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Zurich Herald, 1928-01-12, Page 7�gy��rr --T Ary� r� ;t rQcagn:iaoti. n.s.� 'each by individual #u,' I pllf 'ALM i``�lI . l MD' (��1�t vectors all over the world and par-: iL 19f• iI I �1 ��{,' iP1Uty cu]arl3* on this col tinent," the re, ort declares. "That neiS capital is 'If Not Corrected 'Serious Results Sure to Follow Iu no trouble is delayor neglect more dens;erous than in anaemia - thin, watery blood, It is very common in young girls and in persons who are overworked or confind within doors. It makes its approach ` in se stealthy a manner that, it is often well devel- oped before the trouble Is recognized. But taken In; time the tonic treat- ment through the use of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, so enriches the blood that good health and strength is speedily regained. The correction of anaemic conditions by Dr. Williams' Pink Pills lis as certain as anything can be, Miss 'Teresa Heafey, Dunraven, Que., is one of the many -anaemic sufferers who Chas found new health through the use of this medicine.. She says:—"I can- not express too warmly my thanks for what Dr. Williams' 'Pink 'Pills have done for me. I was suffering from a badly run-down condition. 1.was very nervous, had little desire for food, and ;.would feel tired out et the least deer - tion. In this condition I began taking deer- ,tion. Williams' Pink Pills, and before using them very long found my health gradually improving, and under their 'continued use was completely re- kistored. For this reason I earnestly 'advise all weak girls to take these ills, feeling sure that they wall do for thers what they did for me." 1 Send your name and address to The 'Dr. Williams', Medicine Co., Brock- ville, Ont., and they will mall you free a useful little book on "Building "Qp the Blood." The pills can be obtained through any druggist or by mail at 50 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. 'Canada Speeds Use Of W,yr ter Power Dominion Reports $900,000,- 000 Now Invested Here in This Industry Huge Resources Remain Wide Distribution of Hydrau- lie Energy Has Increased the Standard of Living A tremendous increase in water- power tleveroprnent in Canada has taken place during the last deeade, according to a report of the Depart Ment ofInteziorof the Dominion, of which Charles Stewart is Minister. The total amount invested in water- power development is $900,000,000, or more than in any other single manu- facturing industry. The horsepower now developed is 4,883,266, which is 'estimated to be about 11 per cent. of the total available for rievelopmment. There is now in Canada an exten- sive use of water power in the pulp and paper industry, in mining, in manufacturing generally and in the productio of electric current for do- mestic consumption. "The present use of water power gives promise of even more extended uses in the future," says the. report. "A lready Canada's pcritio n in that respect is one of outstanding 'Impor- tance. Her aggregate installation. places her second only to the United Staten and her per capita develop went, 513 horsepower per 1,000 popu- lation, gives her a position inferior only to Norway among ail the, coun- tries of the world, "Water power has enabled Canada to devedop from communities largely agricultural or lumbering in their in- terests to a manufacturing country of first importance. •---To an increasing degree, low-cost power has been a magnet drawing to the Dominion from abroad important industries whose output goes to augment Cana- dian export trade. .Already some 1,400 branches of United States factories aro stated to have been established in this country. Hand in lranct with this industrial development, the wide- spread .distribution. of power for do- mestic use has in many different ways effected a decided increase in the .standard of, living for the mass of the population." Water.power development in Can- ada is no longer speculative, but has become a highly specialied process, readily+' Available for entered:us of a promising nature is shown by the re- markable development carried out within the Past three years, involving expenditures, upward of $180;000,000. "In 1923 an estimate of; ,the per:- eentage of Canadian and foreign capital invested in. 