HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1930-01-23, Page 3R. iyeti Bank Annual Meeting;
A4sets Exceed Billion Dollars
Tire annual meeting of. sharehold-
ers of The Royal Bank of Canada
not only marked the close of the
Sin
� st
successful w Iui - v
ear on lucord,but
was rende'reit specially interesting
by conctruethre addresses delivered
by Sir Herbert Holt, president; 0, E,
:sill; vipe-president and ../Managing
.director; and Siot'ris W. Wilson,
general , nain:se .
Sir Herbert, in addressing the
shareholders, pointed • out that in
spite of t'he losses incurred by thou-
sands of investors throughout Can-
ada and the United States, the
a,trength of the business structure is
,such ;that'there is no reason to look
forward to more than a moderate re-
•Cessiou in Madness during 1930.
Dealing with conditionsin Canada
Sir Herbert stressed tiro filet' that
neither the prospects in foreign trade.
nor the situation in Canadian indus-
try, trade and agriculture, warrant
pessimism concerning the outlook for
the eoming(year.
Industrial Advisory Council.
After dwelling on the success ob-
tained by President Hoover in secur-
ing'the active co-operation of indus-
trial leader'ship•throughout the cinin-
try in the recent crisis, Sir,'Herbert
urged, that ft`would be to the envoi-
-Lege of Canada to establish a' 'non -
pa bisan,Advisory Council;' composed
of men of outstanding ability,-repre-
seutative of industry, agriculture and
labor. This . council would firing
about •a close rapprochement be-
tween government, industry, agrleut-
ure and labor that would assist the
formulittion ,and execution of effec-
tive measures for the maintenance of
thatequilibrium. q nut
w fc
h h would o -
nstire
sCable.prosperity.
Tice -President's lildress.
C. E.
Neill, and'
managing direotor, submitted to the
meeting a veL'y interesting proPosal.
by which Canada Might ,benefit to a
Ear greater extent Prem the trenien-
dous, tourist traffic thatis.'coining
annually into the country from the
United Slates,
"Canada;" paid Mr. Neill, "fs at-
tracting 'lpproalmately fifteen iniI-
lion visitors a yetis. This; .great an-
nual ini'gi•ation presents' an unapar-
alloled opportunity for increasing
Our trade. As' yes. thore has been no
concerted effort to build the tradi-
tion thaat there are purchases whicb
cattle ado in Canada more advan-
tageously than in the United States.
If we could ^ make pgrcliasing in
Canada sufficiently attractive, it
would make .difference of more
than one Milton dollars a ,,year. In
'our trade." •
' General Manager's Address.
Morris W, Wilson, general man-
ager,' reviewed the GO.th annual' re -
Port and balance 'sheet, for the year
ending November 8D. The figures,
bath of ascots and profits, Constitute
'a new ieoord for Canadian banking.
Total assets of $1,001,442,741 are
shown,' being an increase of
$D2,046,856 for the yeag. Deposita
have gained $64,620,922 and now
stand: at $772,067,768.
A New Theory on
Franklin's Fate
!Canadian Explorer Believes
the Franklin Expedition
of 1845 Succumbed
to Exhaustion
Ottawa.—Major T. L. Burwash, who
4s attached to the Northwest Terri-
tortes and Yukon branch of the Dom-
ialon Government servlco, is an ex-
plorer of cote who knows the Arctic
as do tow men. He returned the oth-
er day front a sojourn within it which
lasted eighteen months and in the
course of which he traveled 6,600
miles by -tog team, neat and airplane,
Major Burwash, like all Arctic explor-
ers, finds a keen subject of specula-
tion in Sir John. Franklin and the gal-
lant crew whech he led to disaster
snore than eighty years ago; and
while he believes the full story of
Franklin expedition never will be
known he has gathered information
from originat sources which leads,
titins to certain conclusions.
