HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1930-01-10, Page 2Exposrrott
JANUARY 1.0, 1.93
YOUR VALUABLES
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your valuables at their mercy.
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tracts, wills or other valuable papers.
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THE
DOMINION BANK
SE AFORTH BRANCH
R. M. Jones - - Manager
227
SUNDAY AFTERNOON
.7(By Isabel Hamilton, Goderich, Ont.)
Breathe on me, Breath of God,
Until my heart is pure;
Until with Thee I will one will
To do and to endure.
Breathe on me, Breath of God,
Till I am wholly Thine;
Until this earthly part of me
Glows with Thy fire divine.
Edwin Hatch.
PRAYER
Almighty God, refuge of all that
are distressed, grant unto us that, in
all the troubles of life we may flee
to the knowledge of Thy loving kind-
ness and tender mercy; that, so shel-
tering ourselves therein, the storms
'of life may pass over us and not
shake the peace of God that is with-
in us. Amen.
Selected.
S. S. LESSON FOR JANUARY 12th
Lesson
tation of
Lesson
4:11.'
Golden Text—Matthew 3:17.
In our last lesson we studied inci-
dents in the childhood of Jesus. To -
lays deals with events in 'His man -
Imo& If we read the last verse of
the second chapter—"And He came
and dwelt in a city called Nazareth;"
and then read the first verse of the
third chapter—"In those days came
° John the Baptist"—we might suppose
that the two events followed each
other within a very brief interval,
'whereas the fact is that thirty years
intervened. The life of Jesus during
those years is largely passed over in
silence by the gospel writers. What
a joy to us had the historian taken
Topic—Baptism and Temp -
Jesus.
Passage—Matthew 3 : 13 -
that 1930 'will be a memorable year
An the history of champagne vintages.
The best a the wine will be coming
along about ten years hence, since it
requires this time for champagne to
reach its true perfection. It is also
a settled part of the business policy
of vintners to deal out their wine year
by year, from old stocks, the good
wine being drunk to -day having been
bottled several years ago. Connois-
seurs of spirits declare that the liquor
bought to -day i not nearly as good
as the liquor obtainable before the
war. There is general agreement a-
mong beer drinkers that what they
consume to -day is, generally speak-
ing, an inferior slop. But that is
not true of wines. It is true that
they vary from year to year, but that
depends upon the climate in the sum-
mer and autumn when the grapes are
growing and after they have been
cut. It is not a matter that the
great wine merchants can determine.
It may be that 1930 will be remem-
bered as having produced some of the
very finest champagne in French his-
tory.
Champagne is produced in eertain
districts of France which possess a
certain eMl. A special grape is
grown therb to perfection. Wine made
from grapes grown anywhere else, or
wine made by any other kind of
grape grown in the champagne dis-
trict is not, teehnically speaking,
champagne. There is another stipu-
lation also. The champagne grape
produced in the champagne district is
pressed several times. It is the
"must" produced after the third
pressing that gives the real cham-
pagne. The product of earlier and
later pressings may be delightful to
drink but the French government will
not allow the vintners to call it cham-
pagne. It nevertheless recognizes
several grades of champagne, accord-
ing to the quality of the grapes from
which the different wines are made.
Rheims is the heart of the champagne
district. Clay, chalk and sand are
blended in the champagne soil, the
undersoil being as a rule chalkq. It
is on this kind of ground that the
champagne' grape reaches perfection.
The grape is small and black and
exceedingly sweet. Certain manufac-
turers use a white grape but the black
is preferable., If there has been suit-
able growing weather the critical
time for the harvest conies after the
bunches have been cut. They lie on
the ground for weeks. This year no
rain fell, and consequently there was
no mildew. A bumper crop, well har-
vested, is what will make the 1930
vintage memorable. The men and
women who pick the grapes, sort
them and operate the presses are
highly skilled. Since all the process-
es in manufacture are those of na-
ture, no chemists or other scientists
are required. But the utmost clean-
liness and care are necessary. The
bunches of grapes are handled indi-
vidually. It might almost be said
that each single grape that goes to
make the best champagne passes in-
spection. If it is not flawless in ap-
pearance it is put aside and.used for
a second grade wine. Four and a half
pounds of grapes are required to
make a• quart of champagne, but
neither this amount of raw material
nor the wages of the skilled workers
will explain the fact that the vintners
have been able to keep the price of
champagne at the same level year af-
ter year, no matter in what country
it is bought.