'commercial cen- tral electric stations : indicated the following distribution: Canada 66.9 Per cent.; Great Britain, 6,3 per• sent„ UMW States, 15 per cent:, and other foreign countries 11.8 per cent. It is not unlikely that the additional capital represented in, municipal Cen- tral electric stations and other water- power development would be distri- buted in somewhat the same manner. "Wane in the past few years Uni- ted States capital has probably taken a larger share in development than British and other outside' capital, there are many evidences -which indi- cate •thab the Canadian -share has been maintained or bettered, demon- strating the substantiial support ac- corded this class of investment by the investing public of the Dominion." Water Power in Paper Industry Regarding the use of water power the pulp and paper industry, the report says in part: "According to the Dominion Bu- reau of Statistics report for the year 1926 the industry represented a total capital investment of $501,1&6,000, found employment for 31,279 persons (exclusive of those employed in the woods), whose wages and salaries for the year amounted to $44,175,500, while the gross' value of product amounted to $215,488,000. . Thee ex- port trade of $12,0 in 1890 for this, in- dustry is often contrasted with the present corresponding figure of $187,- 559,000 187;559,000 to demonstrate the remark- able expansion during this period. Its contribution to the trade balance for the'year reached the impressive total of $175,372,531. "The question of motive power in connection with the production of pulp and paper is a most vital one and, in fact, is almost as important as that of raw material. In any in- dustry the relative necessity of ob- taining etheap and adequate power may be gauged by the amount re- quired'per dollar of product, and, with the possible exception of certain elec- tro -chemical and metallurgical pro- cesses, the requirements for pulp_and paper are among the highest. • • "The importance of low cost power may be judged from the fact drat ap- proximately 100 horsepower Of me- chanical power is required per ton of daily output of newsprint, while any surplus or off-peak electric power can be used most advantageously in the generation of steam for heating or process cooking. It is not surpris- ing, therefore, that the motive power used in this industry is practically restricted to hydraulic energy and Canada's supremacy in the pulp and paper field rests on adequate and abundant water 'powers well distri- buted among extens'-'e forest re- sources. "The use of steam ;as a source of power in this industry ie very lim- ited, and in most eases is prompted by special conditions such as 'opera- tion in close association with the manufacture of Iumber, when refuse from the latter ca1 tt beused as fuel n under the boilers, or in the manufac- ture of specialied lines. of output. The census returns for 1926 show a total steam power installation in the Dominion of only 92,570 horsepower and if the capacity of the three or four large steam operated mills where special conditions obtain is excluded, the remaining unit capacity works out to a very small amount. Development in Ontario "There are forty-two pulp and paper mills in Ontario using water' or hydro -electric power to the extent of 362,000 horsepower, of }vhicli, 174,000 horsepower is produced by the indus- try and the remainder purchased; of the power produced 92;000 horse- power is used in the direct drive of machinery 'and the remainder hydro- electrically. "The principal power developments are those of J. R. Booth on the Ot- tawa' River at Ottawa, 29,000 horse- power Fort Frances Pulp and Paper Company, .on the Rainy River at Fort Frances, 15,350 horsepower Backus- Brook Company, at the outlets of the Lake of the Woods at Iienora, 30,000 b`$Ull PHILLIPS .e4. -4 duFoe e to Aoki imeeeenosi ACn1HEAS'p't'0Meoce SUR EA Excess acid is the contemn -cense -of mill estio'n, it results in pain and emanc::s ebont°two hoaranftcr &sting.: The e :i :c r,circetivo is an sitz lli , which ucutralizee add, The best Cor- rot:tiro is Phillip' Milk of Magnsia. If it has remained standard with physi- i Maim in the 50 years wince its liven- tion, Phillips' xnillc tff One, t.`p(ifiil t%il of Kepi -else noutrelizes ,instantly many' trines its velem in: acid,. It is harm less and tasteless and 'its action is quick, "ion will never rely on exude' methods, never Continuo to mirror, I when- you learn how quickly, how pleasantly this premier Method acts. Meese let it show you -now. .Be sure to get the genuine 1Ii1k of. ]Magnesia pr'escribetl.ltt •Ii'i,1, Clans for 50 years hi oo e lin ; cess asfid;s, Each bottle err ;::.iris fill directions—any drug store, �^+ M x iy Suicccr•�'�-•`s;3 9.; gsteseserattegetaaVassita Upper—Class at Esher with Mr. McNally standing in the centre of the group. Lower—School cal` on the siding at Esher. Remarkable' progress has been made by the pupils attending the Canadian Pacific School Car operating in Northern Ontario along the 126 -mile string of settlements between Cartier and Chapleau Lying north of the Great Lakes, according to Dr. J. B. MacDougall, assistant chief inspector for the Ontario Department of Education. Dr. MacDougall inspected the school car classes recently and stated that the venture had turned out more successful than the department had ever expected. He credited its success • to the untiring efforts of Walter McNally, school car teacher, who has bad the work in charge since the car first began operating in September, 