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HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1929-10-24, Page 7]'HE nerves are fed by 1 the blood. Poor blood• means starved nerve tis- sue, insomnia, irritability and depression. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills will enrich your blood stream and rebuild your over-worked nerves. Miss Josephine M. Martin, of Kitchener, Ontario, testi- fies to this : "1 suffered from a nervous breakdown," she writes. "1 bad terrible sick headaches, dizziness; felt very weak and could not sleep; had no appe- tite. I felt always as if some- thing terrible were going to happen. After taking other treatment without success, on my sister's advice, I tried Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, and now all these symptoms are gone, and I am strong and happy again." 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, Ontario. • S29 sob\ PER BOX f rMinit i n.s' PINK PPLLS "A NOUSEHOLD NANR IN S. COUNTRIES •' Britain's Trouble -Palestine Plague Who's Who •in Holy Land is the Hard Question to Decide A HEAVY LOAD The outburst of racial and religious fw y in Palestine startled all sections of the British press and inspired some of them to question whether the Br- tisb Government is administering the Palestine mandate competently or, In- deed, whether England ought ever to have accepted the mandate. it is not =surprising that Jews in all parts of the world should bitterly reproach Great Britain, remarks the London Daily Chronicle, for having failed to take adequate steps in advance to pro- teot the lives and property of the in- habitants in the event of disorders. The authorities on the spot were either ill-informed, this newspaper odds, or they neglected their inrol'ma- lion. The conclusion the ordinary per- son will draw from this tragic affair, it is further stated, is that the Pales- tine Government has been living re - Gently in a fool's paradise. The Pales- tine gendarmerie was brought to an end in 1926, it is recalled, and re- placed by the mixed police force re- medied from Arabs and Jews. In re- cent years the country west of the Jordan has been completely denuded of military fores, and we read: "The ostensible reason for this san- guine policy was the alleged improved relations between the Moslems and the Jews. But the fanatical fury and the 'Fide -spread character of the re- cent onslaughts on the Jows are suf- litieut to prove that the hostility of the Arabs, if masked, had not abated 'a jot. Throughout ilio last year Intel ligent observers have been prophesy- ing trouble arising out of the disputes about the Wailing Wall." The situation in Palestine has pass ed beyond the question of assessing the rights and privileges of Jews and Arabs in this debatable peace of holy ground, declares the London Daily News, which believes that for some time to collie British authority will b employed on the thankless task o m keeping the peace in a very ucl wider stretch of Palestine territory This journal also notes that. "Ext all parts of the 'world Jews are complaining bitterly of the British failure to protect their brethren in Pal 051100. Wherever there are ,Arabs an Moslems, Arabs and Moslems are ar reigning indignantly the alleged 'pro Jewish' adnxixxistration. Obviously • there is a certain danger of the spread of a general anti-British move mont in the Islamic world; and thi anxiety will not be removed until W lino learned the attitude and inten signs of Ibn Saud, the powerful King Nivel Culinary Creation C. Anderegg, head ,chef, and O. Westerlund, pastry chef. 'of •the Cha.toau Lalte Lc urea 111 the Canadian' Rocltles, with the model made entirely, o'R.sugar of the "Countess of Dufferin," :first locomotive in the Canadian West, which. was prepared as a centre piece fcr•the visit of E. W. Beatty. chairman and president, and other directors and officials of the Canadian Pacific Railway, on their recent tour rf inspection In the west. Candied roses are in the tender and candy -floss issues from the smoke -stack, The ,"Countless," arrived •in Winnipeg In 1877 up the Red River on a barge, and is now exhibited as a historic relic in a park in Winnipeg. Sbe appears. as a dwarf beside the new 100 foot oil burning giants of the "5900" class, the greatest in the British Empire, used by the Canadian Pacific ou the main line in the Rockies and Selkirks. time' our plain duty is to do justice, without fear or favor, in Palestine, and to impose peace with the means at our cummand. "The suggestion that we should re- nounce e nounce our Palestine mandate is not merely nonsense; it is dangerous non- sense. We are committed by an ex- plicit