A bottle of vintage champagne will
cost about the same in Paris, in Lon-
don and In Toronto. In years when
the crop has •been poor, when there
has been a veritable shortage, the
price of champagne has not fluctuat-
ed since the wine being put on the
market is that of earlier years. When
there has been a great crop the price
does not sympathetically fall, for the
reason that the wine being consumed
in that year may represent a crop
that was sparse. Probably the main
feature in maintaining the dizzy ,price
that is always associated with cham-
pagne is the practice mentioned of
holding over a vintage for several
years. The fact that the industry is
in relatively few hands and is strictly
localized also tends to make the stab-
ilizing of prices easy. It might be
mentioned that in France the spark-
ling wines are not valued as they are
in other countries. The Frenchman
prefers a still wine, and insists that
it has a more delightful bouquet and
flavor.
In years gone by the United States
consumed one-seventh of the total
output of champagne, though even
then Belgium had the greatest con-
sumption per capita. National tastes
in champagne differ markedly. In
England the demand is for the driest
of wines. Americans and Russians
like it Sweeter, while Germany, Bel-
gium and Scandinavian countries pre-
fer wine not so dry as the English-
man wants ite but not SO sweet as
Russian taste requires. Even in, the
driest of wines there is a little sugar
added, for it is held that this is nec-
essary for the flavor although there
is plenty of champagne sold "brit,"
that is to say, without any added
sweetening at all. In the month of
January and February the merchants
mix the wines which have been
brought from various vineyards, and
this perhaps is the most important
single operation in the whole process.
What they mix is what people -will
later drink, and according to skill in
blending the different casks will de-
pend the popularity of the brand when
the time comes to market it. Very
often older wines are mixed with the
new, to the benefit of both,
him forget the voice from heaven
which had called him "Son." So the
devil makes use of this and says, "If
thou be 'the 'Son of God, commani
that these stones be made bread."
This was an appeal to immediate
necessity. What harm can there be
in supplying your great hunger when
you have the power? His next at-
tack was to induce Jesus to.put Him-
telf purposely into trouble, that he
might test the full strength of the
divine word. "If thou be the Son of
God, cast thyself down; for it is
written, He shall give His angels
charge concerning thee; and in theie
hands they shall bear thee up, leq"at
any time thou dash thy foot against
a stone." He would have Jesus risk
his life on pretense of trusting God.
His third temptation was that of
bribery; it was the temptation ad-
dressed to every instinct which is in
every human heart to turn much in-
to more; it was a short and easy cut
to rulership. "All these things will
I give thee, if thou wilt fall down and
worship me."
Let us look now at • the. answers
er is
alone."
us down to Nazareth, and 'given us
glimpses into that obscure but won-
drous home! Instead we are intro-
duced to his baptism at the hands of
John, a preacher of repentance.
W hen Jesus presented Himself John
knew that here was one who needed
no such preparation as did others
for, "He had no sin. neither was guile
found in His mouth." Jesus pointed
out to John that it was to be a bap-
tism of sympathy for he, the Saviour,
Vas in all points made like unto His
brethren. It became also a baptism
of apprceral—John spoke .of himself
as a crying voice but by this act he
was made a messenger of God used
to inaugurate to his priestly office
the Saviour of the world. "This is
any beloved Son, in whom I am well
leased." Lo! a voice from heaven
uttered these words of approval to
a man, faultless but inexperienced,
with a great destiny to work out and
Jesus /straightway was led into the
wilderness to begin His training.
Me had been approved of God and
then handed over to the devil. This
was no accident for we read "Then
was Jesus led up of the Spirit." By
this we see that temptation is a part
of the divine scheme. Why there
Should have been a devil we do not
know but we do know he is under the
le entre' of God.
