--One who inherits 39--To repai; lines in a conspicuous place in her production back of 113 Barred Rock Bewspapers, forerunners of the papers Sa face 6--Weight measures 40--Courts husband's bathroom: "He is blest who i Ree Se en eA Ne Bf to-day, dating back three centuries 32 0 walt 7--Conclusion 43--To petitil takes his daily scrub, twice blest is he] 30° Cr" ni" Jeposit for immediate ship Sad 2eliite naively sone tho Sra --Closing time 8--Article 44--Wheel tick who scours out the tub." ment with balance co. Ive Delivery events in English history, are on ex- Safe hiliside 9--To disprove 47--Conjuncon i Entario. oA : Miftion hero 4 plano bi gl --Sindbad's bird 10--Takes leading role 49--Therefo! Uncle Will had sent little Marjorie a ; @nnual meeting of The Associated ; 3 s | bottle of lavender water. : to start it. One can start almost any- ress, and Monk's entry into London, which Answers to Last Wik Puzzle Uncle Will--"Marjorie, how did you | thing these days with $3,000. The newspapers are the collection of the Press Club of London, which, In lending them, has permitted them lo go out of London for the first time. he exhibition ig sponsored by the Columbia University School of Journ- Rlism. Dean Carl Ww. Ackerman, who ar- ged it, remarked that two consid- jerations which still exist to-day-- 'selling and the danger of war'-- gave birth to the idea of newspapers. "In the exhibit," Dean Ackerman paid, "one may find the origin of the modern newspaper. The early pam- Phlets were written to interest busi- ness men and maintained a personal eommercial character. Their object wag advertising in embryo." 3 Execution of Charles Told One of the most interesting exhib- its is the pamphlet published by Peter Cole in 1648 telling of the exe- cution of Charles I. It ig prefaced with one of the earliest examples of newspaper headline. The dramatic death of the King is told in full de- tail in dialogue, part of which fol- lows: "King: When I put out my hands this way then-- (stretching them out) "After that, having said two or three words (as he stood) to Him- self with hands and eyes lift up; Jmmediately stooping down, laid His Neck upon the Block: And then the Executioner again putting his Hair gnder his Cap, the King said (think- Ing he had bin going to strike), Stay lor the signe. "Executioner: Yes, I will, please Your Majesty. "And after a very little pawse, {be King stretching forthe his hands, The Executioner at one blow, severed his head from his Body. "That when the Kings head was cut off, the Executicner held it up, rnd shewed it to the Spectators. "And hig Body was put in a Coffin, covered with black Velvet, for that purpose. "The King's Body now lies ir His Lodging Chamber in Whitehall." The pamphlet ends solemnly with p line in large italics: "Sic Transit Gloria Mundi." : The newspaper in its primitive form, according to the Columbia Behool of Journaislm, came to Lon- fon from the Low Countries early in the seventeenth century. It was ¥nown ag a "coranto," probably de- tived from current or curento, to sig- pify that it was relaying "news while 1t Is news." The Thirty Years' War was then in progress and the coranto, published irregularly, sprang up In London in 1621 to satisfy the demand for war reports. The next step was the appearance of the authorized "diudnalls" of Parliament. News pamphlets in the exhibition record Parliamentary proceedings of the time, and also contain accounts of the battle between Blake ana Van Tromp and de Rlyter, Cromwell's campaigns in Scotland and Ireland, and it | preceded the return of Charles II Paper of 1667 Shown The establishment of the first news- paper in the modern sense, The Lon- don Gazette in 1667, is markeq in the exhibition with a copy for Aug. 1-5, 1667. There also is a copy of the first trade newspaper, "A Collection for Improvement of Husbandry and Trade," including many features strikingly like those of to-day, such as stock prices, exchange quotations, corn prices and want ads. The first English daily morning newspaper, the Daily Courant, which appeared soon after the accession of Queen Anne, also is represented. The appearance of the Daily Advertiser, which is represented by a copy of the issue of Oct. 27, 1741, was of momen- tous importance in English 'journal- isin because it adopted a format fun- damentally like that of the newspap- pers to-day, and hence has been call- ed the first modern newspaper, The recognition of the freedom of the press stimulated the issuance of literary journals in the first half of the eighteenth century ang the exhi- bition includes copies of papers edit- ed by Steele, Addison, Prior and Swift. After these came the essay journals, or "coffee house publica- tions," of the time of Samuel John- son. The exhibition carries the story of journalism on through the pericd of George III, when, in the last quarter of the eighteenth century, the Eng- lish daily morning newspaper came into its own, and the outstanding journals of England were founded. The exhibition includes a facsimile of The Times for Nov. 9, 1796, con- taining George Washington's Farewell Address. a he There also are issues of the Lon- don evening newspapers, including The Star for which Robert Burns wrote for a guinea a week. The exhibition includes copies of four early American newspapers, The Providence Gazette and Country Journal for Dec. 10, 1785; The Am- erican Mercury for Dec. b, 1785; The United States Chronicle for Dec. 22, 1785, and The Dally Advertiser of New York for Feb. 4, 1786, % 900 MILLION HERRINGS CAUGHT Nearly 900,000,000 herrings were were caught