Franklin's expedition, of 129 officers
'and men, sailed from England in May,
1845, it Batch of the Northwest Pas.
;sage, and to a fate only partially re-
. 'vealecl by relief parties. Sir John's
two ships, the Erebus and the Terror,
were locked in the ice off King
linru's Island front September, 1840,
until 105 of their crews who survived
deserted them in April, 1848, Sir
John himself meanwhile had died.
Many relics of the party have been
found, and it is evident that they
made a valiant struggle or existence.
The point where these 105 men
(under Captain F. R. M.' Crozier laud -
ill is described by Major Burwash, as
a lost' -lying, rough, desolate and Storm -
ridden country, Major Burwash be-
lieves tate party tool[ what they could
carry o11 sleds and set out for the
South—and from that point the story
leaves the realm of fact and becomes
theory. It is the theory of Maier
Burwasit that two-thirds of the party
,retraced their Steps over weary miles
and re -manned tate two vessels whicb,
unexpectedly, had survived the Crush-
ing ice and once more presented the
letter chance.
But death was in the party, and not
one was to escape to tell'the 81017
of unparalleled trials and heroic en-
deavors. Major Burwash does not
believe .they starved to death. He
says it is well established that they
had ample provisions, firearms and
ammnntion. Scurvy is a 0101`e prob-
able explanation, with the ships three
years out of their home ports and
having. had no opportunfty for many
months of securing fresh supplies. It
19 the theory 01 Major Burwash that
11110 num succumbed rather to exhaus-
tion which made them au easy prey
of an Arctic which they found far,
ifrotn friendly. Inadequate clothing
ono doubt played part, The men had
not leat'nel the lessons of the Acetic
which subsegheut explorers have tak-
en from the Eskimos.
Major Enmesh, therefore, sees
seventy or so who remained of the
oiigfnai high-spirited party desper-
ately trying to save the' expedition
'from annihilation as they re -manned
their stanch ehlps. He sees them
drifting with the merciless lee as titan
after man succumbs ,uuttl finally the
vessels cruise with the ice-ffelcis man-
ned by dead 'ashore. One ship, he
believes, was wrecked on the nortih-
ae.t coast of Matty island, in Sit' John
Hass Strait. ' Tito other came to rest
off O'Reilly Island, at the eastern end
of Queen Maud Gulf, and there it was
boarded by Eskimos who found the
hold in darkness, and in their eager-
ness and ignorance they sought to ad-
mit 'light by cutting it hole through
the side, Tile hole was helow tate
water line, and the vessel rapidly
sank.
this is the' version which Major
Burwash believes to be substantially
true, In the light of information he
believes authentic, although It differs
in some details froin theories widely
held. There are still, ho Says, ancient
Eskimos who pt'ofess to recall the
mysterious "Kabloonahs" or white
men and their groat -winged kaiak.
Some 'of them claim to remember a
camp of white hest at Starvation
Cove. Bat these old omen then were
boys, and at the best native, mem-
()Nee are unreliable. There are no
written records to prove them right
or wrong, and the exact location of
the sunken ships is not revealed by
the traditions of the North. '
Big Floating Roadway
Liverpool. ---•Tile largest floating
roadway in the world, representing a
triumph of englneeringr; Las been
opened at Soacombe Ferry, Wallasey,
by Lord Derby. The new roadway,
or bridge, is 599 feat long and 56
feet wide outside the girders. It
has taken two years to build, and cost
£60,000. 0. Tire bridge r •lo r
carries three
roads, of which normally the- nortb
road will be used for vehicles moving
dOwa to the stage, the centre road
for light and fast mitor vehicles com-
ing oft the stage, and the south read
for horse traffic, handcarts, and slow
and heavy motor traffic coming off
the stage.
The structure consists of five float-
ing spans linked to each other and
to the stage and shore by six suspend-
ed spaus. Each floating span is sup -
Petted on a nest of eight steel pon-
toons, each of which is capable 02
bearing 60 tons. The roadway will
open a new gateway from Lancashire
into Cheshire. Wallasey ferries, the
biggest undertaking of their khid
carry 27,000,000 passengers a year.