and solemn pledge. However much we may dislike the job, we must. go on with. it, or submit to the deri- sive condemnation of the civilized `world." It is within the power of Ibn Saud, King of tbe Hejaz, to keep the peace or to break it, The Daily News as- serts, for he exercises an immense in- fluene over a wide expanse of Arab territory. He is described as a reli- gious enthusiast with a magnetic per- sonality, who is commonly said to be well-disposed toward Great Britain. But, we are told: "There are a number of acute prob- lems still outstanding between him and the British Government—not least the British methods of defending the Irak frontier—and the complete fail- ure of Sir Gilbert Clayton's mission last year to liquidate these questions has never been satisfactorily explain- ed. Ibn Saud was both aggrieved and alarmed at the breakdown of the ne- gotiations. Until a settlement has been reached- we shall not regain his good -will. Yet it is true, that IlanSaud remains the only indigenous ele- ment of genuine stability in modern , Arabia. To come to a proper under- standing with Ibn Saud would be to reduce our task in Palestine and to remove a far-reaching menace." But the root of the whole trouble was planted, thinks the London Daily IIsii, when the Coalition Government embarked ou the "futile and perilous" policy of attempting to make Pales- tine "a national home" for the Jews. Against this ""stupid and mischievous ' enterprise" The Daily Mail claims that It has protested for years, and also that it has shown from the out- set that the undertaking was "unjust, dangerous, and dishonorable," besides imposing a superfluous and intoler- ! able burden upon the British taxpay-. er. This newspaper also declares that !the "foolish mandate" runs counter to Britain's pledge at the close of the war to give Palestine a government based "ort the free choice of the na- tive population. We read then: "There are 750,000 Moslems in the country and only about 75,000 or 80,- 000 Jews. To maintain the privileged position of this small body, mostly re- cent immigrants from abroad, over the Arabs, who have been settled in the. territory for centuries. British baronets have to be constantly in evi- dence or readily available. As far back as March, 1923, Lord Northcliffe, after examining the conditions on the spot, warned the British nation of the gulf that yawned before it in South- western Asia. 'Look at Palestine,' he exclaimed. To you know that we are on the verge of starting a war in . Palestine?' With his unerring in- stinet for realities, Lord Northcliffe; saw that there could be no permanent peace from the Jordan to the sea un-! f e tier the artificial system we have set lx'p, l "The Government seems to be deal- • ing energetically with the present out- � burst, which must, of course, be firmly repressed. But when order is re- stored the matter, in its larger aspect, ' must not be allowed to rest. The c1 Ministry. is not bound by a casual de- - elevation made' to a very unrepre- - sentative Jewish group by Lord Bal -four. We • hope that :111r. MacDonald and his colleagues will waste no time• to , reopening the question, and that 8, they will go closely into the whole e outrageous lolly of endeavoring—with `British backing --to convert an old Arab. State into a shall Jewish 'eta- - [tion' at the expense of the British tax- payer, Owl Laffs BOOTLEG BLUES Iac wn ill t110 fllOUtl1 01 the alley An elephant fell asleep; The wildcats moaned in the Parlor; The lions murmured peep peep. The coal scuttle ran through the tall - way; Chased by the cuckoo clock; A centipede played the. piano 'While a dinosaur chewed. an! my sock, Four Hundred thousand cooties Played leapfrog over a chair; A:: bald-headed ape In a corner sat Complacently oombing his hale. From out of; the depths of the pantry Came a hippo's weii known scream; And a little grey mouse with sixteen legs Chased the tomcat away from his cream. As. I took my bath in the coal bin, ,I saw a trolley ear born, ' And I vowed by the lett hand of Pinto I'd stay sober and quit drinking corn. YOUR LITTLE ONES At no time of Iife is delay or ne- glect more serious than at childhood. The ills of little ones come quickly and unless the mother is prompt in administering treatment a precious little life may be snuffed out almost before the mother realizes the baby. is ill. The prudent mother, always keeps something in the medicine chest as a safeguard against the sudden illness of her little ones. Thou- sands, or mothers have found through experience, that there is no other medicine to equal Baby's Own Tablets and that is why they always keep a box of tbe Tablets oa hand—why they