The Exeter Times-Advocate, 1927-12-08, Page 7e
-"I cannot praise Dr. Williams* Pink
Jt
originally e&ti-
less a possible
Premier,
the vac-
members
and then
its aboli-
■4-.Al
piness through this medicine. 'Miss
On Airship Development
London—The British Government’s. . ..._J..............
tlon would leave me tired out. On the scheme of airship development, which
wnr8 ° > J decided to try Dr. includes two giant dirigibles now be-
constructed,
.... ,
__ • Thousands of weak and ailing
not being 'girls have found new health and flap-
______ Member- Piness through this medicine. '1,21^
ship in the Council is nonelectiye, the Gla<iys V. Bond, Kentville, N.S., used
formerly being appointed ^his treatment successfully, and says:
amount by ap-
Samueli
>
Nova Scotia
To Have Only
One Chamber
Now Gives All the Credit to Dr.
Williams’. Pink Pills.
When a young girl becomes pale,
complains of exhaustion at the least
exertion, has dizzy spells, headaches
or stomach trouble, she should know
that these are some of the* many
symptoms of anaemia, which means
that her blood is thin and weak. In
such condition there is the most ur
gent need for a tonic that will prompt-
a. ly restore the missing qualities to the
] blood and thus hying back health and
For this purpose there is
Action of Provincial Premier
Canvassed as to His
Next Step
'Halifax, N.S.—Having succeeded,
by the Frivy Council decision, in es
tablishing its righty to abolish the
Legislative Council, which is the sec
ond chamber of the Legislature of
Nova Scptia, the government of the
province will proceed in due course in
reforming the Legislature into
single chamber.
The Council consists of 21 seats.! strength. ___ __ __
There are at present 17 members; the 1 no tonic^can equal Dr. Williams’ Pink
four vacancies, owing to the uncer- • Pills.
tainty of its continuance, :
filled by the Government. Member-
members-
for life by the government iji power. ~ ,the constitution of, ^1Ils to° highly for the good they have |
done me, I '
i poor health,
I headaches and nervousness. My ap
petite was poor, and very little exer-
Three years ago
the chamber was reformed by making
the appointments then, and there
after for 10 years only Owing to the
long tenure of office of the Liberal
Party in the Provincial Government,
the Council had become almost ex
clusively Liberal,; in fact, when the
present Rhodes or Conservative Gov
ernment came into power In 1925,
therewas only one Conservative mem
ber of the Council. The
E. N. Rhodes, filled two of
ancies by appointing two
favorable to his government,
proceeded to' take steps for
tion.
There were four questions submit
ted to the Privy Council, after the
Supreme Court of Nova Scotia had
failed to agree on the case submitted
to the full bench. These questions
were:
1. Has the Lieutenant-Governor
power of appointing so many mem
bers to the council that the total num
ber holding office would exceed 21,
or exceed the total number who hold
office at the time of the union
the British North America
Answer—Yes.
2. Is the membership of the
ell limited in number?
^present a full House is
number can be increased by the Lieu
tenant-Governor in Council.
3. Is tenure of office of members
appointed prior to May, 1925, during
pleasure or good behavior for life?
Answer—During pleasure.
4. If such tenure is during pleas
ure, Is it during the pleasure of His
Majesty, or during the pleasure of
His Majesty represented by the Lieu
tenant-Governor.
The procedure that will now likely
be followed by Mr. Rhodes will be
either co call a special session of the
■Legislature, appoint sufficient sup
porters of the Government to the sec
ond chamber asi will enable the Gov
ernment to have in the council that
majority that will pass an abolition
bill; or wait "until the usual win’er
session of the Legislature and take
such action then.
... With the abolition of the Nova
Scotia legislative council, Quebec will
be the only province of Canada main
taining her bi-cameral systenTof gov
ernment.
under
Act?
Coun-
Answer—At
21, but the
■O
Dominion Handles
Its Labor Problems
A New Use For The Airplane
.'' j- «
CARRYING OUT THE LIFE LINE
To a stranded ship so a breeches buoy could be used to save the crew.