REVENGE
Bath any wronged thee? Be brave.
ly revenged; slight it, and the work's
begun; forgive it,�,and 'tis finished.
Ile is bels whiling:1f that not above
an Injury.—Quarles.
Minded's for the Ideal Rubdown.
Reproduce Hotel in Sugar
War Guilt
'Tile war -guilt belongs to .all Eur-
ope; • researches in every'. country
'have proved this, Germany'sexclu
sive guilt or Gei'maiiy's innocence are
fair' r-ta
5 les for chiIlroi
1 on both aisles
of the Rhino. What ,country wanted
.?
th' war? e Letusput'f'
4 different u' c ues-
a0t1
tion` What .circles in every country
waisted, facilitated, or began the was'?
If, instead- of a 'horizontal section
through Europe; We take a vertical
section through society, we find ,that
the suns of guilt was in the Cabinets,
the sum of innocence in the streets
of Europe.
' "fit no country had the man at the
machine, in the workshop, or at the
plough any desire to break the peace,
or any interest in doing so,'" Every-
where the lower classes feared war,
and.fought,against it till the eleventh
hour, The _Cabinets, on the other
hgnd,'the War Offices and interested,
circles that worked -with 'them, the
ministers, generals, -.admirals, tear
contractors, and journalists, were
driven forward by ambition and fear,
by incapacity and greed, and drove
the masses forward iu their turn. The
less control a Gover'nmeilt had to
fear, the heavier le its historical re-
sponsibility. For this reason, while
exact Calculations. of relative weapon-
sibility are impossible, one can say
that Vienna and Petersburgstand
first, their seconds, follow them, al-
though at very _different Intervals;
London comes a. long way after,
"This book is a study of the stupid-
ity of the men who in 191-f Were all
-
Powerful, and of tate true instinct of
those who, at that time, were power-
less, • It le international fu outlook,
and chows how a peaceable, industri-
ous, sensible 'mass, of 500 millions,
was hounded by a few dozen incap•
able leaders, by Mislead documents,
lying stories of threats,'aud chauvin-
istie catchwords lute a war which
was - in no way destined or inevit-
able,"
Tliat is a very long extract; but it
M well that I should give it for noth-
ing could better present the case that
Emil Ludwig argues; nothing better
expiates why his dedication is "To
oar sons—in warning"; nothing bet-
ter accounts for the quotation chosen
for his title-page—Ba11tn's "A elan
need not have been a Bismarck to
prevent this most idiotic of all wars."
1MIany will disagree vigorously and
vehemently 'with Itis assumptions and
Itis conclusions;'but In these days of
cooing fa the Continent at least as
many will support his plea for a
World Court of Arbitration, "There
is only this alternative, either to do
It now ,,or wait tor another • war."—
Abridged from a review of "July,
1914," Emil Ludwig's latest book.
This review appeared in "The Thus -
traced London News,"
CONSTIPATED CHILDREN
Constipation is sue •of the most
common ailments of childhood and
the child suffering from it positively
cannot thrive. To keep the little one
well the bowels must be kept regular
andthe stomach sweet. To do this
nothing can equal Baby's Own Tab-
lets. They 'are -pleasant to tape and
eau. be given to the newborn babe
with perfect'dafoty. Thousands of
motiherg use no other medicine for
their little ones but Baby's Own -Tab.
lets. They are sold by medicine deal-
ers or by mail at 25 cents a box from
The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co.,
Brockville, Ont.