The tempter has just three things
to say toNesus but he begins by try-
ing to introduce distrust into His
wind. "If" is a very subtle wore d
the devil uses it every time. chicle
bad gone through a most trying ex-
perience such as would tend to make
Tells Just Why She
Recommends,Them
Jesu4 gave. The first a
"Man shall not live byller,
The devil's notion was th t life could
be sustained only in one way—"Eat
and live." Jesus replied that life is
not a question of drinking or eating
but of seeking first the kingdom of
God and His righteousness. "It is
written, Man shall not live by bread
alone, but by every word that pro-
ceedeth out of the mouth of God."
The loaf perishes in the handling,
God's life seems to grow in the using
The second answer teaches us that
we must not run into danger for the
purpose of being delivered from it.
"It is written again, Thou shalt not
tempt the Lord thy God."
Take the third .answer. "Thou
shalt worship the Lord thy God, and
Hrim only shalt thou serve." Thou
shalt not tempt the Lord thy God,
but thou shalt worship Him, give Him
the heart's adoration, the spirits'
whole fire of love; and coming out of
this there must be service.
In these answers Jesus in each
case replied, "It is written," showing
that He used quotations from the
then Holy Scriptures. Let us follow
His example and study the Book so
that when assailed by the adversary
of our souls we may be able cut of
our rich stores to answer
"Get thee hence, Satan."
ONTARIO LADY FOUND RELIEF
IN DODD'S KIDNEY PILLS
----",'; Mrs. Win. Brown Snffered With '
Kidney and Bladder Trouble.
Hamilton, Ont., Jan,. 9.—(Special)
was troubled with Kidne/ and
j1adder trouble," states Mrs. Wm.
;Strewn, 145 Strathcona Ave., Hamilton
Ont. "I had tried a lot of medicines
, *tilt without ,avail. I finally tried
Dodd's Kidney Pills and to my great'
ley xny kidneys got in real good shape.
feel so trach better now. I keep a
* in the house all the time. I would
ot be without them.' I recommend
in to all thy friends."
m
re are many pions which
• t directly to kid eY disease and
Yeti of serious r danger ahead.
ache, deposits it trine, headaches
aching limbs, harsh dry and itch -
and leS6 of flesh and weight,
' irdirect'action On the kidneys
onderful”Oadesa of toodd's
, la' relief for disinteleti
Vit them a trial t° 60 tat-
, ".`1: • '
and say,
WORLD MISSIONS
Brave l' Papuan Christians.
It used to be said that the natives
of Papua were among the lowest of
all the peoples of the world. But
the Gospel has shown its power to
make of these degraded folk true men
and women in Christ Jesus.
Not long ago the Governor-Gener-
al of Australia came on a visit to
Port Moresby, the capital of Papua
The natives in this region are very
fond of water, and are skilful in
managing all kinds of boats even in
the roughest weather. Canoe racing
is one of their favorite pastimes and
the Port Moresby men possess a flo-
Via of ten rating caiiies. At the
invitation of the natives, the Govern.
or attended a service in. the church,
and spoke to the 'children in the Sun-
dayj School: Meanwhile, he white
residents had been planning, a _pro-
gramme for the Governor's enter-
tainment, and they were very anxious
that he should see a native canoe
race.
They suggested that stithet race
should be held on the Sunday, a n d
asked the opinion of the church mem-
hers about this, as eight out of the
ten racing canoes belonged to church
members. Most of the crews, too,
were regular attendants at church.
The church members stood firm, and
replied that, although they would
gladly race for the Governor on any
other day of the week, they would
not do soeon Sunday. As soon as
the Governor at Port Moresby heard
ef this, he gave orders that 611 ar-
rangements for a Sunday race 'should
,be dropped.
Thus; although Christianity only
came to Port Moresby in 1874, the
church membe rs have already shown
that they ha-- the courage of their
convictions, and are ready to say
"No" to all aaempte to make Sunday
a day of mere pleaaine-seeking, in-
stead of a day for rest and worship.