The United States Coastguard has this in operation.
*0***^ AV A tjVWU. LLClVU f I \
Ji,1 '1a ot vorx, Britain to Spend £1,680,000 I?AD M._trom .?eTsrei n„ nA.uL™.., rVK M1
Williams’ Pink Pills. I
I began to feel better, my appetite Im-1
proved, and the headaches were less'
frequent. I continued the use of the
pills until I had takqn six boxes, by
which time Ffelt as well as ever, and
I gained in weight from 98 pounds to
II “pounds. For this reason I advise
all weak girls to try this medicine."
Try Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for
anaemia, rheumatism, neuralgia, ner
vousness and stomach trouble. Take
them as a tonic and cultivate a resist
ance that will keep you well and
strong. You can get these pills
through any medicine dealer or by
mail at 50p a box from The Dr. Wilv
liams’ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont.
..............o----------
A contributor in York County tells us
that the rabbit industry is growingi
by “leaps and bounds.”
was
mated at £1,350,000,
I payment of £150,000.
It will ..exceed that
proximately £13D,0Q0,Sir
Hoare now says.
Originally the cost of one ship, the
R-101, was estimated at £300,000, but ... ___ ________ ________ _
owing to a variety of causes, includ- ] throughout the country, not only use
Ing a slowing down of work, the cost ----------------------------------- , .
is now expected to reach £400,000.
Lure of National Parks
The unexplored regions of Canada’s
national parks are now more and
’•■more proving a loadstone to out-of-
doors adventurers, explorers, and na
ture lovers. Every season brings newc
of some newly-explored area, attend
ant on the journeyings of individuals,
or parties seeking access to the hid
den wonders of remote districts.
set
the
the
Arctic Islands Preserve
The area of wild life preserves
aside for the benefit of natives by
Department of the Interior, in
Northwest Territories, Canada, has
benn extended by taking in all islands
north of the mainland between the
60th and the 141st degrees of longi
tude. This large area is now known
as the Arctic Islands Preserve.
Mothers are quick to praise any
thing which brings health and com
fort to their little ones—any medicine
that will make the baby well and keep
him well will always receive hearty
recommendation from the mother.
That is why Baby’s Own Tablets are
so popular. Thousands of mothers,
them for their own little ones but are
always delighted to be able to recom
mend them to other mothers. Thous
ands of mothers have proved Baby’s
Own Tablets-to be without an equal in
relieving their little ones of any of
the minor ailments which arise out of
a derangement of the stomach and
bowels. Baby’s Own Tablets are the
ideal laxative—easy Jo take but thor
ough in action. They banish consti
pation and indigestion; break up
colds and simple fevers; expel worms
and make the teething period easy.
The’Tablets are sold by medicine
dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box
from The Dr. Williams’ Medicine* Co.,
Brockville, Ont.
$30 A DAY Dear Mr. Cooke:
I was making $25
a week when I enrolled. Now with
my own Electrical ;
Shop I make as high as $30 a day. A. J. Daigneault, 225 Worcester,
Sou th bridge, Mass.
Hundreds of Men•;
Ihave trained
are now earning
I c/o FL. A. Farrow,
8peclal Representative
1 Medbury Lane, East
Windsor, Ont
ins, anywhere. It's the Training that big Elec-w trical men are praising; it's the Training that
Province
WHY ciurn $15 or $ao or *30 a week, whan in tho same six
dayu as an Electrical Expert, you cun make $70 to $2GC—-and do it
easlor-r-not work half ro hard. Why, then, roxnaln in a ■mall-pay, no* future job that offere no chance for blgr promotion—no chance for bly
income? ECt yourself for a real job. GET XJTTO ELECTRICITY. That’B
where tho big* money is being1 made, and always will be made.
EEECTBICITY—THE »IG PAY FXEED
Today even thu ordinary Electrician— "screw driver" kind—is making’ money—big
money. But it’s the trained man-—the Electrical Expert—who makes the really big money—$12 to $30 a day—$70 to $200 a week. Be a Big-Pay
man, yourself. Get in line, now, for one of these "Blgr-Pay” Jobs.