Ice Jams Destroyed
By Lisp of Chemicals
Prof. Barnes of. McGill Has
Learned How to Reduce
Their Menace to Life
and Property
Winter is not want it used to be,
now that ice engineering has come
into practice. New methods of meet-
ing cold weather conditions in noth-
ern rivers have been especially ne005
nary. There, with successive cold
waves, the fee lant forms, sometimes
closing- ports and causing losses rui-
ning into enormous figures. When
the St, Lawrence freezes, for example,
and ships cannot teach Moutroul, the
losses are estimated at about $1,500,-
000 a week. Ice Janis may also mewl
the overwhelming of entire cont-
muuties of floods.
Remedying such ice conditions lig'
these calls fol' the services of a sei-
enti0c speeialist,' and so the ice en-
gineer has come into being.
In his task 11e uses a number of
chemicals. Ontstanillttg among them
is calcium' ,Chloride. It has boelt
found very effective in relieving Ice
pressure, when destruction of a jam
Is not necessary. A tracks of the
chemical laid along the line of a wall
gives adequate productive. Some-
times a series of holes is made in the
jam and calcium chloride is inserted
mixed with gravel, sand or coal dust,'
which serve to carry it Into the ice;
or the -chemical its flakes inay be scat-
tered ort the surface. Wherever it
touches the ice the lee rots, Sodium
chioi•1de may also be used systemati-
cally for rotting and destl'oyiug'ice as
may, calcium carbide, crude sulphuric
acid and hy,ilrochloric acid.
The most effective and spectacular
reagent that rias been used x11 ice en-
gineering is thernilt, long familiar in
welding operations, • Professes, How-
ard T. Barnes o; 'McGill University
made prolonged researches in its use.
Therinit consists of a mixture of
aluminum metal and • iron o;tide,"
When rte temperature Is raised to
2,800 degrees Fahrenheit, the alumin-
um combines with tate oxide, 'releasing
the iron, molten and white hot, which
In turn reacts with the water of the
tee to generate hydrogen se'suddenly
that an explosion results, though
thermit itself Is not explosive,' •
te
X7OMEN of all ages,
all over the world,
are finding new health in
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills.
Act u a I microscopic
tests have shown that the
medicinal elements con-
tained in them increase
the;blood countand build
up 'and revitalize the en-
tire system. 1Vliss Juliette
Seguin, of Dalkeith, Ont.,
testifies as follows
wrwo years ago I became
weak, nervous and enn=down.
Various prescribed treat-
ments did not help me. I
began taking Dr. Williams'
Pink Pilis and it was not long
before I noticed a big im.
provemont; and soon I was
in the best of health. A year
ago also my mother was
badly run-down; her nerves
were chattered and life .be' -
came a burden. She began
taking the pills and as a re.
suit she is in perfect health."
Buy Dr. Williams' Pink
Pills now at your druggist's
or any dealer in medicine or
by mail, 50, cents, postpaid,
from The Dr. Williams Medi.
cine Co., Brockville, Ont.
0.87
g t,i` y ASS
"0 HOUSEHOLD NAME
IN 54 COUNTRIE0•',
Flared Skirts
And Shirtwaists
Vogue Among Skaters at
Paris Ice Clubs
Paris,—Paris lags a little behind
the reported entltusiestn for winter
sports 1110(1181' big cities, although
Parte travel bureaus will tell you that
their bookings for the Alps and the
Pyrenees are heavier than ever this
winter.
There is talk of another and larger
skating rink, but for this winter the
Palate de Glace, at' lite Rond Point
des Champs Elysees is atilt the only
one. It is opeh to the general public
in the afternoons, but reserved for
private clubs in the mornings, and
hero tete may find all there is in the
way of the skating kit fn Paris.
The first comparison between the
costumes of last wiliter and this is
the cowling to the fore of the tailored
shirtwaist. Many of the younger ele-
ment spate in clout sltirts, pleated or
slightly flared on hip yoke, and tuck -
in crepe blouses ,with mannish tut'n-
oFer of fiat Claudine attars. One very
sinart blouse noted was of tub sill[ in
broad stripes of white and light blue
with a navy skirt. Often a lightweight
Juniper is worn over tate blouse, but
this juniper, too, is usually tucked in-
to the belt.
