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HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1930-01-23, Page 7j. ea— I ,e. let Are you afraid to eat a hearty meal? WHAT does meal- time mean. to you? Is it the pleasure that it shotild be to restore the energy your work hes taken from you? Or must you pick and choose — in dread of indigestion? . Here is a remedy that has brought relief to men and women the world over. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are taken every day in many countries, speci- fically for digestive trou- hks and stomach dis- orders, and have brought happiness to thousands of one -tine sufferers. For, besides strengthening the digestive nerves, they in- vigorate and purify the entire system and lay the foundation for continued health. Buy Dr. Williams' Pink Pills now at your drug- gist's or any dealer in medicine, or by mail, 50 cents, postpaid, from The Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. Dr. PINK AtrOUSEHOLD NAM iN 54 COUNTRIES" iNew Vice -President Canadian.National A Military Move Sports Put Under State Con- trol as JugOslavia Dis- solves Clubs Belgrade. -With a stroke of the pen the Jugoslav government has dis- solved all private sports organiza- tians and placed the physical educa- tion of the youth of the country un- der state control. This ends the na- tionalist Sokoli societies which had been built up on the old tribal princi- ple of distinguishing between Serbs, Croats and Slovenes. The government decree ordering the dissolution states tbat the Sokol societies have fulfilled their national task. According to "The Vreme" the government is planning to form a na- tional militia, membership in which shall be obligatory for all able-bodied youths, including the peasants and the workers. Service in the militia will earn a reduction in the term of active service in the army. Following upon the establishment of the Denote Councils, the members of which are appointed by the cen- tral government, the creation of the militia Is seen as another move to- wards the introduction of the Fascist system as it prevails in Italy. SUFFERING It is, I am sure, an element of hu- man life, that a man should suffer precisely in that relation which makes it most painful, most Unbear- able to him. How he conies out of It all is the essential point.—Rahel, "If ChristendoM is to be reborn the Cburch must be .sepernational."-- Rev. Henry Sloan Coffin, • Robert L Burnap Appointed in Charge 'of Traffic for National 'System' • Announcement has been made at Comedian National headquarters ot the appointment of Robert L. Batman as ViceePresident in Charge of Traf- fic, vice A, T. Weldon, the aenoInt- went being effective et epee. R. L. Burnap, who has been Assist- ant General Freight Traffic Manager of the Canadian National Railways with headquarters at Montreal, since 1927, has been aeeociated with the various lines which now comprise the Canadian Natinnal Railways System during the whole of his railroad career of 36 years. He has advanced step by step through the various grades of railroad service aud is widely knowa in the geueral com- mercial and. railroad fields of both R. L. Burnap Canada and the United States. Fol. lowing his eaiversity graduation he began his railroad career as a clerk with the Central Vermont Railway in the Transportation Department, in. 1804. He became associated with the Freight Traffic Department in the fol- lowing year. in 1896 Mr. Burnap went to New York to join the Freight Traffic Department there, and. during the same year was appointed Travel- ling Freight Agent t.t 'New London, Conn. In February, 1900, Mr. Dunlap became Commercial Agent at New York 'City, and five years later he moved to St. Albans, Vermont, as General Freight Agent. He was ap- pointed Assistant General Freight Agent of the Grand Trunk Railway at Chicago in April; 190S, Assistant Freight Traffic Manager in 1910;. Traffic Manager in 1019, and Freight Traffic Meinrager of thee road in 1920. In November, 1927, Mr. Burnap was appointed As 'stant General Freight Manager of the Canadian Natioual Railways wi h headquarters at Mont- real and Freight Traffic Manager the Central 'Vermont, both of which positions he has held until his pre- sent appointment as Vice -President. He has served on various freight traffic associations and wae a mem- ber of the Traffic Executives Com- mittee of the Central Freight Associ- ation. • only sure way of suppressing an out- break, and approximately $25,000,000 King has been paid to fanners as compensa- Mr. on Pensions tion for herds destroyed in the public Saskatoon