X*EA TBAIN YOU AT HOME
I’ll train you at home—in your spare time.
You work just as you are working now'—at
your same job. My now famous “Work-Sheet
and Job-Ticket” method guarantees you simplified, practical training along work-shop lines. In a few short months you can step out of your
old job into a new job—into electrical work where you can be a Big-Pay man in this Big-Pay field.
YOU EAEN AS YOU LEABN
To learn Electricity my way you don’t have to be a College man, or even a High School graduate. You can read. You can write. That’s enough. With me, you get experience as you go along and make good money while learning. I’ll show you how—and I’ll give you, without exbra cost, tools and apparatus to work with—6 Big Outfits In all.
MONEY BACK XE NOT SATISFIED
That’s what I agree to do. And back of me in this agreement stands the Chicago Engin-
eering Works, a $2,000,000 Illinois Corpora- B Uke. “Cooke” Train- "
trfcol men aJ'e praising; it’s the Training 'that
employers reoommend; it's the Training that >ne of our greatest Engineering societies has indorsed 100 percent It's the Training for you.
IF YOU*BB EARNING BESS THAN $70 A
WEEK—INVESTIGATE
wait a minute! Find out today why “The Cooke Trained Man is the Big-Pay Man,” everywhere! Find out how "Cooke” Training
will help you boost your payl Mall coupon right now ormy Big FREE Book of Facts. See the Six Big working OutfltB I give you without
extra charge. See the hundreds of pictures, the proofs, the Big-Pay letters of other "Qooke” Trained Man. Get this great free Book. Send W RIGHT* NOW1 gl<rn* and mal1 coupon
COST
*1.50 AW HOUS Dear Mr. Cooke:
I had ,to work like a slave for 4Eo an Hour before I
enrolled. Now, thanks to you, Mr. Cooke, I make $1.50
an hour.G. W. Oprea, 4220 N. Meade Av., Chicago, Ill.
BIG
NO EXTRA
70-100
Awniv
I'll train you ct
home in a few
short months.L.L.COOKFL L. COOKE SCHOOL
OF ELECTRICITY
Dept. 1718The Sydney Coal-Feld
Submarine mining is the outstand
ing feature of the Sydney coal-field,
Nova Scotia, apd workings have been
carried seaward to distances varying
from one to two and a half miles.
While the seaward extent of the
seams is unknown, there are no indi
cations of- flattening or rising tenden
cies, and it is probable that the limits
of mining wil be determined by econo
mic factors rather than by exhaus
tion.
I>. E. COOKE, Chief Instruction Engine*®
Dept. 1718, o.|o. a. A. Farrow, Special
Representative, 7 Medbury Done, E^
Windsor, Ont.Send me at once without obligation your big illustrated book "The Sfli* crets of Success in Electricity” an® complete details of your Home Training Course In Practical Elec-.,
tricity, including your outfit an® employment service offers.
Name...
Address
City.
Enlist Now!
With the party of Christmas
homegoers leaving Halifax
for the Mother Country.
Make sure of a right royal
Christmas and good time
with your family and friends
on the other side.
See a steamship agent to-day.
Round Trip from $155 up.
Children, half fare— every
thing included.
Christmas Sailings
From HALIFAX
Dec. S'—ANTONIA for Plymouth;
Havre and London,
Dec. 11—ATHENIA for Belfast,
Liverpool and Glasgow.
Dec. 12—ASCANIA for Plymouth^
Havre and London.
From ST. JOHN, N.B.
Dec. 10—ATHENIA for Belfast;
Liverpool and Glasgow.
} CANADIAN®SERVICE<
01
THE ROBERT REFORD CO. LIMITED
Cor. Bay and Wellington Sts., TORONTO
Last Week's Howler
Perpetrated by-the boy who said a
cynic "was a place where you washed
dishes.