The one-piece woollen dress le an-
other fashion endorsed by well-dress-
ed 'women at the Palais de Glace.
White collars, leather' belts and, not
Infrequently, a bolero out to the bod-
ice are features of these dresses,
most of them In fine tweed mixtures.
Many of the skirts are pleated, es-
pecially in liliespleats stitched part
way down, but a greater number than
last year are flared.
101adame Barbey, who, with her
daughter, is among the best skater's
ill France, is wearing a green woollen
dress this winter, with green felt hat
to match, It has a cream color collar,
and is made princess style, with a
wide flare to the skirt Most of the
very good skaters, who sometimes go
ifs for exhibition amities, wear grin -
Cess dresses.
Mlle. Barbey has an attractive one
of brown velvet with beige collar and
cuffs; Mile. Andrea ably wears• black
velvet, with tiny cream net collar
close to the throat and a black velvet
hat on Dutch Cap lines and black
shoes and stockings. Another of the
good skaters also wears black velvet,
but brightens it by heavy lace collar
and cuffs,, and a beige facing to her
skirt to match her quickers, shoes
and stockings,
The rack and file of skaters prefer
less spectacular ooetemes, and ones
which would be suitable for other
sports. The sweater, jumper worn
without a blouse is still seen, provided
it fa 'hand knitted andin modern de-
sign; and a felx..jersey cardigan sifts
are worn. A young Spanish girl wears
a smart ono in.. Vfonnet's color com-
bination of dark brown and pinky
beige, the latter .used for incrusted
pattern of :fine toothlike triangles
arolind the border of to jacket and
act'ossthe.tront of the Manna
Berets, small • off-the•face Shapes,
and .occasionally .cloches short at
front, are the principal headgear,
with., the cloches greatly in the minor-
ity.; Most of the skaters wear knick-
ers la neutral beige tone to snatch
their Stockings.
Failing Hair—Just try M'inard's.
"What. _is filature jndgmeut,' atly-
ay, bu"the total of our disappoint-
tents and' worries, out' burned •_fin•
ers and our fears"'—Brflca Batton.
"Women's instincts are better than
Mien's, but Of a siifterent ostler,"—i
Teary Ford.."
1 "Socialism .deuounces those who 1
A large mpdel In sugar of the. great Canadian Pacific hotel at Toronto, have the wealth and leisure wliiclt g
are' ,les ideals."—Reginatd Mitchel
the Royal York, forty-two incites in height,.has been made by Harty Astley; Bmilts.
eblef confectioner of the 'liner Empress of Scotland. T11e model wit ex- ' ' c —
ttl tted at theConfectioner Exhibition London England; thish r
t- p s gra d, rent Minards Wads Off Grippe..; i
Why Politicians'
Never Retire..
By A. G, GARDINER
"Nature
cries aloud for re1o
se H.
said Gladstone of himself, and' fortis.
with entered upon another twenty!
yoars of volcanic activity in which be
waged battles that made all that hail
gone before look like mere skirmishes.
Rosebery said he liad retired from
public life and went on delivering pub-
lic speeches on the smallest provoca
tion,
Mr. Lloyd George usedto sigh
heavily In public over- the intolerable
weight of his responsibilities and hint
that it there we're only another man'
who could tote, the job off :his hauls,
he, too, would fly away and be at rest.'
And .831'. MacDonald had hardly been
in since a month before he was peat-
tpr deliverance and miu•nniring,
'words which sounded like "How long,
0 Laird! low long?"
And this is .not mere make-believe.
It is, at; the moment at. all events,
optert quite sincere; and it la certain-
lyquite intelligible, , Liven those of
us who live much less strenuous and
contentious lives and never catclh the
'flow light that beats upon the publle
stage have moments 0t weariness
with ourselves and our task when the
wings of a dove or "a lodge --iii some
vast wilderness, • a boundless conti-
guity of shade," would be a most de-
sirable means of -escape.
