The romps that carried him Varsity #•""*% ... because Mother started this wise habit Full of vitality he romps through his school days. He is fit, splendidly fit. Yet mother does not relax her watchfulness, her care. She knows just how much his success as a man in the future depends on the firm foundation of health that is built to-day. Adequate food value to feed the fires of vitality for brain and body—that is her great care. Who knows but that some great crisis in his life may be decided by her care of him to-day. She is a great advocate of cocoa. It has been her boys staple drink from childhood—big not fragrant cupfuls at breakfast, tea, at night, whenever she can give it to him— especially when he is studying. For cocoa is far more than a delicious comforting drink—it is food, rich and sustaining. Make COCOA a habit.... How Mother makes it. For each cup mix la « jots, half to • I— jpnoiifiil of coom witli aos»- to tarte. Add boiling water or botibas ■aflk and water. Stir brklcry while Return to saucepan and boll for one mtwwta. WKlak i» jus before ■erring. i OURNVILLE Whisk it before you drink it Save the Coupons! ' CADEIfkY," WrJBRflMi, «*««* Frm Gift Scftcn*
By the use of an invention for transmitting drawings by wireless telegraph, the steamer Silvermaple, which received severe damage to her upper rudder stocks while en ronte from Oran to New York last March, wan saved over £2OOO loss. As soon as the owners* New York representative was informed of the damage, he cabled to London for a drawing of the rudder stock to be sent by wireless, in order that a new one could be forged and machined in readiness to be fitted in the vessel in New York or sent to Bermuda to be fitted there. The three drawings werp "radioed" on the afternoon of one day, and delivered in New York the next "morning. The work on the new stock was completed in two days. The cost of the wireless telepram- was about £6O, which was almost negligiMe, considering the ship was paved about seven days' delay. For a st°amer of her type a day's delay meant a loss of £309.
Twu European boys, one armed with a small-bore rifle and the other with a catapult, fought a duel at Port Elizabeth. South Africa. The boys belonged to a party which had been shooting in the bush'country, and :t was decided -o settle the matter by a duel. Starting back to back, the boys paced off a stated number of steps, swung round and fired. The catapult missile missed, but the riffo bullet struck the other boy in the chest, and he sank to the ground in a dying condition.
Remember this when you get * cold — "Everr dose of 'NAZOL' does jou good." " Its a wonderful remedy Sixty doses for L& Gd.
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Bibliographic details
Press, Volume LXV, Issue 19675, 19 July 1929, Page 17
Word Count
485Page 17 Advertisements Column 3 Press, Volume LXV, Issue 19675, 19 July 1929, Page 17
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