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Flesherton Advance, 10 May 1933, p. 3

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i rO SEE HER FAT GO! Cost This Woman 75c If you are curioua to know wliat U hapi>eiiing to her bust, waist, and hip measureineDts, read her letter: â€" "I was 186 lbs. when I started tak- ing Kruschen three months ago, and im now 162 lbs., and I hope to reduce my weight still more. Regarding my neasurements before taking Krus'chen: I was 41-ins. bust, SS-lns. waist, and l9-ins. hips, and now I am 39 Ins. bust, J6-ins. waist, and 45-lns. hlpa, my age tielng 29 years. A 75c. bottle of Krus- chen lasts me a month. I take one iialf-teaspf.unful In a tumbler of hot water each morning before breakfast, fcpart from losing weight. I feel so nuch better in health. I do not wake IP in the morning still feeling tired, ind do not get headaches like I used lo. I cannot thank Kruschen enough." -Miss) M. A. H. Kruschen contains those six mineral lalts, proportionately balanced, found In the waters of those tamtnia Euro- pean Spas used by generations of fat people to reduce weight. Kruschen helps blood, nerves, glands End body organs to function properly â€" you gain new strength and energy â€" feel years younger â€" look better, work better. + Do You Know? + Opinions "The root cause of all our indus- trial and financial troubles is lack of tonfidence in the stability of inter- national relationships." â€" Lord Da- vies. "Unemployment spurs intelligence." â€" Benito Mussolini. "Of all the senses, I am sure that sight must be the most delightful." â€" Helen Keller. "All human progress has been made by ignoring precedents." â€" Viscount 'S.owden. ' "Tho&c who aspiro to leadership to- day must realize that it is more im- !portant to inspire goodwill than instill 'fear."â€" B. C. Forbes. ' "The more government we have, the less we care for it."â€" Will Payne. "The problems of politics, econom- ics and ethics should be treated as scientifically as those of industrial production." â€" Aldous Huxley. ! "Happiness lies not in the mere possess.ion of money ; it lies in the joy of achievement, in the thrill of crea- tive effort." â€" Franklin D. Roosevelt. I "The world is in more danger of .being governed too much than too little." â€" John W. Davis. "Great armaments are no longer a remedy for fear; they are the major 'cause of fear."- Harry Emerson Fos- 'dick. I "American ballads deserve a great- ^er place in music than they have ever been given." â€" Lily Pons. I "If you believe the world can very well get along without religion, you probably mean, without the other man's religion."â€" John Erskine. "The prosperity of those who till the soil lies at the basis of world pros- perity." â€" Viscount Astor. , "International sports meetings ^v^w seeds of war. They only cause bad manners and ill feelings."â€" George Bernard Shaw. "Democracy does not champion edu- cating a man because he is miserable, but because he is so sublime." â€" G. K. Chesterton. "Let us not ask for a return of our former false 'prosperity, but for a return of integrity and honor and responsibility and duty among us." â€"Bishop Wm. T. Manning. "The reputation of a country d- pends upon the contribution she can make to the progi-ess and happiness of mankind in art, literature and Bcienee." â€" Stanley Baldwin. "Banking needs men with the keen- est sense of the social responsibilities af their position." â€" Henry Ford. "In a rapidly changing world, wis- dom cannot resist in mere adherence lo trac.ition." â€" Bertrand Russell. "Pi-obably in the mirror of his past I man will mistake his vices for his rirtues."â€" William Allen White. "True happiness is to be looked for In the living of the present moment." â€"John Masefield. "I have enough of the devil in me :Lat if any one prohibits a thing it Becomes the one thing that I want." â€"Lady Astor. True freedom is from within; it can )nly come by the knowledge of truth. â€" McKenney. Believe, when you are most un- happy, that there is something for fou to do in the world. So long as /ou can sweeten another's pain, life s not in vain.â€" Helen Keller. rheerfulness is lilje money wejl ex- pended in charityâ€" the more we- dis- p«nse of it, the greater our piS.