How much more irksome is the life
of the, 'public man, with.its ceaseless
publicity, its shiftings and changes,
its cross -currents and compromises;
the extremists gaiting you at the
rear, the reactionaries tugging your
sleeves on the flank the enemy bom
barding you in 'front; behind the
scene the infinite intrigues, the 'Petty
personal ambitions, the disgruntled
followers the disappointed pitmen -en.,
and, outside, the megaphones of the
Press raging and the public through
its myraid voioes, clamoring for this
subperb gesture and denouncing that
craven. surrender. •
The marvel is not that public Men
emit yearnings forpeace and for a
shepherd's crook upon the hillside;
but that they do not give effect to
their yearnings. They never do, or
they do it so rarely that the excels
tions only emphasise site'' general
It
-
It is the case of Mr. Reginald Mc-
Kenna. it is true that Lork Birken-
head appears to have done the sante
thing, but It is clear that his heart
still hanirers after battle with his
peers far on the ringing plains 01
windy Westminster, and that at any
moment required (hating been assur-
ed) the falconer's voice may summon
hilifeiu. back to the torments of public
The fact, of course is that, with all
its acerbities, irritations and disk).
peintmeuts the life of the public man
Is too thrilling and absorbing to be
ciscarcled. It has the fascination of
the stage and tate intensity of gambl-
ing, and once caught in it these 18 no
escape. It is often fatal in its attrac-
tion and cruel in its consequences.
He is a wise 01011 who, like Isar -
court, loaves the game alone until he
has acquired a competent that gives
trim independence. I have sena at
close quarters many a bittbr tragedy
of the public life, such as those of
William Pringle and Charles Master -
man. They'tvere caught its tate flame
and perished in the flame. But even
while perishing they found in it the
only life that was thinkable to them.
And if that isthe ease with those
who fail, bow mutat more is it s0
in the case of those who have had the
luck of the cat•let Thittk of that
marvellous forty years during which
the new Father of the House, Mr.
Lloyd George, has had all the ism of
the fair,
Retire! Fly away and be at rest.
Spend his declining year's with a crook
on the flanks of Snowdon: Forgive
ate, my dear sir, if i pause to smile.
Ansi that other weary Titan, the De-
puty Father, Sir Austen Chamberlain,
who, fa his rather massive, ponder-
able tray, has had a great, if some-
what solemn, innings, Can we con -
YOUR HAIR NEEDS
TO GIVE IT HEALTH AND LUSTRE
ASIC YOUR BARBER
SAS
if 'with a
Stays sharpSAWtenger
Cuts easier. Saws faster
5/110005 CANADA SAW CD, LTO.
MONTREAL TORONTO .5
VANCOUVER, ST, JOHN,N e'
sell yr h rs inth
highest ilk Ip rket
We are paying silo, following
prices for great eggs delivered.
our warehouse at the preuont
t
ince•
re
P s an mattasAs 50c doss.
k'roslt Pivots ,'47c doz,
&'rolls Pullet Extras • , 405 - aoz,
2t'reah seconds et Oradea 110e doz.
Deal with an old reliable 'busi-
ness
house .pvith a reputation of
More than siXtyfive years for
square
dealt ng.
Best pri
ccs
paid. Prompt payments,. Cases
returned quickly, Cases -sup-
plied, 60c each, complete, deliv-
ered, payment in advance.
Reference: -Your Own' Banker,
Write for Weekly Quotations
THE WHYTE PACKIHR' ,DO LIMITED'
78-80 Front t
ESTABLISHED OVER 65 YEARS
Street : East
Toronto 2
a..a.u,e"-•w,.a•r; AVRA:awtcam.+e PS,531r.,.:r %r
ceive Win taking off his 'flannels and
quitting the pavilion for ever?