always feel safe with the Tablets. Baby's Own 'Tablets are a mild but thorough laxative which by, regulat- ing the bowels and stomach -banish constipation 'and indigestion; break up colds and simple fevers and pro- mote healthy, natueai sleep. Con- cerning them, 14.rs. Isaac Sonia, St. Eugene, Ont., writes: -"I have been using Baby's Own Tablets ever since baby was a .month old and have found that they reach the spot and do moregood than any ether medicine I have ever tried. I always keep the Tab- lets in the house and would datise all other mothers to do so." The :tablets are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. Gabby Gertie "It's wise to pick up a.pilx that's lay- ing on the floor, but if it's a rolling pia it's wiser to dodge it." Reform In Turkey Harold Armstrong in the North American Review (New York): (Turkish women have not adopted European dress, nor have they aban- doned the veil. "A great deal of non- sense has been written about the pre. sent position; mainly by newspaper' correspondents). The mass of the Turkish women were little affected by [ the revolution. They live again much the sane secluded lives as they olid before. Men are forced by law to wear peaked hats instead of fezzes, but the veil for the women is optional. lit' Constantinople perhaps 90 per cent, of the Women go unveiled; in Smyrna perhaps 60 per cent, and in Adalia perhaps 40 per cent, The rest, and in all the towns and villages of the in- terior, are strictly veiled. In Adana few walk about uncovered.. Even in .Angora itself the majority were veiled, or at least wore the old cos- three of 'cltarchaff with the .Veil thrown back over the head. And in the old town inside the castle walls on the hill above Angora, where live most of the minor' Governulent offi- cials, the women all went veiled. of the Hejaz,, whose professed friend ship for. Great Britain depends upon many doubtful factors. In the mean 0 R THE HAIR Ask 'Your i3al'b'er- -He •Itnows •i' I hate 0'1 .bungling as T do sin, but particulal'ly bungling • in politics, which l lea r v 1 ds to the misery ul ruin n of s many thousands and millions of people. -Goethe. Miniaturen ears won't - 't h 1n much. help Picking one out of a pedeetl'fan will he as tedious as pulling one off.— Hartford TIMM Wife—I noticed that you cut an article on "How to Live to Be a Hun- dred" oat of the magazine. Why didyou do that?" Hub.—"I was afraid your mother might read it" People wlio prize the finer things of ,life usually demand Red Rose Orange Pekoe Tea., A xnoneY-bac) guarantee with every, package. 68 RED. ROSE ORANGE PEKOE is extra good, The Canadian Boat Song A hundred years ago there was printed in "Blackwood's Magazine" a' poem, entitled "T1le.Boat-Song of the Canadian Highlanders." Because it is, perhaps, more true than any otber known composition to the atmosphere of the Highlands and the sentiment of Highland people, it has secured a re- markable place in the affections of Highlanders. The song indeed' has been more widely quoted than pos- sibly any verse of the hind, particular- ly the. second stanza, which the date Lord Rosebery held to be "one of the most exquisite that has ever been written about the Scottish Exile": From the lone sliieling of the misty • island Mountains divide us and a waste of seas— Yet still the blood is strong, the heart is Highland, And we in dreams behold the He- brides. It is remarkable that after the lapse of a century no one has been able to neine the author with any degree of ertainty. It has been ascribed to at least •half -a -dozen writers. The poem was first published in "Blackwood's Magazine" in Septenx.. bee, 1829, included in No. 46 of the "Nootes Amhrosianae" series contri- buted by "Christopher North" (Pro- fessor Wilson). The particular article was written not by the Professor, but, as it happeued, by John Gibson Lock- hart, who described the verses as a translation just received from a friend in.Upper Canada of a boat- man's song in Gaelic which he had heard on the St. Lawrence. The first suggestion that the poem had another origin was made in 1849, when in an article in Tait's "Edin- burgh Magazine" on the prosai enough subject ,of "Employment or Emigra- tion," the writer, Donald Campbell, at- tributed the authorship of the poem to the twelfth Earl of Eglinton, who had a high opinion of the loyalty and bravery o fthe Canadian Highlanders, and had left a "translation of one of their boat -songs among his papers, set to music by his own )land." The Rev, Dr. Norman Macleod, who, perhaps, dill most to popularize the poem, although, like Robert Louis Stevenson in "The Silverado Squat- ters" and Mr. Joseph Chamberlain in