The Browns \vere expecting a visit
from their pastor. It was the custom
of the latter to ask the small children
of his flock three questions—their
name, age, to test their knowledge of
right 'and wrong, he asked them
where bad little children went. Mary,
the young daughter, had received full
instructions from her parents and was
quite ready to answer the questions.
The minister arrived, and asked:
"What’S- your name, little girl?” In
her hurry to display her Intelligence,
Mary answered: "Mary, sir; five
years old; go to hell.”
Classified Advertisement*
MUSICAL IUSTEUMENT3,
Indian Railways
Push Publicity
New Ideas Sought to Boom
Home Traffic — Foreign
Campaigning System
atic
Calcutta—One of the subjects seri
ously discussed by the railway confer
ence at Simia was the question of (
publicity on the Indian railways. This
is at last -being tackled on a system
atic basis. The railways of this -coun-
try^have to make every effort to at
tract fresh business. Their profits
have been showing a slight but con
tinuous decline since 1924. They are
still too dependent on the vagaries of
the monsoon.
As regards tourist and overseas
traffic, publicity work on the Indian
state railways1—these now cover the
greater part of India—Is #bsing co
ordinated and freshly extended. Each
railroad In the system has its own
publicity office. In addition there is-
at Bombay a central bureau respon
sible for turning out a number of
pamphlets which in their general get
up and artistic layout ate equal to the
best home pictorial work.
All the state railways in India are
actively engaged in filming scenes of
interest in their activities, and in
running “demonstration trains” for
the benefit of agriculturists^ They
have opened a London bureau and
started advertising on a wide scale in
Hngllsh publioationsi.
The Indian railways have arranged
reciprocal publicity with the our big
English railway groups; with certain
Continental railways; with the Aus
tralian railways, and with our ’own
■Canadian National, Canadian Paaiflo
Railways, which we distributed
thousands of pamphlets In America.
In India there Is a good deal of reoi-
procgl publicity with the press, press
advertising space being exchanged for
poster space on the platform.
What is being carried out on the
Indian state railways is also being
actively undertaken—possibly not to
quite the same extent—on the Indian
lines still under company manage
ment, of which the chief are the Ben
gal Nagpur Railway (Calcutta), and
the Bombay, Baroda and Central In
dia Railway (Bambay).
Yukon’s Tourist Attractions
Yukon has been known in the past
almost entirely as a mining country,
but the tourist traffic is assuming a
prominent place among the commer
cial assets of the Territory. The
unique natural attractions, magnifi
cent scenery, bracing atmosphere, con
tinuous daylight during the summer
season, and improved facilities for the
tourist are the reasons for the rapid
growth in the number of visitors.
ITLTRAFHONIC GRAMOPHONE. 18,J selections $165.00 lor $55.00. Guar
anteed. Poisson, 340 Mount-Royal Kaaft, Montreal.
ELECTRIC FIXTURES
A T BARGAIN BRICES. BUY DIRECT
A and save half the price. Send Cot special catalogue, Earle Electric Supplies, 12S4 St. Clair Ave., Toronto.Minard’s Liniment for Colds.
Canada has taken the place of Great
Britain as the best trade customer of
the United States, the Dominion’s
purchases having increased $55,193,-
342 in the first eight months of 1927
over the like period in 1926. Canada
is prospering, and its business was a
great factor in keeping the industries
o fthe United States on a sound basis
when other markets were quiet The
prosperity of one nation helps the
prosperity of its neighbors.
I ... .... ,..
Salesmen wanted to rlvcs best Mining Stock Issue Vi every* town. NsDrnal Bond Corporation, 35-7,
Bay $.t., Toronto.
Ottawa—Nearly 3,500,000 unemploy
ed provided with jobs in the short
space of eight years is the splendid
showing of the Employment Service
Branch of the Department of Labor
$bof Canada, Since its formation by
the Dominion in 1918, sectional and
seasonal unemployment has been
largely solved and labor has become
stabilized as never before.