Aud thick of the astoulslldng adven-
ture which the public life has been to
Mr. Churchill, Mr. Snowden; Mr. Mac-
Donald, They may declare against
its burdens and afflictions, but in Weir'
hearts they know there Is no life like
it, and they could no more voluatarily
leave the public' stage than the tooth
oat cease to flutterround the caudle,
We sometimes wish they would.—
Montreal Standard.
South Africa and the Empire
Christchurch Press, N.Z.; (The
South- African. secessionists seem to
be only "an obstinate but decidedly
not confident remnant." For this, if
the Empire thanks time and General
Rertzog, it would be stupidly forget -
tut not to thank greater Boer states-
men titan Hertzog —Botha and Smuts,
for instance—and the wisdom of the
British statesmanship of immediate
trust and reconciliation. The pres-
ent situation in Soutis Africa is full
of'difficulties and dangers, not the
least of them being the sharp racial
cleavage of the parties; but it is no
longer In the least likely that the at-
tempt to get over tiheut will follow
separatist lines; aid that means that
South Africa Is much more Likely to
get over them successfully in the end.
The Singapore Base
Singapore Free Press. It is hard to
believe that abandonment wilt bo the
end, but if it should it has to be re-
cognized that in• all probability the
floating dock would still remain In
'tire East, and might well be sited fa
Ceylon. In some respects stat might
be a better strategical position even
than Singapore, although perhaps not'
so good a tacticat one, slltce it titioutd
be .centrally sited on interior lines of
communication with tate Suez Canal,
the Cape and Australia, screened by
the Malayan archipelago from eastern
observation and with a clear oppor-
tunity of observing the Pacific out -
tete and ensuring safe eommuaica-
tiou mint Australia.
That Sore Throat Needs ailnard's.
Canada and Australia
Sydney Bulletin: For years Cam
ado's exports have largely' exceeded
its imports, so it has had a balance
with which to meet its interest and
other liabilities abroad. Australa,
on the other 'band, sells much less
abroad than she buys, and lives on the
thin edge of financial deapalr, to tiro
detriment of its plants, .As a result,
more or Tess direct, the Canadian
Minister of Finance has a reliable sur.
plus, and when the debris of war had
been mostly cleared away he began,
in 1923, to reduce the public debt.
Australia has the deficit habit badly,
and has been fucreaetug its- foreign
debt at a pace when makes a catas
troph0 seem .imminent.
Could not Eat or Sleep
after Husband's Death
Her husband's death left her very
run clown its health, unable to eat or
sleep ouch, Now she is brighter its
spirits and eats and sleeps well.
Whet caused the difference? Let
her answer in her own words.—
"I thick KrusChee Salts are a spleen
did tonic. After my husband's death
in December lost I became very run
down in health. Had terrible fits et
depression and was unable to eat or
sleep nmuelt, I was also troubled with
rheumatlstn, I decided to take Krns-
clten Salts and have now . talion the
little daily dose for nearly ttvo
months, during which time my health
has greatly improved, The rheumatism
has completely left me. I am much
bl'igltter fit spirits and bots eat and
sleep well." •
When life begins to "get you down,"
when you begin to feel the results of
modern artificial conditions -errors of
diet, worry, overwork, lank et exer-
eiee—then you should tarn to Krus-
chen Salts. They possess a wonder-
ful power of giving new life and vital-
ity to the countless millions of cells
of which the human body' is composed,
The way to peep smiling is t0 tape.
Kruschen Salts every morning—just',
a pinch 10 your first morning cup of�
coffee or tea. 9.0,11
iak�•` rw y._�
vad..g,
- L.,..e�NV1ryF't eY
�oerinoA�s
Por 'a -Quieten
due to Acid
essesSTION
ACID STOMACH
HSAgreetiN
HI.ADACHE
DASES•NAUSEA
Many people, two ho tee after eat-
ing, stiffer indigesticin as they call it.