1926. horsepower; the Spanish River Pulp A Pira and Paper Mills, 14,400 horsepower on the St. Mary River at Sault Ste. Marie, 15,820 horsepower on the Spanish River at Espanola, 10.400 horsepower at Smoky Falls and 13,3.90. horsepower at Sturgeon Falls, on the Sturgeon River; the Abitibi Power and Paper Company, Ltd., 28,000 horsepower at Iroquois . Falls, 30,000 horsepower at Twin Falls and' 48;000 horsepower at Island Falls; on the Abitibi River. Other important puip and paper developments have been made on the Mattagami' and Kapus- kasi n rivers. s g On the lowerM atta- gami the Spruce Falls • Power and Paper Company is constructing a plant of 56,250 horsepower. "Thhe production of ground wood pulp andn ewsprint being the great power -consuming factors in the pulp and paper industry, the statement that the mills of Quebec produced. over 52 per cent: of the ground wood pulp and over 44 per cent. of the newsprint manufactured in Canada during 1926 :predicates an enormous use of hydraulic power." The report contains a digest of the Dominion and Provincial laws affect- ing water power, giving the funo- tions and powers of the various pub- lic regulating commissions and tell Mg of legislation designed to produce cheap power for use in various Cana- dian tiles. IMPROVEMENTS UNDER -WAY Mrs. Aristah .Kratt: There could Ire considerable Improvement In your manner, Mrs. Nouveauriohe, Mrs. N. (loftily): We are spend- ing a hundred thousand In repairs on our manor now, Mrs. Kraft. The Dog Sentry The motorist who is compelled to leave his car for a time can seldom do better than leave it in charge of a dog. An amusing situation was caused recently, when a dog mistook another car standing near for the one left in his charge, and vigorously opposed the rightful: owner when he 'tried to take it away. Icor a long while'the•man endeavor_ ed to gain possession, but was un- successful until accidentally he tooted his horn. The dog, stopped; cocked up his head, looked at the car, and then with an eloquent look of apology trotted off and lay down beside the right one. It is generally acknowledged that dogs quickly learn to recognize the sound of car -horns, and often a dog lying In front of a fire will jump up at the round of his, master's motor - horn, even though hundreds of other ears may have passed the house dur= ing: the Clay, SECT MEDICINE POR LITTLE ONES Baby's Own Tablets Should be in Every Holme Where There Are Children. The perfect medicine for little ones is found in Baby's Own Tablets. They are a gentle but thorough laxative which regulate the bowels, sweeten the stomach; c drive out constipation and indigestion; break up. colds and sim- ple fevers and promote healthful re- freshing sleep. It is impossible for Baby's Own Tablets to harm even the new-born babe, as thy aro absolutely guaranteed free from opiates or any other injurious drug. Concerning the Tablets, Mrs. Alex. 3'. Perry, Atlantic, N.S,, writes:—"I always keep Baby's Own Tablets in the house for the children, as I have found them a perfect medicine for little ones," Baby's Own Tablets are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. New "Eye" Or Doctors Dr, Andre Tours, a Frenchman, has discovered a means of making the human body transparent, so that all the organs will be seen working as in a mirror. Th doctor has refused all financial assistance, and also an offer i to go to the United States. He is de- termined that the first data shall be given to medical men of France. If flesh can be made transparent so that the bones can be seen clearly by surgeons and ostopaths, X-rays will be dispensed, with in locating internal! troubles. The doctor in future will be able to see the trouble at once without diagnosing blindly. In cases of consumption and cancer the trans- parency of flesh wil be an enormous boon to medical men. Dr, Tours claims that his discovery will assist experts in tracing the cause of death wheer murdr is sus- pected: The presence of poison will be easily detected, and in the case of shooting the exact course of a bullet will be traced. Crime and Prohibition The increase . of crime in America is attributed primarily to prohibition, "which .has eaten into the ethical at - Linde of the nation," according o the view of V. F. Calverton, editor and author, expressed in. December "Cur- rent History."' "The bootleggers themselves have become an economic group that exericses influence upon political parties, police organizations and social organizations. 'The spirit of corruption has become domnant.. Defiance of law has become a wide- spread practice, that extends • from bootlegger to `college co-ed. The un- einployed find employment in beet - legging, tai sing a misleading appear- anon of prosperity. Everything con- nected with bootlegging becomes con- taminete;i. Both the 'minds of those who purchase bootleg liquors and (boas who Attempt to -arrest those' who sell liquors become corrupted." Durable Goods. 