Briefly described, this branch is a
national clearing hou^e for the job
less and jobs. The results are ac
complished through the employment
offices of the nine provinces, now
numbering 64, and the federal clear
ing houses, while retaining each its
individual identity, working together
as *a single organzation under the
title of Employment Service of Can
ada. The Federal Governmept assists
the provinces with an annual grant of
$150,000, distributed among them ac
cording to their expenditures, and in
sists upon special provision being
made for veterans of the war wh<> are
partially disabled.
1
♦
Canadian Embassy
Increases Prestige
YA R N S--M ACH I N E * HAND KNITTING—"Old Tyme.” "Atl
Wool,” “Silk and Wool.” 85c a pound «nU delivered. Samples free. Stocking1 « Tarn Shops, Department E. Orillia Ont.
/Bu.'EjsSES
Canadian National Registered PetUgrfi®
Silver Black Foes
Ancestors from somp of the best P E. Es_ ■ land strains. Prolific breeders. Full furred jwlth plenty of guard hair. $400.00 a patfi •
I WinniAM BATES, RIDGETOWN, ONTs
SPECIAL CHRISTMAS OFFER
SOUTH
Here is a chance to get an Ideal Handy Farm Mixer, Delivered anywhere in Ontario $32.00, Manitoba $86.00, Saskatchewan or Alberta $38.00, British Columbia $40.00.It mixes concrete, feed, fertilizer, washes roots; and a dozen other uses on the farm. This is a special Xmas offer. Attach a money order to this ad. and mail th this office. ThouBandg' ti’e being sold. Order yours today.
Fully described In Bulletin 120.
LONDON CONCRETE MACHINERY COMPANY, LTD,
100 KITCHENER AVE., LONDON, CANADA!
ENJOY
WINTER
is not con-
walls. Not®
The Infant
When you want the most
economical & satisfactory
lumber cutters, write us
for information & prices.
SIMONDS CANADA SAW CO. LTD.
Montreal Toronto
Vancouver St. John 1-27
GOOD
Mother of Eleven Children
Praises Lydia E. Pinkham’s
■ V egetable Compound
Her Interesting Experience
Buckingham, Quebec.—"I am th®
mother of eleven living children,
Hospital for Sick Children
07 College St., Toronto 2, Ont.
December, 1927.
Dear Mr. Editor:—
Most of your readers are well
a.ware of the wonderful service
which the Hospital for Sick Chil
dren in Toronto is enabled to per
form through the generosity of its
friends. During the Christmas
season the Hospital appropriately
makes its annual appeal for the
funds necessary to carry on the
work throughout the new year.
Now is the time to give tangible ex
pression to the feeling of good-will
which “The Sick Kids” Hospital—
as it is familiarly called—has won
for itself in every part of this
province.
The magnitude of the Hospital’s
task continually enlarges. In its
little blue cots there are always
nearer three hundred than two
hundred youngsters being tenderly
ushered back to health and strength.
For every patient a dollar a day
must be secured through voluntary
contributions which adds up to at
least $100,000 for each year of the
hospital’s ministry.
Its service, however,
fined to its own four
those arresting facts,
mortality rate in Ontario is 78.5,
while In Quebec it is 142. In our
towns and cities the.loss of Infant
Life Is less than half what it is In
the Bister province. Now, for On
tario’s priceless advantage, one out
standing reason Is the maintenance
by public benevolence of a world-
famous provincial institution dedi
cated to the care of the on-coming
jgeneration. An entire department
of the Hospital for Sick Children is
devoted to the care of babies under
one year of age. Her$ every aid
which medical science can devise
extended to help the tiny patients
through the first hard round In’
their struggle for existence.
Familiarity with._ the method*,
hero employed is an invaluable
asset to doctors and nurses enlist-;
Ing for service in the homes of th*)
province. Thu’s is the childhood of
evem the most romote community
within the compass o’f tho wide
spread' ministration of the Hospital
for Sick Children benefitlod. It la;
Indeed a work for hu&anlty which
deserves cordial remembrance at
Christmas time. &
Faithfully yours,
v JRVING M ROBERTSON,
2 Chairman ^Appeal jbohmittfje.1
........... ..............................