Star -Phoenix (Lib.): Exe interest. service men and citizens generally will Farmers patiently accept the in- welconae the state,aent of Mr. Mac- evitable when their herds are con- kenzie King that amendments to the demned, but they are demanding more Pension Act, to provide for more gen- drastic efforts in other directions. The erous treatment of certain war vet- government, they feel, might hasten erans, are included in the legislative the discovery of a cure for or vaccine program for 1930. Recent discussions against the clidease by more liberal have brought out the fact that the appropriations for research. Act, although framed with a generous Meanwhile, they ask, why not lessen intention, does nothing for the soldier the risk of contagion by exterminating who is burned out before his prime, al- the fox? though he may show no evident dis- 400 NEW CANADIANS ARRIVE FROM EUROPE Four hundred trained canaries recently trilled their sway across the At- lantie from Hamburg, Germany, to a Toronto firm, The little birds Made the long trip in intlividtial wooden cages, each cage having a small feed box and a drinking cup. .As the cease were unpacked and the canaries saw the light of day, they burst into a cheery chorus of song, showing no ill effects from their long journey. All these Canaries are the Roller type, having the peculiar rolling trill so popular with Canadian bird lovers, and which gives delight in thousands of Canadian homes. HOW TO. RELIEVE • Owl Laffs cHIL DREN,s coos Resolution "Boys, I've quit the hold-up game, • . I'll hang around joints no more," Avoid Serious Results by Using so with a sigh Anda faint little cry, 13aby's Own Tablets Tim garter stretched out on the floor. When a child shows the first sYmP- toms of a coldasuch as sneezing, red- ness of the eyes, clogged,or running nose, prompt measures for relief may avert serious results. Mothers should always have on hand somesimple safe and effective remedy for immedi- ate use. Baby's Own Tablets act quickly, contain no opiates or narcotics, are tasteless and harmless. Concerning them Mrs. Jos. Cadieux, Holyoke, Mass., says:—"I have used Baby's Own Tablets for my claildren and find him U112 Tablets mght and he was well the next day, I gave them to tho children for constipation and they are always benefited. I think Baby's Own Tablets are much easier to give a child than liquid. medicine. I strongly recommend all mothers who have ave you know, only two things prevent your becoming a great dancer?" She—"Indeed? What ar a they?" IIe—wirour feet." Women give and forgive Men get and forget. She was only a butcher's daughter, but site gave my liver to mel Alother-e-"Oswald, you should. never SHIP YOUR G. AIN To TORONTO LOW INSURANCE AND STORAGE RATES FIREPROOF ELEVATOR Write or Phone For Particulars TORONTO ELEVATORS, LIMITED Phone ELgin 7161 Queens Quay Toronto, Ontario Tribute to Crime Brandon Sun: A member of the Un- ited States intelligence service told the Women's Auxiliary of the Wayne County Medical Society in Michigen that if present conditions and trends continue, another ten years will see every banker and prominent bueiness man in' the country paying tribute to gangsters. They are doing it today, as is every other man, woman and child in the United States. Todirectly they are being tapped annually by organized and unorganized vice and crime in an amount estimated by one thoughtful and thorough student of the situation at $16,000,000,000. This sum represents what the honest ele- ment in a nation of 120,000,000 people loses each year through dishonesty and attempting to guard against it by police, courts', and jails, a half million private policemen anel. watchmen, and insurance against theft. them a very satisfactory mediciae. do anything which you would beI Millard's. for the - Ideal Rubdown. When my little boy had.a cold gave ashamed for the whole world to see. Oswald — "Hooray! / won't have to take any more baths." It is riot receiving but giving, Not being served but serving, Not being supported but supnorting, That brings life to the individual small children to keep a box ,of the Tablets in tbe house." • Euld—"Ilow do you mean you made. Baby's Own Tablets are sold by a faux pas last night?" Mabel ---"Well, I told Jack l'd never cents a box from The Dr: ,Williams, been kissed b‘fore, and it appears Medicine Co., Brockville Out. that I was engaged to hie . last sum - 011 medicine (teeters or by mail at 26 Old Sport to Go? Cattle Plague Laid to Foxes; English Farmers Ask Hunt Ban Brighton, Eng.