It is usually °excess /mil, Correct it
with an alkali. The lost tray, the
quick, harmless ami bIilcLeitIs 'way, is,
Phillips' Milk of Magnesia. It has
remained • for = 50 years the standard
with' physicians. 'One. spoofiful' in
Water neutralizes many times`'1ts
volume in stomach acids,. and at
once.' The symptoms. ,disappear' in,
five minutes. •
You will never use 0 Me methods
when you know this better method.
And you will never Suffer .from ex -
este acid Wilms you prove out this
easy relief, Please d'o that—for your
own sake—now.
Be mire to get the genuine P hiili S
p
Milk of Magnesiii,pl'eseribed.by 1311751
clans for 50years in correcting excess
acids, Bach .bottle contains full di '„
rections—any drugstore. ,
"White" Australia
Bombay Daily Mall: The poljey i
tlte'dog fu the manager has not nese
So far any good to Australia. But its
effect has been to iudece Japan to
'Cast covetous eyes on the vast ex.
pauses of Northern Australia, a dan-
ger of whtoh the latter is Perfectly
aware. -
"Only a people who are strong and
calm can work usefully for peace."---
Andre
eace."—Andre Tardieu.
DR. WATSON'S
ii SON'S
TONSC SWANS' AN11 A'&E
One pacitage • makes Pour gallons,
Mau 760 today and 155 wttt for-
ward you postpaid one Package or
this delicious beverage,
AT, IlLI,DAT 8s CO. LIrexTDn
Terntinai Wabehouse, Teton o
List or "Wanted invention"
and Pall Information Sent ties
on` Request.
TDB 'ndAXSAY CO., Dept. W.
273 Bank St., Ottawa, Ont.
"After Baby, Was Weak,
; Skinny. Gabled 22lbs."
.
rroaieed Yeast did it, says Mrs.
ats$ •,I'` � Benoit. Thousands says to 15 lbs.
gamed in 3 weeks. Nervousness, constipation
vaalah overnight. Skis clears like magic. Get
Ironlzed Yeast tablets from druggist today.
The soothing, cooling tomb that
brings comfort to the halm
�a��iic¢aa•� Tar';lanslsa
The newest or !hit Concurs preparation.
wilt] n tlackgmuud of a0 yearn or depend.
nbio quality and e,r.ira.
2,7e. Everywhere
PREF =LILL PACRRAGE of Dr. 3.
Ii, Guild's Green Mountain Asthma
Compound sent en request. origin-
ated in 1500 by Dr. Guitd, specialist
in respiratory diseases. Its pleasant
smolt° vapor quickly soothes and re-
lieves astluua—also catarrh, Standard
remedy at at•ut;siste, 36 cents, 80
cents and $1,00, powder or cigarette
form, Send ler PREE TRIAD peck.
• buten, SYtn antis S,td.,, ci pta002. 098
St, Paul St Vogt, Montreal. can -ma.
Dr+t1Si D. lIld*g SMP ACOMPO IIO
For Instant
Ease From
COUGIIiiVG take
`Y" CKLE
M1XTUR
Aruna
`C;;;:)i
f/n,SA
A s hiu^13 SIP PRovEstr
Gettig Bald?
You needn't: Minard's checks
Pall[ng hair and stimulates new
growth—adds new lite to the ens
tire scalp.
Rub into eealp four times a week.
10
t`I was very weak after art op-
eration. My nerves tvere'so bad
l would sit down and cry and
my husband would not go out
and leave me alone, Now my
nerves are much better, thanks
to a booklet that was left
under the door. Lydia E. Pink-
ham's Vegetable Compound
surely put me oil my feet, p
have taken eight bottles, My
friends tell tne I look fine. My
sister has taken this medicine
too." ---.Mrs. Annie Walton, 67
Stanley St., Kingston, Ontario.
ISSUE No. 4--'3Q