—From The Missionary Review,
FRANCE PAS HARVESTED
BOiMPER CHAMPAGNE CROP
Wine bibers, if there ate any such
among our readers, will be interested
to know that in be year, just closed
ttranee has hereetted thegreateat
map crop iit her history. TMs means
After ten months c( suffering —after spending
roans dollars mother remedies—this woman gave
Hrusehen a tried. .Now read what she saga
I am just writing Lk few words of praise in
which the wonderful way your Kruschen Salts
have helped me. ay 1 say 1 have suffered with
terrific backaches night and day for this last
10 months, and have spent many dollars on
advertised remedies, without result, and decided
a few weeks ago to give Eruschen Salts a trial,
and I am thankful to say lam feeling better and
better ever since 1 have taken them.
'1 take Kruschen on rising in a cup of
and if only people knew they would not [men
the money they do on other materials when
they could derive such benefit from Kruschen
alts. Wishing your firm every success."
-(Mrs.) J. V. P. •
Original leftar oe filo for Inspection.
ruschen Salts Is obtainable at drug and
department stores in Canada at 75c. a bottle.
A bottle contains enough to last for 4 or 5
months—good health for half -a -cent ,a day
IMPORTS ARE PAID FOR BY
EXPORTS
Dear Editor Expositor:
Some one ought to offer a prize for
the wisest statement made by any
public man in Canada during the past
year. There also ought to be a 'booby'
prize. I have no idea who woald win
the former—the latter beyond ques-
tion, would go to Lt. Col. R. H. Webb,
D.S.O., M.C., Mayor of Winnipeg
Mr. Webb suggests that we lack
patriotism because we fail to purchase
Canadian goods.
Dreadful as is this solemn asser-
tion, it is not so bad as it looks. Other
people are equally "unpatriotic." We
may be wicked but if all others are
equally guilty—well in the end a com-
mon sin may be recognized as a
common virtue! During 1928 (calen-
dar year) we exported goods valued
at $1350,00,o00, Imports totalled
roughly $1,222,000,000. Now please
tell me how we caused unemployment
by importing commodities—we were
busy making the goods which we ex-
ported to pay for the goods we pur •
chased abroad?
Suppose Mr. Webb were a farmer
instead of a statesman and economist.
Suppose also that I have a farm
alongside of Mr. Webb. His farm, we
will assume, is good for the produc-
tion. of wheat—mine is suitable for
dairying. Will Mr. Webb add to his
wealth and prosperity by conducting
dairy operations on land specially
adapted for growing "No. 1 hard"
while I, with equal silliness, attempt
to use my rich pasture lands, suit-
able for dairying as a place for the
growing of wheat? It goes without
saying, that the satisfactory thing to
do under the circumstances is for Mr.
Webb to grow the wheat which I need
as well as the wheat which he needs,
while I produeee,,ethe butter which I
need and the butter for Mr. Webb
and then we exchange the two com-
modities, thus both secure the things
we need with less effort and less ex-
pense.
This is precisely what we do in a
national way. By no stretch of the
imagination could we consume in
Canada, the wheat or the newsprint
which we export. If we are going to
export we must receive pay for our
exports. There is no other way by
which commodities can be paid for in
the long run, except by tlie.ereceipt of
commodities in exchange for the com-
modities which we export. Exports
are paid for by imports, if they are
paid for at all. Imports are paid for
by exports. Wien we import com-
modities we pay for them by the ex-
port of commodities and therefore
we employ men at home to produce
the commodities which we export to
pay for the commodities which we im-
port. If this simple irrefutable state-
ment of an econicic truth could be
driven into the heads of Mr. Webb
and others who cling to fantastie il-
lusions in regard to imports then we
would have a clearer r.understanding
of the problems which are before us
and might perhaps face the difficul-
tiesi involved in their solution.
In 1922, Canadian imports amount-
ed to approximately $748,000,000. In
1929 imports amounted to $1,265,000,-
000.
Was there more unemployment in
1929 than in 1922?
There should have been if Mr.
Webb's theory were correct, for our
imports in that period increased
$517,000,000.
If Mr. Webb were speaking, he
would say—'"rhink of the vast amount
of employment the manufacture of
these products at home would have
given to the Canadian people."
•'Thstierts in 1922 amounted to $5(74,-
000,000. Exports in 1929 amounted
to $063,000,000. We paid for our
imports by the export of other com-
modities and so there was no ecrease
in employment—on the contrary there
was an increase inemployment due
to the fact that we, in this way, found
a market- for commodities, which
otherwise would not have been mar-
ketable.