—One of the oldest sports of Englund, the hunting of the fox, may be sacrificed to scientific agriculture. Farmers, smarting- under the loss inflicted by foot-and-mouth disease, are blaming the fax for its spread from pasture to pasture. Extermin- ate the fox, instead of preserving him for occasional romantic hunts, they argue, and you will dc away with the chief carrier of this plague. The fight against foot-andonouth disease has been going on for years in England. Destruction of the infected cattle is accepted by authorities kis the ability. The country's obligation to Saskatchewan to Spend those men is as clear and certain as its obligation to theenaimed and the blind. $19,000,000 for RoaFls Mr. King's statement shows that the Wiunipog.—Saskatchewan plans to Government recognizes this fact and spend $19,000,000 en roadt u g b within the next three years. The program, as outlined by 1110 Hon. A. C. Stewart, Minister of Highways, at the recent road convention held, at Iflilionoac, Monte calls for the conetruc- oe 2,000 miles of now gravelled highways In the next two years.. The sum of $10,000,000 will be rata - ed for road purposes in 1930. Half of this amount will come from a bend Issue end the "balance from the gaso- line tax and automobile license fug. One of the three north and small all-weather highways will cross the international boundary south of Re. gina and will continue through Re, gins. northward to Saskatoon in , pass- & on through that city. to Prince Albert National Park. Two We tional highways are to run north and south and to points east and west of Regina. respect to the north and south roads, highway officials in Montana, North Dakota, and .Saskatchewan vill co-operate with a view of securing the best comtectirn at bottler p011115. is ready to act accordingly-. KINDNESS Guard within yourself that treas- ure- kindness. Know how to give without 'hesitation, how to lose with- out regret, ' how to .acquire without meanuesse--George Sand. —to r' p-ijiJPS cif riAokts, for 'rriottbieto due te Peold oueoeseeee STO MACH HSARTSURN t", MEADACH 'GAsEs.KAUSSA ray people, two hours after eat- ing, suffer indigestion as they call It; It is usually excess acid. Correct it With an alkali. The beet way, the quick, harmless and efficient way, is Phillips' Milk of -Magnesia.litte ; remained. for 50 years the standard with physicia114. Ono' spoonful in water iteutrelizeS many limes its yoinmo in eloinach nelds, and nt once.; The eymptoms disappear in five min- utes. Maid—"While you were gone, mrt'arn swallowed a tang, take a when you know fitie better metlied. ent don't WONT, I had him u You will never me crude method' year little \ o sw And you will never suffer teem eXcese leeect powder." Iced when 3 am wove but this tae re-, **A lief. Please do that ---ter yohwn. r o' The net war should be waged, • against the war -Makers. Be sure to get the genuine Philips': The jawbone of an ass is just as Milk of Magnesia prescribed by ; dangerous a weapon to -day as it was physicians for 150 yeare in correcting . full directions—any artlgstmexeess acids.. Eta Each bottle contains mer." This baby is ouly an undertaker'sdanghter, daughter, bat she's made some gravemistakes.Pather—"Dear, mistakes. Fatb.er—"Dear, I ani happy' to an- nounce that young Johnson has asked for your hand." Beautiful Young. Nothing "— "But, Papa, I don't want to leave mama." Father—"Don't let that bother you. You cau take her along." A. good night's sleep known to solve many a difficult problem. Customer—"Why don't tise?" Storekeeper—"No, sir!! I tried it once and it pretty near ruined me." Customer—"How was that?" Sterekeeper—"People came in here aed bought denied near everything I had." has been perplexing; you adver- A fool and his party. The winters do not seem so cold as they did when we were young, no doubt became we are LOW living in town and don't have to go outside and thaw oat the puma. • . — — Don't worry. If he called three timee while you were out, ho wasn't .trying to give you anything. • Grace—"They're dancers pure and simple." Henry—"Yeah: She's pure and bo's simple." money are some • It won't be long before men will be demanding barber shops "for men only." Patient—"Doctor, I suffer a great deal with my eyes." "Doctor—"Ile comforted, my dear lady, you would prolarbly stiffer a great deal more without theme' It's a funny tiling, but the man who spends the mostme tiwith his hands in his pockets has the 1':'8t in theta. YOUR HAIR NEEDS Ux TO GIVE IT HEAL1H AND LUSTRE ASK YOUR BARBE in Saineon's time. R That Sore Throat Needs Millard% 1, DISCIPLINE Eveeyone may learn how to be mas- terful and authoritative. Those who seek authority, ane those who find authority thrust upou them, have an ever-preseut opportunity for perfect- ing themselves in its exercise. But many a man ignores this opportunity. and then wonders why he is not given greater command. Discipline, like charity, begins at home, and the more truly it is exercised there, the more surely will others gladly submit themselves to the man who has thus moved his right to rule. ISSUE No, 3—'30 GOOD MANNER Good manners is the art of making those people easy with whom we conxerse. Whoever makea the few- est persons uneasy is the best bred in the country.