«sVs- lions. â€" Victor Hugo. The Dominion Coast-To-Coast That in certain seui^nis oi agrjcultiirai Canada oxen are sliil in â- ommoa use on farms? The photograph shows a yolk of oxen har- nessed to a hay wagon near Greenfield, Nova Scotia. â€" Canadian Na- ional Railways. Muscle of a Bird Solves Problem of Hemorrhages •Cheap" Choir - Also Removes Possibility of Blood Clots Forming â€" Pigeon Favored Confronted with a hemorrhage, eveii a serious one, the doctor can now stop it instantly, under certain conditions, by a simple application of the muscle of a bird. This*, writes Dr. Ogliastri in Science et Monde (Paris), is a therapeutic novelty. It has even removed a serious per.'l involved in certain operations â€" that of the possibility of a subsequent blood clot. But this is among the possibilities of the future. The certainties seem -to be as follows. Writes Dr. Oglia.s- tri: "The blootl, as all are now well aware, is not, in a true sense, a liquid. "It is compo.-jed of a solid part formed of microscopic elements refer- re<l to as globules, swimming in a liquid substance called plasma. "The blood, as soon as it emerge:? from the vessels, undergoes physico- chemical modifications ending in its coagulation. "The clot is made up of a substance termed fibrin, presenting tlie aspect of meshes or links close together, im- prisoning the globules. "It appeai-s that fibrin is the pro- duct of the action of a substance tech- nically termed 'thrombin' upon an- other substance normally in the blood plasma and known as "firbrigenic" â€" giving rise, that is, to fibrin." The tissues, and especially the mus- c lar tissue, of birds, contain the two substances â€" the plasma containing, for its part, only the fibrogenic sub- stance. Dr. Ogliastri then proceeds to give us these further details: "If we previously remove the blood of the bird in such a way that it has no coiti.ct with the tissue mass, the blood will i-emain liquid indefinitely. coagulation not being possible. These considerations have led cer- tain authorities to utilize the coagu- lating p' wer of the muscle of the bird. "Hemorrhages are :v real difficulty for the surgeon, and at the same time a great peril for the patient. "All physical expedient.s hitherto adopted proving in.suffi,iont. Dr. de Martel and his aid had recourse to :» liological procedure based upon the hemostatic action of the muscle of a bird. "Thank, to thi.< procedure it has been ix«?sible to check hemorrhages that must otherwi.se have proved fatal. "Obviously a method capable of af- fording such service to the surgeon was spee<lily found susceptible of more general application. "Other experts resorted to it in varying cases, especially to stop hem- orrhages following dental operations or operations on the ear or iarynx. "Among the patients known tech- nically a? hemophiles â€" whose trouble is due to more or less difficulty where the coagulation of the blood is con- cernedâ€"such hemorrhages may en- ife. London Arts Club â€" - May Sell Relics The Arts Club, which has been domiciled at 17 Hanover Square, London, since 1S63, is said to be con- templating the sale of some of its valuable literary relics. Its founder was Arthur J. Lewis, an amateur art- ist of distinction, who married Ellen Terry's sister Kate, No. 17 Hanover Square, _ an old Georgian mansion with marble mantl3pieces and ceil- ings painted by Angelica Kauffmann, was the first clubhouse. Among the original members, painting was rep- resented by Leighton, Poyuter, Prin- sep, Stacy Marks, Frederick W'alker. Whistler, and Arthur Severn; archi- tecture by A. W. BiomfieUl and Hor- ace Jones; black and white drawing by Charles Keene. John Tenniel, and George Du Maurier, and letters by Charles Dickens, Lord Houghton and Edmund Yates. Among the treasured relics possessed by the club are two checks drawn by Charles Dickens, one in favor of the Artists General Benevolent Fund for £7 13s, dated March 22, 1S62, and the other, prob- ably his last subscription to the club, six guineas, dated Feb. 26, 1S70. University Gives Advice For Dressing Economically A little money can go a long way toward a Spring-clothes outf-t, say clothing spcciali.?ts at the State Col- lege of Home Economics ..t Cornell University. The distance it will go, they say, depends upon imagination and skill in changing old clothes into new. If a faded dress of last summer is tinted blue and the sleeves are lengthened by capelets or by spiral bands of the same material, or per- haps of a new plaid, money otherwise needed for a di-ess may be used for gloves, stockings, a purse, and a scarf of matching hhades to blend with new shoefc of reptile leather anci a sailor hat. An old spring suit, too, may be freshened to take the place of a new one by making clever new blouses from discarded dresses, these author- ities add. If a woman takes stock of her old cloths, looks ahead :<nd makes a wardrobe plan, she can choose he;- clothes so that each garment is be- coming and in harmony with those she already has. In the wardrobe plan her own standards of comfort, becom- ingness and adaptability should be built around distinctiveness and ser- vice. For instance, in selecting shoes she should consider how they will suit each costume and how their comfort will add to her poise at all tin5''s, the 1 university expe ts conclude. 