I have quoted no statistics showing
the change in the amount of employ-
ment in Canada between 1922 and
1929. The figures are available, the
facts are clear to every man who has
lived in Canada during this period.
There VMS more employment in Can-
ada in 1929 than in 1922. The state-
ment goes without proof—if ie admit-
ted by everybody.
Precisely,the sense thing is true e
the United 'States. Imports between
1922 and 1929 increased approximate-
ly one billion dollars, but there was
no increase in unemployment in the
United States during that period for
the simple Tenon that there was an
increase in ea -ports to pay for, the
imports and consequently employment
improved.
Now here is a little pro em which
Would like to submit to Col. Webb
and all those who believe with him,
that reduction of imports would in-
crease employment. Lt tis suppose
that diming the peat Year, weather
conditions in Western- *nada had
been absolutelY ideal for every sec*
tion of the country and that the to-
tal preduotion of wheat had been
750,000,000 bushels instead of some-
where around 250,000,000, That II a
rather extreme estimate, yet not im-
possible, if you could conceive of per-
fect weather eonditions. Assume al-
so that craps failed in other countries
and for that reason the price was
high. Roughly then, this country
might have closed the year with an
export of $750,000,000 more than we
will actually have. Despite anything
which Col. Webb may say, it would
be necessary for us to be paid for
that crop. We eould not be paid in
gold—there is not gold enough avail-
able in the world to pay us. We would
have to be paid in imports.. Imports
would probably increase to almost
the same amount. Does Mr. Webb
think that we would be poorer as the
result of that transaction? Beyond
question we would be richer, yet we
would have had more imports. Would
our increased wealth have led to in-
creased unemployment? That, of
course, is nonsense even to Mr.
Webb..
Further, if our imports to -morrow
went up toi$5,000,000,000 anal United
States imports increased to $26000,-
000,000 could Mr. Webb picture that
even without visualizing a tremend-
ous outburst of industrial activity in
both countries and reflected prosper-
ity in the rest of the world?
The fact is—and it can •be repeat-
ed and repeated until it is driven in-
to the minds of the least intelligent
of our statesmen, mayors and public
men—imports do not cause unemploy-
ment, imports are a sign and cause of
prosperity—imports are paid for by
exports.
I have written a little booklet on
this question. It is entitled "The Tale
of the Missing '5' ". I will gladly
send a copy free to any interested
person. .Please address me Box 844,
Ottawa, Ontario.
R. J. DEACHIMAN.
, TO RELIEVE CATARRHAL
) DEAFNESS AND HEAD
NOISES
-If you have Catarrhal Deafness or
are hard of hearing or have bead -nois-
es go to your druggist and geteone
ounce of Parmint (double strength),
and add to it 1 pint of hot water
and a little granulated sugar. Take
one tablespoonful four times a day.
This will often bring quick relief
from the &dressing head noises.
Clogged nostrils should open, breath-
ing come easy and the mucus stop
dropping into the throat. , It is easy
to prepare, costs little and is pleas.
ant to talc& Anyone who has
Catarrhal Deafnes.4 or head
,should give'thiis prescription atrial.
See. re
Gas On Stomach
Is Dangerous
Gas, pain, bloating and sourness
after eating, almost always mean "too
much acid" in the stomach. The
condition is dangerous. Acid irritates
the stomach lining and may lead to
Ulcers. Gas forms and presses against
the heart. The stomach needs an
alkaline. 1Bisurated Magnesia—pow-
der or tablets—is the ideal method of
getting safe, quick, lasting relief. It
neutralizes the excess acid, sweetens
the stomach, breaks up the gas, stops
the pain,and sourness. Food digests
naturally. •It must give prompt re-
lief or money back say druggists ev-
erywhere who sell it on this hon clad
guarantee.