his famous Inverness speech, 11e badly misquoted it attributed the author ship to Profeso: Wilson. Authorship has also been attributed to John Gib- son Lockhart; John Galt, the Ayrshire novelist and author of "Annals of the Parish;" Jannis IIog, the "Ettrick Shepherd;" and even. Sir Walter Scott. If we accept the , iews of Gaelic scholars and experts on highland life and culture, including Dr. Neil Munro, the novelist, the one thing certain about "The Canadian Boat Song" is that it is a translation from the Gae sic, but English in its thought and origin. Chauncy Depew once told of meet- ing a Union veteran ivho had been wounded in the face, and asked him in what battle he had been injured. "In the last battle c•f Bull Run," re- plied the veteran. "But how could you get hit In the face at Bull Run?" "Well, sir, after I had run a mile or two I got careless and looked back." "'' Sweet young Thing: "Just look at those pretty cowlets!" Rustio: "Yes ma'am. but they ain't cowlets. They's bullets." We call her Marigold because that's what she's trying to do! Any day now we expect to see the advent of a combination hip -flask and a cigarette lighter -the same liquid can be used for both. Gladys: "Bob's been drunk every night since I refused to marry him." Helen. "Why don't. you tell him to, stop .celebrating?" SIX AGES OF MAN Bossed by mother. Bossed by nurse. BQcsed by sister. 1 Bossed by wife. Bossed by -daughter. Bossed by granddaughter. Frank (looking up from his news- paper)—"Isay, Tom, what is the Order of tbe Bath?" Tcm—".`\'Nell, as I have experienced it, it's first the water's too hot; then it's too cold; then you're short of a towel; then you step on the soap, and finally the telephone rings." Lady—I should think you would be ashamed to beg in this neighborhood. Tramp—Don't apologize for it, ma'am. I've seen worse. You have to give it to the song 'writers. How's this, for instance? "I'd rather he blue when thinking of you, than to be happy with some- body else." Doubtless our gl'andehildren twill prize heirlooms all the more if they mast finish paying for thein.—Cedar Falls + I Ia. R ec I c d. ) Mlnard'! Liniment rot Neuritic, Coal Fields in Ontario Toronto, Ont.—The province of On- tario, one of the world's richest areas In mineral deposits, has so far been without a coal supply of her own. Recent announcement was made of the location of important beds of lig- nite coal in the northern part of the province.. Explorations which have been continued by the Department of Mines reveal that the dep^sits cover an area at Ieast four times as large as was at first estimated, and that the coal is of better quality than expect- ed. A bed occupying an area of two square miles with an average thick- ness of twenty feet has been located. The goal will be of great value to the pulp and paper manufacturers anct the mining industries of Northern On- tario. Reprove yourself liberally, but oth- ers sparingly. For Sprains—Use Minard's's Liniment: Tanning the hide promotes health, and in the old clays it also served to develop moral fiber.—Key Nest, Fla. Cit izen. Eggs in Three Days are guaranteed by crushing "Natio Egg trla.,d Tablets" in your fowls drinking water or mash. or your money batt.. Are rte'h in vitamins, proteins, and 'wonder- ful, scientific, egg -making ingredients. No necial feeding reii.tired. all c. Craw- ford, Ontario, 'rites;"Your 'tablets gave s'cupid results on second day of use." 1\111 keep your hens laying big through the Fall and 'Winter. 11 -sea for years by thou: Emla of farmers, Free Bulletins for the asking One big ,.ox 00c: two big bows $1,00 post paid. Agents wanted. 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Now she is brighter in spirits ami eats and sleeps well. What caused the difference ? Let her answer in her owa words s -- I think Kzuschen Salts are r.. splendid tonic. After any husband's death in Deceinber last I'became very run delves in health. Had terrible fits of depres- sien and was hirable to eat nr sleep much. I was also troubled with rheumatism. I decided to take l'rus- eben Shits and have now taken the little daily dose for nearly two menthe, (luring which time my health has greatly improved. The rheumatism has completely left ole. I itin muds brighter in spirits and both 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, leek of elereise--e then you should turn to Kruscllen Salts. They possess a :wonderful power of giving new life and vitality to the comities" millions of cells of which the human body is composed. The way to keep suxiling is to take it.ruschcn Salter every tnortmxg• just'a ninth in yowl, firsts waning Clip of toffee 0>C tC a. ISSUE No. 42 •".