—Switt. Classified Advertising "IVr 10 OUNDLAND Jas chofee registered stock: real guard- i.ons aea. companions. Lumley and Brown, lona, Ontario MAKING FRIENDS The second division of life, after death begins, is a sad business, have been in it fax some years—(did you realize I was fifty-one?) One of the saddesl; things in it is the impos- sibility, or, at least, unlikelihood, of making new friends. We discover gradually but surely that the last friend that a man makes is Lie wife. It is not that we meet no one to whom we are affectionately drawn: but that we hesitate to give oer love with the old careless freedom. We have grown critical, and so have they. It may also intolve us in too much emotion; we must be protected.—E. V. Lucas, is "Listener's Lure." "We want the world to know that Great Britain can no longer be re- garded as the miIch-cow at Europe." —Philip Snowden. essesiamanseaternasneassaues AWED 11 Lbs. in 8 Wks And a Boy Friend." mite's Suave Salino. Thousands soy new Ironized Yeast adds 5 to 15 lbo. in 3 weeks, Skin clears like magic. Constipation, nernee, end. Get pleasant honized Yoant Ottialets from dritegint today. atintinmannisoistokia=saimgointiniel Frost Bites Minard's restores oh' onlatio a and eases the pain of cold flipped cheeks and ears. The man who would never walk again® Tim emthl imagine a more poignant stork than thi? A champion athlete—bedridden. Told that he could never nalle again . . .1 And then he took Ernechen. " doctor told my landlady that I could never walk again. 1 had rheuumtism set in about Christmas -time, and was confined to bed for two months. "1110 nearly sixty years of age. After taking six bottles I am starting to work next week. "tbi till two years ago 1 had. been a Cham- pion Racing Cyclist. I havo won a prize every time I have ridden. Being an athlete, but a Poor sehoiar, It would take Inc a week to write the facts about Krtiselion Salts." --TY. if, B. original Utter cattle for lineation. Ktogelten Sang is obtainable at drug and department stores In Canada at 75c. a bottio. A bottle contains enough to last for 4 or 5 months—good lwalth for Italf-a.ant a day, FARMER'S WIFE GETS STRENGTH By Taking Lydia E. Pink - ham's Vegetable Compound Wilton; Ont.—"I am taking Lydia E. Pinkharo's Vegetable Compound throughtheCliange of Life. It helps me and 1 cannot praise it too highly. I was troubled with heat flashes and my limbs were heavy so I could hardly walk to do my farm work. 1 saw in the newspapers your ad about the Vegetable Com- pound and thought to give it a trial. The first bottle gave me relief and I have told others what it does for me. I am 'willing for you to use my letter it you choose."—Mus. D. Ti. PETERS, Wilton, Ontario. Ask. Your Neighbor Babies ItnitenentltolegattlIcktki giVe4iiiablerninaialiontsit• sitrolatinttihtiontibYikgqi,' tingtheSintanittainititt.lta tat*" Babies will cry, often for no apparent reason, You may not know what's wrbrig, but you can always give Castoria. This soon has your little one comforted; if not, you should call a doctor. Don't experiment with' medicines intended for the stronger systems of adults! Most of those little upsets ate soon soothed away by a little of this pleasant -tasting, gentle -acting children's remedy that children like. It may be the stomach, or may be the little bowels. Or in the case of older children, a sluggish, con. Istipated Condition. Castorta is still 1. TherettyrininotintiDAttikt Cicerlitintstatillttitintint adder Opinm,Anitimm Mineral. riozSgatcovic ghparii,Vaitn—gkrotat An,R. •6.4 att. Aat Analpfulitortelytor Constipation and Dorf' and Fetierkabnesn a Loss de %Or_ coultIn4Th.rt,"'3". bow* sionaotoat the 'thing to give. It is a.intost certain '10 clear tip any minor ailment, and could by no possi- bility do the youngest child the slightest harm. So it's the first thing to think of when a child has a coated tongile; won't Oar, can't sleep, is fretful or out of sorts. Get the genuine; it always has Chas. IT. Fletcher's signature on the package.