ree.efeere;Ir
.1400tffit,
reek
'
BOOTLEGGERS SELL WARES
THROUGH COLLEGE PAPERS
Down at Harvard University the
liquor problem seems to be as grave
as in large American cities and as
anxiously discussed as at a Rotarian
luncheon or a convention of mortic-
ians. After football games in all
parts of the United States there is
always a collection of empty flasks
that would have excited the admira-
tion of those who carried on the high-
way bottle campaign for Mr. Sinclair
in the last election. There is also,
apparently, a good deal of drinking
among students on other occasions,
and it is not unusual for prohibition
agents to raid the sacred precincts
of learning and eturn not empty-
handed. Students who were found in-
toxicated have been expelled. Whole
classes have been solemnly warned of
the evils of intemperance, and one can
not escape the conviction that drink-
ing in American universities must be
commoner than it was in the old days
before prohibition. Then, at least,
there was a negligible quantity of
liquor actually consumed on univers-
ity property. What drinking WaS
done took place in licensed hotels in
Boston or Cambridge.
A couple of months ago the liquor
question as it affected Harvard was
brought to the front by two adver-
tricements which appeared in the un-
dergraduate papers, the Lampoon and
the Crimson. Of course, in the Unit-
ed States it is illegal to advertise
liquor for sale, and the practice is
looked upon by .the government with
almost as much horror as it might be
in Ontario. Nevertheless in these two
publications bootleggers' advertise-
ments actually appeared and subse-
quent evidence brought to ' light the
fact that they had proved extremely
popular. They were published about
the time of the Harvard -Dartmouth
football game, when public interest
in the stock market was at its height.
In the Lampoon a half -page adver-
tisement appeared, depicting two
youths in coonskin coats in a convi-
vial embrace, and under the illustra-
tion were the following words:
"Wlhen an examination is over do
you feel at a loss? While the waiter
is speaking to others in French do
you go in a corner and hide - your
head? Or do you mix freely with
yeur fellow man (homo sapiens) and
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..... 1,
if so what do you
him?
"These are not difficult' questions.
"Try the loan and mortgage game.
Fun for your friends. Stocks now in
liquidation," Below was a name and
a telephone number. '
The advertisement in the Crimson
was smaller and consisted of the
words "Stocks and bonds," "Mortg-
ages," and the same telephone num-
ber as that appearing in, the Lam-
poon. When it became generally
known what these advertisements
really meant there was a good deal
of commotion, and in due course the
knowledge came to the ears of the
authorities. They threatened to pros-
ecute the editors of the papers but
refrained when they were assured that
the business managers had accepted
the advertisements in good faith.
There were no more advertisements,
of course. But the "interest in the
matter was revi, ed a few days ago
when prohibition agents arrested two
bootleggers before a Harvard gold
coast dormitory. The telephone num-
ber of one of them, from whom 24
quarts of liquor were taken, was that
advertised in the college papers. But
it is understood that the agents are
satisfied with their haul and that the
bootleggers themselves will receive
any punishment that may be meted
out.
There is also to be noted a quarrel
between the students and the boot-
leggers, broughtabout by the increase
in the price of liquor. Gin actually
went up to $22 a case for no adequate
reason that the students could learn
and since rye and Scotch are beyond
the reach of the majority of them the
increased price of gin was felt to be
a sore touch. They remonstrated in
vain with the rum runners, and then
it is said that an informal committee
of six went to the Boston police and
gave information which resulted' in
several raids in Cambridge and in the
arrest of the two men in the Harvard
dormitory. Then arose the rumor
that the United States government
was paying stadenta to act as stool
pigeons. This was hotly denied' hy
the students who said that any in-
formation they had given was volun-
tary and by way of protest against
outrageous profiteering. Since then
it is understood that the price has
been reduced and the students who
are interested in the matter have been
placated.
The Harvard authorities are doing
what they Can to stop the flow il-
licit liquor, but 'among so many
thousand students and ao 'few yard
police the task is about as hard as
drying up a large and bibulous city.
Students will not spy on each other
and no matter how much they may
deplore drunkenness they will not lay
any information agajnst offenders.
One dean called hiss4tudents before
him in assembly one afternoon and
said that he had had occasion to re-
buke one of them for drunkenness
and that the student had expressed
astonishment that drinking was ban.
n,ed at Harvard. The dean said that
probably 85 per cent. of the students
obey the liquor laws and he called
upon them to see to it that the five
per cent. did not go beyond a "gentle-
manly limit." In the words of one of
the students afterwards: "The dean
told us not drink any more than we
can handle." In the meantime the
bootleggers, most young men, undiss
tinguishable from students and carry-
ing despatch cases, are unusually
busy in filling Christmas orders.
mix- -freely with
While serious, if neglected, it is now
ordinarily an easy Matter to quickly
relieve Bladder Weakness and Irrita-
tion, Pains in' Back and down
through groins, frequent daily annoy-
ance and troublesome nights—by the
pleasant home use of Dr. -.South-
worth's "Uratabs," which any good
druggist will furnish in sealed pack-
ages captaining .10 days' supply en
guarantee of money back on first,boi
purchased, if results are not fully
satisfactory.
No rotten how stubhoin, trouble-
some, tyr of how. long standing your
case May be? you can easily prove the
value of "Uratabs" in a I'm: days'
time. --and you are invited to do so
without slightest risk of cost unless
pleased with results. Start, the. teat
of "Iltatabt" to -day and you may
look or improrement inside of 24
hours—asit ,your doggiet.
%;'(4•A
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r."
LOCAL FIRM GETS VALUABLE
AGENCY
Local citizens who have heard of
the resultswhieh have been accomp-
lished by Sargon, will be interested
in the announcement that this new and
scientific formula can now be obtain-
ed in this city.
Sargon was introduced in the Unit-
ed States in April, 1928. Since that
time it has become a nationally -
known, nationally -advertised product.
Not in recent years, perhaps, has, ttay
other medicine of its kind attained
such widespread popularity, and were
it not for the actual facts and figures
given out by some of the leading drug
firms -of Aanerica, the success attain -1
ed by this product would be hard to
believe.
Sargon in nate being introduced in
CanadaaziaL a new, nuitlecnly abhor -
ped plant bib been eetahlietherd.in. On -
Curio t taiga' care a the rapidly gra*,
,,14411r<
Vt.
ing demand throughout the Dominion.
In awarding the local agency, the
manufacturers of Sargon are carrying
out their established policy of confin-
ing the sale to one thoroughly re-
sponsible and centrally located drug -
firm in each city, and wherever intro-
duced the Sargon store will be founch
to be one of the leading and most re-
presentative. Such firms are always.
anxious and willing to co-operate with,
the manufacturers of meritorious pro-
ducts, especially internationally
known products of proven merit.
Sargon was recently introduced in
Toronto, Hamilton, London and other
-
cities, in Ontario, and judging from
the large initial sales and the repeat.
business it has enjoyed, it now seems
a foregone conclusion that the suc-
cess*ained by Sargon in the Unit-
ed S es will be duplicated in Can-
ada.
In the leading cities of the Unite.
States some of the most prominent
r•en of the country have been among.
the hundreds who have ,come forward
to tell what Sargon has done for -
them, and many thousands have usedl
it with the most gratifying results...
Human nature is the same"the
over, and when suffering men anct
women find' a medicine that helps
-
them, they want to tell their friends
about it, and in this way Sargon'is.
rapidly becoming known throughout
the entire American Continent.
The exclusive agency for Sargon
and Sargon Soft Mass Pills for this
city and section has been awarded to.
Mr. C. Aberhart. In anticipation of
the extraordinary demand, this well
known firm has just received a large+
shipment of this celebrated medicine -
err
• of,
Are yo4 afraid to
eat a hearty
meal?
WHAT does meal -
VI' time mean to you?
Is it the pleasure that it
should be to restore the
energy your work has
taken from you?
Or must you pick and
choose — 6 dread of
indigestion?
Hex he tweedy that
has brought relief to sten
and women the world
lover. De. lirdlients' Pink
Phe taken every day
in many countries speci-
fically for cregesti,' e trou-
bles and st.mach &s-
eethes and have brought
happiness to thousands
of otte4inse sufferers. or,
besides strengtheren. g the
digestive nerves, they is.
• /orate and purify the
entire system and lay the
foundation for condoned
health.
B Dr. Irdliteselialt
Pith now et your Asap
gkes ar an), dallier lfl
or 'by man, 50
cal* foam The
Metlicine
Co Bratkalite Oat, 847
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