1 Halifax, N.S.â€" Of the 27U,47'2 acres in Canada devoted to orchards. Nova Scotia has 46,883 acres, the province having increased its proportion in the past ten year.s from 9.6 to 16.S per cent. Quebec's contribution dur- ing the same period rose from 9.5 per cent, to 11.4 per cent., while British Columbia's rise was from 12.5 per cent, to 17.5 per cent. Fredericton, N.B. â€" According to rep<irt of the Provincial Department of .\griculture, production of cream- ery butter in New Brunswick during the past fiscal year reached a new record at 2,749,320 pounds, produced L. 23 creameries. This output repre- sents a gain of 333,328 pounds over the previous year. Montreal, Que. â€" .A.ir traffic at the ?!'.ov.ed a substantial incrfi'^'i in 19S2 over the preceding year in the num- ber of aeroplanes arriving and de- parting, the number of passengers carried and the amount of baggage, freight and mail loaded and unloaded. Air mail leaving the port during the year totalled nearly 50,000 pounds for points in the United States, while niail carried to places in Canada, par- ticularly to Rimouski on the St. Law- rence where it connected with Atlan- tic liners, was exceptionally heavy. Toronto, Ont. â€" According to an an- nouncement by the Toronto Industrial Commission, negotiations have been concluded for the establishment of an iiiiportant new industry to manufac- ture women's Uppers in Toronto. Mr. David Ro.senstein of New York has taken 8,000 .square feet of manufac- turing space in the Beardmoro Build- ing for this purpose, and practically all the machinery and equipment, to- gether with the raw materials, are to be purcha.<ed in Canada. Brandon, Man. â€" The A. E. Mac- Kenzie Company, seed merchants, are taking an acti\e part in promoting the World's Grain Exhibition and Conference, to be held in Regina from July 24 to August 5. This firm, whose head office and main plant are at Brandon, with branches in a number of leading Western cities, is conduct- ing an educational campaign featur- ing two cash prize contests. The firm will distribute a total of $5,215 in frizes. Moose Jaw, Sask.â€" Receipts of live st.x'k at the Moose Jaw yards con- tinue to be on a larger scale than last year, both January and Februarj', 1933, recording inci-eases. Decreases are recorded in the numbe.- of cattle and horses, but large increases in swir • and sheep. Receipts for Janu- ary and February (1932 figures in brackets) were as follows: cattle, 2,075 (3,330) ; calves. 53 (68) ; hogs, 22,277 (21,326); sheep, 22,293 (16,- 801); horses, ,588 (1,208), making a total of 47,286 compared with 42,733 for January and February, 1932. Letlibridge, Alta. â€" In a review of tt.e beet sugar industry of southern Alberta appearing in the annual re- port of the Lethbridge Board of Trade, attention is drawn to the fact that within the past four years the tonnage per acre of beets has risen from 7.47 to 10.80, and that many (.ther improvements were recordeti in the -" -dustry. Calgary, Alta. â€" Natural gas pro- duction in Canada during 1931 am- ounted to 25,874,7'23 thousand cubic feet valued at $9,026,754. Alberta \.'as the leading producing province with an output of 17,798,698 thousand cubic feet. Ontario came next with 7,419,534 thousand cubic feet. New Brunswick following with 655,891 cubic feet. There was also a small production from .several private wells in Manitoba. MORE ENJOYMENT Plug Tobacco lasts H longer â€" gives J^ more enjoyment for the money. Buy the 3^2-'b- plug and you save still more. DIXIE FULL WEIGHT V2 lb. PLUG 70^ Stratosphere Trip To Seek a Record Plans are rapidly maturing for a balloon ascent into the stratosphere, supervised by Professor Augusta Piccard, whose ascent over Switzer- land of more than ten miles set a record for man's penetration of the upper air. The new ascent will be made at the Century of Progress Ex- position in Chicago. It is hoped that an altitude fix>m 5,000 to 7,000 feet greater than the 54,000 feet reached by Piccard on his second ascent will be attained. Details of the under- taking were explained here by Dr. Irving Muskat, Research Associate at the University of Chicago who is in charge of exhibits of pure science at the world's fair. "The object of the proposed balloon ascension," he said, "is further and more scientific study of the cosmic rays. Appartus is now being con- structed under the direc*tion of Prof. Arthur H. Compton, which will hie 1 .uch more comprehensive and at the same time»much lighter than any used