Quickly Bases CT
9 Irritated Thraats ’
‘■Slowly swallow a sip of "Buckley’s".
Yob’ll M astonished by the immediate relief it brings to a sore, inflamed (hroat. Singers, speakers .and smokers
should never bo without it. The first »
1 dose clears and soothes the throat and
A bronchial tubes — and there are 40 doses tn a 75-cent bottle I At all
wX druggists and guaranteed
Wk W. K. Buckley, Limited, 142 Mutual St., Toronto
4and my baby is
five months old. I am only 38 years1
old and I have I
taken Lydia EL ?
Pinkham’s Vege
table Compound
for weakness and
my nerves. I knew
of it from my
sister, Dame Ed-*
ouard Bellefeuille
of Ramsayville.J For five years I
_________u .....Lwas always ready
‘Now I ara so happy to have
Sood health. My daughter, who is
3 Years old, has also taken it and
willbe happy to recommend it to all
young girls. ---Dame William Par
ent, Box 414, Buckingham, Quebec.
Why, suffer for years with back
ache, nervousness and other ailments
common to women from early hi<s to
middle ago, when Lydia E. Pinkham s
Vegetable Compound will give you
relief? .,
In a recent country-wide canvass
of purchasers of I^ydia E. Pinkham s
Vegetable Compound, over 250,000
replies were received, ano 08 out ox
every IDO reported they weiu bone*
"‘i, Q
I
Act* like asflash—a tingle sip proves it
0.^..,^!! ^., n.n.um^ww-.—
Washington—Since the -establish
ment of the Canadian Embassy in
Washington, Canadian activity and
prestige have been considerably en
hanced The visit of W. L. Mackenzie
King, the Canadian Premier, while
stated to be purely a social one,
It is believed will be Important in es
tablishing more direct relational be
tween Canada and the United States.
There are also matters’ pending be-
* tween the two- countries that will Un
doubtedly be discussed Informally,
Mr. King has been the guest of
President Coolidge at luncheon, and
Frank B. Kellogg, Secretary of
•State, gave a dinner in his honor,
Canadian legation was hl“;fl(jg,t while
ho was in the clto ylsit of the
Premier be considered- as a sort
prelude^ to that of thn Governor-
*tSouoral, Lord WlLWlor..
‘t?
iOn the Beautiful
GULF COAST
Mild, equable temperature; never too hot, fiever too cold, A land of
history and romance. Beautiful foliage; inspiring water views. Out
door sports under perfect conditions.. Modern, new hotels; also apart
ments and cottages. The Pan'American, all-Pullman train of de luxe
accommodations, leaves Cincinnati dally at 10:20 A. reaching
Gulf Coast points early next morning. Other through trains dally.
In Qloridus
FLORIDA.
Never fiiore beautiful, never more nllutlng than thia winter. Swim and fish in trop
Waters; play golf, tennis, polo and enjoy summer sports right through the Winter. Every
form ofdeHght'ftrl entertainment awaits winter visitors. Splendid through train servica
iforh Detroit and Cincinnati on The Flamingo, and from Cincinnati on The Southland.
Write for free descriptive literature, or for information as to fates, or reservatlorn—'
H. E. PORTER, Trav. Past’r Agent CF27—N
(Dept. “ W L* ’) 605 Transportation Bu lid Ing, Detroit, Michigan
LOUISVILLE St NASHVILLE R. R
That Hacking Cough
Ahali teaspoon of Minard’s taken
ihternally with molasses will
ease the throat and stop cough.
was in inisery ahd
to cry. T*
ST’
1
I?
»
I
^fitcd'by its use.
ISSUE Nb
The little girl had been visiting.
When it’was time for* her to be going
home, her hostess said: “Good-bye,
Marjorie; you' must come again' sotm.
We should like to see more of you.”
“But there isn’t any more of me,” re
plied Marjorie. . 1
I Keep'MIrtard’s Liniment In the house.