'Unlit two years. ago tee Moemons t5 h fins hadn't` 'changed their underwear in seventy -live 1esrs:--Pittsilargh llrtpel•, Parking f.,or.c:r in its g'Dlrcri1111 ate, Colied. i Etinilin - is.even harder to f.n'1 in t "o dictienar;r than in the street. The ia'ost uncompromising expoi1- ont nt , Stole' doctrine in the uio:lc-;rlrv;orl d i5 Iminunnuel Kant. �i..i.•�.-.- Miin'irii's Liniment fur r•heumaticrn. Alexiea.ns aro spending four times as lunch on movies as on bull -fights. But, of course, there's 'much more bull in a'movie' than in a bull-fight.—Ar. lcansas tlauette. Y,, l•&SUE No. 1-118 11 Red Rose Orange Pekoe is the best tea you can buy In clean, bright Aluminum Facts of Interest The latest census shows that there are 50,000,000 poultry in Canada valued at $50,971400. • * * * A record hay crop was produced in Western Canada in 1927. An official preliminary estimate shows that the provinces of Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta' and British Columbia pro- duced 2;544,000 tons of hay and clover compared with 1,564,000 tons in 1926, and 235,700 tons of alfalfa as against 223,000 tons last year. • * m Moserip Bros,, Major, Saskatehe-' wan, have completed threshing what is considered to be the largest crop of wheat ever produced by one `family in Saskatchewan. From 2,000 acres they threshed approximately 15,000 ; bushels of No. 2 Northern. • * * * Although Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta are commonly supposed to be exclusively devoted to agriculture, it is interesting to note from a return just made available by the Canadian Government Bureau cf Statistics that the Prairie Provinces .have an annual manufacturing production of more than -$200,000,000.., • .e * * The total value of production of the fisheries of Canada foe the year 1326 was $56,360,633 compared with $47,- 942,131 for 1925 and $44,534,235 for 1924- • * 8 * A consignment of 1,000 cases of pears, grown in British Columbia, was shipped recently from Vancouver to England. This was the first shipment of pears ever made from British Col- umbia to England, though thousands of barrels of B.C. apples find a ready market every year in the British Isles. The King of Pain—M[naed s Liniment Midnight Sun Moves South. Sunshine returned to Los Angeles to -day, after a night of light rains, and will continue to -night and to -morrow, —Los Angeles Herald. It has been found that a market basket of food •costing $1 in Philadel- phia can be bought for 70 cents in Paris, 90 in Ronie, 80 in Vienna, 75 in Stockhalm and Berlin, 73 in London, 70 in Brussels, and 60 in Amsterdam. It's bard to beat the Dutch. By ©1�r Hair and SP1;iIR F1'e.,erved 'tic ora SCUPt© �Ct crasaw Heal Ointment to :re Classified Advertisements GGS AND POULTRY. J We pay highest market prices St,, London, Oaad guarantee complete satisfaction wit$ each transactor.nt. O. A. Mann & Co„ King T E wA ea x Sx List of "Wanted Inventions". and Full Information Sent Pre* on Request. i .._ TUE llamas: ' Co., Dept, W, 273 Bank St., Ottawa, Ont. Hoarse? Rub throat and chert thor- oughly with Minard's _Lini- ment. Quick relief assured. YOUNG WI MIFJ SUFFER MOST These Two Found Relief by) Taking Lydia E. Pi rlltha31'i's, Vegetable Corp, Bund. Ayer's Cliff, Quebec. — "I havel been teaching for three years, and, at the end of the year I always feel; tired and have no appetite. I wash awful sick each: month.too,havin I pains in my until sometimes was'oblged to sto working. A frien recommende ' Lydia E. Pink' ham's Vegetable Compound to me and I heard many women telling how good it was so I thought it would help me. And it did. Now I take six bottles every year and recommend it, to others." — DONALDA FANTEUX,1 Ayer's Cliff, Quebec. "Unable to Work" Canning, Nova Scotia.—"I had ire' regular periods and great suffering at those times, the pains causing vomiting and fainting. I was teach- ing school and often for some hours I would be unable b tot nd ate to my work. Through an advertisement in the papers I knew of Lydia E. Pink. ham's Vegetable Compound, and to has been of great benefit to me, the troubles being completely relieved.' —LAURA J. EATON, Canning, King's County, Nova Scotia. a To break a cold harmlessly and in a hurry y try an Aspirin tablet. :And for headache. The action of Aspirin is very efficient, too, ' cases of neuralgia, neuritis even rheumatism and. lumbar l Af there's no 'after effect, doctors give Aspirin to children --often infants. 'Whenever ti ere's pain, think of .Aspirin, '1`1..; g,:n-.:ire Aspirin 11i1s Bayer on the box and on Ivory tablet. All dr,1g, ibts, :with proven direction& Physicians prescrib ks. it it does NOT affect Aspirin le 1he trade merle (res:st.r.a in Csnnel) Indicating Rarer Manntner:r*. VIA; tt' 19 'Wil boowii that' Aspirin mean* truss meanrncture, to n**n1 the VR,'r "a 'eel rat es..' tions, tare Tablets vill be et;wmpel With their "Beres Cross" tradetaute