heretofore. It is also hoped that the balloonists will be able to go higher than in previous stratosphere flights as the bag to be used, will be of great- er capacity and the gondola of lighter weight." Designs for the balloon itself are now being completed by the Goodyear- Zeppelin Company, Dr. Muskat said, and those of the spherical gondola or car by the Dow Chemical Company of J'idland, Michigan, which a.s perfect- ed a material which is one-third lighter than aluminum. The balloon, ' added, will have a capacity of 600,- 000 cubic feet of hydrogen at its maxi- mum inflation as compared with 500,- 000 cubic feet for the balloon which Professor Piccard used last year. The flight is sponsored by The Chicago Daily News and the National Broad- casting Company. PAffUKTS. AN OFFER TO EVERy INV^-NTOI^ List of wanted luventlona anj ful in(orin,atlon sent free. Xlis Bamsay Coidj pasy, W^rld Patent Attorneys, 2Ti Caul Street, Otr.awa, Canada. -' ai-ASIOIiI BTTIiBS. LOWER IXG GLADIOLI BULBS, treated. 400 mixed varieties. t2.0li per liiO postpaM. P. \V. ICrouse, Uuelphi^ Ontario. « F BABY CHICKS OXlr Or THE OHOXNABT TOP-NOTCH" BARRe4 Chicks ara Government AlT ALL •â-  Rock proved, from blood-teatiid parents am are sired by approved cockerels fror R. O. P. and Registered dams with re ords from 204 to 305 eggs. The avera production back of 113 Barred R^'Cl Cockerels used is 23G eggs. May pric are extremely low, JIO.OO per 100. Sei 10 per cent, iieposit for immediate '^hi ment with balance C.O.D. Live Deiivei Buai-;.nt.ed. Mills -atchery, Nai);'.iie Ontario. The problem of maintaiiiins a <-holr. »hen economic conditions prohibit has been solved by the Presbyterian Church of tlte Convent in New York. PhonoRraph records of choir .•<inK- nj; are played and amplified at the ?un(Iay evening services. The con- tresation sinKs to the accompaniment .if plectrical inmsiriptions of the choir music from famous churches all over the world. It has been contend- ed more .elaborate programs ran be offeied than it could present with Its own ri<lii<('il ihoir. . â€" . .^ â€" â€" , jjg ^^ij„ lives after nanive. \Vp arp .slow to believe what if be- never he poor, after opinion UfcveU womUI hint our reelings. -OvW. never be rich.â€" Seneca. clanger I "Any bird almost can be u.sed, bat , Di. de Martel has employed the pid- goon, because it can be obtained read- ' ily. and lieca.ise its maladies, which :ii(> rare, occasion symptoms sufficient- Iv definite no* to be missed." Held at Bay for 17 Years The Japanese beetle which invaded the United States in 1916 has so ia^ been held at bay on the Canadiatt frontier by the inspectors o£ the .Do* minion Entomological Branch, whQ have intercepted adult beetles botH alive and dead several times in shii;}» ments ot various kinds from the soutlb Precautious are taken at all places ol entry into Canada. Dead beetles wer^ found in a motor car at Yarmouthi, N.S., and in a car at Niagara Fall^ and nine in a shipment of atiuaiie plants. The beetle in the grub stag! feeds on grasses, and as an adult oi fruits and foliage o£ various trees, ft; is a most destructive pest, its presenfi area of depredations being llassiff chusetts and New York States. Expedition Sets Out to Scale Highest Ural Mountain Peak Sverdlovsk, U.S.S.R.â€" .\n expedi- titm of Alpinists has set out for the dangerous undertaking of scaling for the first time in history the highest Ural Mountains peak. Point Tel-Pos-Is. The peak Is in the polar reaches of the Ural range and its character may be judgej from its> name, which in the native Ziranyl ton.!;ue means "nest of storms." It is considered sacred by the Eskimos of the region. The only expedition on record was in 1847, under German leadership, and ended In failure. Persia to Extend British Oil Lease London.â€" The London Daily Herald reports that the Shah of Persia and Sir John Cadman, head of the Anglo- Persian Oil Company, have come quickly to terms in Teheran, under which Great Britain obtains not only an extension of the Darcy concession to 1933, but also the sole right to ex- ploit the vast untouched oil fields in the northern provinces of Persia. This agreement, if confirmed by the governments, will end the acri- monious dispute between tlie British Government and the oil company on the one hand and the Persian Govern- ment on the other. The Herald says Persia will receive an increased percentage of the Anglo- Persian Oil Company's profits and in adilition a small percentage of the fits and in addition a small percentage of the profits of its subsidiaries. Sir John arrived in Jffeheran early ii April and imme<iiately opened di- rect negotiations, the i-esumption ol' v.hich had been arranged by the Lea- gue Council in February. Schools Are Formed For Women Driver^ St. Louis.â€" A series cf schools for women drivers has been iuaugurateol U.er6 by the St. Louis Safety Couir. cil. More than 200 women were ra» cently "giaduated" at the first sohooL The course consists oi four mee^^ ings, of two hours each, at whicK a traflic court judge or some other traffic ' authority lectures. Writtejj exam'iuations are given at the coS ehisioa of the cour.se and a lovinf cup awarded the winner. r:^ Kennedy & Menton 421 College St., Toronto Harley-Davidson Distributors Write at once for our bargain i;st ot used motorcycles. Xerm.s arrnrgcd. ♦ shall shall Licensed Garbage Feeding Kee<lings hogs on collected garbage, either raw or cooked, without a li- cense is prohibiteil in Canada. The enforcement of this regulation is be- lieveil to have a direct effect in pr' venting outbreaks of hog cholera the previous sc.-le year 563 l^.tI..-lu, feeders' premises and cooking equip- 1 ment for 4.').484 swine were inspected by the Dominion Health of Anima'v Branch; inspections also being ma(!? on unlicensed premises to ."ee that th • regulations were being observed. * The liner's mighty engi.ies throli- l-t:<i ceaselessly. The chief engineer wiped a perspiring forehiad as h.- scowled at the pale- faced young man with an oil-can. 'Look here," hi' growled, "you ai .'t helping me mu<- 1 with the;* engines, yet 1 understoo.;i you knew something about the game!" "So I do. sir," stammered the othc'-, "but on a smaller scale, you know." 'What's your regular job'?" "WaUb rcf airei." She watched the door of her new I estab'ishment open to admit her first I dent. Business had started! A good impression must be created upon him! Hurriedly she grasped the telephone recei\er and became engaged in an I animate<l conversation. Then, an ap- ; pointement having been arranged, she jji replaced the receiver, and beaming I'censed "" ^'^^ customer, asked: "What can 1 ' do for you, sir?" A moniert's pause, iv!!d then: "If you plta.s.'. ma'am, I've K.mc to c;'nr.;'ct th. tek"jih:ir.L' !" TIRED AND IRRITABLE? Take Lydia E. Pinkham a Vegetable Compound It steadies the nerves and helps to build you up. You will eat bet- ter .. . sleep better . . . look bet- ter. Life will seem worth liTing again. Remember that 98 out of 10# women say, "It helps me." Let it help you too. Liquid <»' tab» let form, as you prefer. Oats for Poultry Many poulti-y keepers do not give oats its projier place in the ration to their fowls. This, probably, is due to the fact that much of the oats placed on the inarket are not well filled and when offered to the ix>ultry are not eagerly eaten. Oats have a fibi>)us '. ;11, and it is probably largely on that account that the birds take more read- ily to wheat or corn. However, when cats are of a goovl quality, t' ey are an excellent feed as has been demon- strate<l by the Dominion Dept. of Agricnlture, and as soon as the flock becomes accustomed to oats they will , t this feed gree.iily. » "Deai'esl Betty,"' wrote Krai.k, who v.as hopelessly in love. "I would swim (he mighty ocean for one glance from your dear eyes. 1 would walk through a v.al! of flames for one tou.?h of your til y hands. I would leap the widest -Iream in the v.orld for a word from >iiir lovely lips. As always, your Frank. P.S.â€" I'll be over on Satur- 1 ; y ni.ght if my toothache is better. ' 0NEYFaRY6U AT HOME _ YOU can cam Bood mofMr ia •par* dme at home tnaloDsaupUy cards. No Mlling or canvas5inc< VTe initruct you* fumiaii com* plete outtit and supply you with work. Writa to-iiay for free booklet. The MENHENITT COMPANY, limited 64*^ Dominion Bldg., Toronto, Ont. -inrw-M â-  â-  â-  â-  â- -mr OFF COLOUR? HOW IS YOUR UYER7 Wake up vour Liver Bile â€"Without Calomel Tour Hvor> a rery ftmnll organ, but it cet* tsinly can put your <ligpflii*« and eliminaiiv^ oraans out of kilter, by refusiug to pour out it» daily two pounds of liquid bile into jour buwel* You won't corapVtcly correct axich a condition by taking wilts, oil, mineral watct, laxative candy or chewng gum, or roughag*^. Wlicu thry'v»* moved vour bowels tlxy ro through â€" and yoa need aliverstimulaut. Carter's Little Livrr Pills will soon bniig badl the <4un9hme into your life. Thev'pc purely veffe* tabic. Safe. Sure, .^sk ivr them by name Uriiiis MlMtitUta*. 3t6o at all druggisa. 4ft 1 BURNS Mix cqudl part* of Minard's nnU «wecl od, castor oil. or rream. Sprrad on brown P«p4>r. Apply to burn or <i«:nld. Before long the painful smarting stops' -♦- K;uu> resuainetl may be roinprired to a fountain, which plays highest by diminishing the aperture. -Goldsmith. iSSUE No. 18â€" 33

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