in English waters this year. oe BD. UE ---- e' A firm advertised for a girl clerk, and the next morning hundreds of ap- plicants arrived. So numerous were they that the chief told the office boy to admit no more. Shortly after this an aggressive woman arrived, and, pushing her way past the others, ask- ed to-see the chief. By this time the office boy had grown deaf to all pro- testations and had but one znswer. "Not today, madam," he said. "But I'm his wife," said the woman. "Not today, madam,' was the inexorable reply. S|PIY A Y|A|R R WAN F DAU P R 0 D ee Veterin The old map sits, baleheaded in the sun, A battered hat benedh him on the grass, And watches, lazily, he people pass. The limping hours dag slowly, ome by one. Now it is four, and children home- ward bound Rup by and wave at 1m; they know him well ; As one who has a tlousand tales to tell Of ships and battles, and found. By five the ancient pipe he puffs is cold; The gentle sun takes on a tinge of gold. His eyes are closed, his have wandered far, And head on chest, ke dozes in the light, } To dream again that magic moonlit night The British marched through sleep- ing Kandahar, --Herbert C. Uren. bam Schools Are Formed For Women Drivers St. Louis.--A series of schools for women drivers has been inaugurated here by the St. Louis Safety Coun- cil. More than 200 women were Te- cently "graduated" at the first school. The course consists of four meet- ings, of two hours each, at which a trafic court judge or some other traffic authority lectures. Written examinations are given at the con- clusion of the course and a loving cup awarded the winner. treasure lost thoughts TIRED AND IRRITABLE? Take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound ft steadies the nerves and helps to build you up. You will eat bet- ter . . . sleep better. ..look bet- ter. Life will seem worth living again. Remember that 98 out of 100 women say, 'It helps me.' Let it help you too. Liquid or tabe like the gift I sent you?" prefer lemonade." Marjorie--"It was all right, but I When a hospital patient is "doing as well as can be expected,' he may be in any sort of condition from convales- cent to one jump ahead of notice in- forming the world that his interment will be private Real Sleuths "What happened when the police searched your house?" "It was fine! The police found the front-door key which my wife had hid- den, a penny stamp I lost weeks ago, and four collar studs." Then the Feathers Flew A certain rather exclusive club had replaced its familiar black-coated male staff with young and, in some cases, pretty waitresses. One day a member who had been strongly opposed to the change arrived at the club for lunch. "How's the duck?" he asked an at- tractive waitress rather grufly., . "Oh, I'm fine!" ghe replied. "And hows the old pelican feeling himself?" Insistent Pat, the Irishman, placed seven-and- sixpence on the counter at the village post office. 'I want a license for my mother, miss," De said to the postmistress, She gave hm a superior look. "You don't want a license for your mother," she replied. "That I do," said Pat, "she's bought a dog." John Brew and Alice Beers were recently married by the Rev. Still, ae- cording to a Nebraska daily. Customer--"I don't like those shoes. The soles are too thick." Salesman--'"Then I can assure you, madam. that the objection will grad- ually wear away." Some of the older people can still remember the time when the farmer with the ambitious daughter was final- ly induced to trade the old sorrel mare for an organ. Chief--"You had yesterday off to go to your mother-in-law's fcneral, and now I hear she is not dead." Clerk--*"Pardon me. I did not say she was dead. I merely said I would like to go to her funeral." A lot of pity is wasted on animals. There are many contented cows, but who ever heard of a contented farmer? Folks are drifting back to the old- fashioned games. Some thought they would play a game of dominoes, and found to their surprise they didn't know how. A man claims to have invented a let form, as you prefer. Young Son--"Dad, is there any dif- ference between a new fad and a new wrinkle?" Father--"Certainly, my son. Young women have fads, older women have wrinkles." 'We had to fire Our housemaid Nan; She treated china ike Japan. oe. " Passengers sust Pay London, Eng.--A. fine of $75, with $30 costs, was imposed at Bow Street recently on Isaac Collis, 52, a poultry farmer of Dameny avenue, Laindon, Essex, for travelling on the District Railway without paying his fare, 2d, and intending not to pay. 421 College 8t., Toronto Harley-Davidson Distributors Write at once for our bargain list of used motorcycles, Terms arrarged. NEY FOR YQ AT HOME Mo OFF COLOUR? HOW IS YOUR LIVER? Wake up your Liver Bile --Without Calomel Your liver's a very small organ, but it cer- tainly San put gon, digestive sud siiningtive organs out oO T, by refusing pour out ita daily two pounds of liquid bile into your bowels ~ You won't completely correct such a oonditi by taking salts, oil, os; Bnet water, laxative pr or Shawing wim, gr xou bree. 'When Sigrde MOV our 'bowels they're through----an pr i do sly 4 ugh i Carter's Little Liver Pills will soon bring back the sunshine into your life. They're pur Ee table. Safe. Bure, Ask for them by name. Refuse substitutes, 28¢ at all druggists. ) BURNS Mix equal parts of Minard's and sweet oil, castor oil, or Sean. Spread i 8 brown per. pply to burn scald. Before long the iy MINARD'S ATTY perpetual machine, but requires $3,000 ISSUE No. 18--'33

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy