The Exeter Times-Advocate, 1928-01-12, Page 6With Her Heart
Had Dizzy Spells
Canada’s Leading Citizens Voice Significant Opinions On The
Turning of the Calendar
Mrs, Clayton Roy, Milton, N.S.,
writes;—“A short time ago X waa
greatly bothered with my heart. I
could not sleep and would have bad,
dizzy spells, I also became so run down I 4ould not do my work, but
would just have to sit down.
“I spent a lot of money trying dif
ferent medicines, but none of them
seemed to do me any good. At last
my mother advised 140 to take
“After I had ftaken a couple of
boxes I began to eel a lot better, so I
continued Their use and to-day I am in
perfect health and feel as well as I
did. when I was a young girl.
“I always recommend Milburn’s
Heart and Nerve Pills to my friends
as I feel that I cannot praise them
enough for what they have done for
me.”
Price 56c. a box at all dealers, or
mailed direct on receipt- of price by The
-ipiA—-1. t,p-ni-pP Toronto, Ont.
Premier King
Ottawa, — Premier King issued
the following New Year message:
. “The dawn of 1928 has a special
significance for Canada. It marks
the close of one period in oui’ history
and the beginning of another. Be
hind us lie GO years of united elort.
In this time we have built steadily
upon the foundations laid at Confed
eration and have extended the boun
daries of the Dominion from sea to
sea. Forty years hence many now
living will join in the commemora
tion of the 100th anniversary of Con
federation. The happiness of that
day will depend in large measure
upon our labors in the new year and
in succeeding years.
“As a result of the celebrations of
the past year, we understand more
clearly than before the greatness of
the task of building a Canadian na
tion. We know that the dream of the
Fathers of. Confederation was not
realized without courage and perse
verance. We‘know, too, that national
unity in a country of diflerent races
and creeds is not achieved without
charity and forbearance. The true
wealth of Canada consists less in the
abundance
sions than
and habits
come down
from the past.
expansion which lies before us, it is
our highest duty to conserve this in
heritance for the benefit of those who
will some day stand in our places.
So may it be said of us as it was said
of those who created the Dominion,
‘Providence being their guide, they
builded better than they knew.’ • ' ■
(Sgd.) “W. L. MACKENZIE. KING"
of
in
of
to
Plot in Alsace
Indicates Condition
Plot to Promote Insurrection
to Give Alsace Autoijom-
^ous Government In-
dicates European
Unrest
GERMANS IN IT
Paris—An autonomist plot to start
an insurrection in Alsace has been
discovered, and twelve leaders arrest
ed. Among them is a priest, Abbe
Fashauer, and. a woman, Agnes Eg-
gemann. One man, Henri Reisacher,
Treasurer * of Heimatbund, or the
Autonomist League, violently resisted
arrest.
The authors included several jour
nalists engaged in publication of
autonomist newspapers, a bank clerk,
a furniture maker, a shoemaker and a
contractor.
rormer* Prussian Captain
One mail, Doctor Roose, official
_chief. of- the party, is a former Cap
tain in the Prussian Army, who, at
theh ead of an organization of outon-
omist troops, managed to escape and
avoid arrest.
Though the number of those Invol
ved in the autonomist movement is
small, it’ appears the organization
vzhich the arrested men were build
ing up was well planned. Lists of
adherents and the names of those
supplying funds are in the possession
of the authorities.
Discovery of the* plot was made re
cently, when the houses of
twenty suspected persons were
ed in connection with another
which wa.s in progress.
For* Armed Conflict
W-mt is most serious is that
time the autonomists were not mere
ly engaged in developing propagan
da, but were actually organizing their
folio we is into battalions for armed
conflict.
some
raid
trial
this
The most of those arrested are na
turalized Frenchmen and Germans,
and not of Alsatian origin. The
.Abbe Fasiiauer has been an active
worker against French interests for
some years. All of the arrested peo
ple have been transferred to Mul
house,
Stevenson says a joke enjoyed in
common binds friends. England and
America should be thankful for Big
Bill.—Hagerstown Herald,
The effort to take the wood out of
political platforms might give some
attention also to the woulds,
SUFFERED FOR YEARS
CONSTIPATION
Was The Trouble
Mrs. Win. J. McCulloch/Woodstock,
Ont., writes:*—-“X have been a sufferer
for years from constipation.
“I tried everything I could think
of but nothing seemed to dt^ mo much
good. J-
“ After my first baby was bom my
husband got me a vial of
Milburn’S
and they did me co much good I took
three more, and they certainly are ex
cellent pills.
”1 have recommended them to differ
ent friends, and they All think they arc
good,
uMy siater won’t he without them la
her home.”
Jdiibtxm’8 Laxa-Liver X’ills are 25c. a
JruggW and dealer#, 0* ’' .... . oJp hy
IniUM Toronto,
bruggist# An
I on receipt
Ira Co., Lira
VISCOUNT CECIL TOO
ests amounted to $6,009,600.
“The most remarkable progress has
been, in the dominion of electric power
and in the mining industry.
“This marvelous hydro-electric de
velopment constitutes an inexhaus
tible source of wealth,
“Our mining regions have revealed
wealth surpassing our greatest hopes.
In the last ten months 12,686 claims
have been staked and work has com
menced in several mines of incal
culable value.
“During 1927 our population has
maintained those noble traditions
which secure for it the admiration of
foreign economists everywhere,
“It is then, with all confidence that
we salute the New Year and it is in
cumbent upon us to thank Provi
dence,”
I
Covenant might be supplemented with
a view to the settlement of non-legal
disputes,’ excluding, naturally, the
decision of internal questions.
“That is a wonderful lead to have
given the empire, and it is very heart
ening to those who like to believe
that the empire stands permanently
for peace. ’>•
“If another great war is allowed to
come it can only mean the breaking
up of civilization,
of recovering from
are not unlimited;
exhaustible stores
But one thing they have got within
their reach: the means of preventing
future wars by the peaceful settle
ment of disputes and the reduction of
armaments by international agree
ment. That is the great task which
the League has to face in 1928, and
which public opinion alone can enable
it to achieve,”
Nations’ powers
such devastations
they have no in-
of such powers.
Lesson
Our maternal posses-
these moral qualities
thought which have
us as an inheritance
In the new period of
Nova Scotia’s Message
Halifax, N.S, — Lieutenant-Gover
nor J. C. Tory gave out a New Year’s
message in which he lister a number
of reasons why he believed the people
of Nova Scotia should look forward to
a prosperous New Year, Among them
were the following:
“The favorable report of the Dun
can' Commission.
“The sympathetic attitude of other
parts of Canada toward the Mari
times.
“The practical application of the
recommendations of the Duncan Com
mission by the Federal Government.
“The quickened interest of the two
great railway systems in Nova Sco
tia affairs.
“The move
trade and to
and the spirit of courage and buoy
ancy which permeates to a very con
siderable extent the business inter
ests of the country.”
to stimulate tourists’
accommodate visitors
Premier Ferguson
Hon. G. Howard Ferguson, Premier
of Ontario, issued the following
greeting:
“As head of the Government of this
province, I congratulate the people of
Ontario on t^e splendid crop and on
the increase in general business activ
ity which has been evidenced during
the past year. From every side there
is the indication that the year 1928
will be. one of universal progress
and prosperity for the province. The
increased interest in the development
of the natural resources and the re
markable expansion of the great in
dustries of Northern Ontario assures
to the people there a rapid develop
ment and greater production of new
wealth which will add to the general
business prosperity of the whole pro-,
vince -and of the whole Dominion.
“The people of all Canada and par
ticularly those of our own province
may look forward with confidence to
a banner year in -1928. I desire to
wish everybody great happiness and
a full measure of comfort and pros
perity during the year that is open
ing.”
Premier Taschereau
Quebec, Que.—Premier Taschereau
issued the following New Year’s
message:
“The year 1927 has marked a new
era of prosperity for the Province of
Quebec.' The Federal Bureau of Sta
tistics reveals that the figure of our
population has grown to 2,604,000.
The number of students attending
our schools new exceeds £00,000 and
the fund reserved for public instruc
tion by the Government has 'practic
ally-attained this year the figure of
$4,000,000.
“Our agricultural domain, too, is
increasingly great. Land under cul-’
tivation in 1927 amounted to 6,867,000
acres. The value of harvests is esti
mated at more than $147,000,000 and
the gross revenue derived from agri
culture can be estimated at $275,-
000,000.
“The Minister of Highways has
built 1,300 miles of new roads, and
has repaired and maintained 7,800
miles.
“The year has not been prosperous
for our fishing industry, although the
latter represented a revenue of $3,-
000,000.
“Revenue from the Land and For-
Viscount Cecil
London, Dec. 30.—Viscount Cecil,
former Chancellor of the Duchy of
Lancaster and a member of the Bald
win cabinet,'who resigned the.chan
cellorship following the .recent tri
gave out the following New Year’s
message:
“Canada will doubtless embark upon
the year 1928 with a greatly increas
ed interest in the activities of the
League of Nations. As a member of
the Council of the League she has
undertaken a great and honorable po
sition. She sits as one of the 14 coun
tries specially charged to advance
the peace of the world. Her repre
sentatives on the Council and at the
assembly of the League, however ad
mirable, can only be the mouthpieces
of the opinion of her people. On
them rests the ultimate responsibil
ity, and I trust therefore, I shall be
pardoned if I venture to remind them
of what thb League of Nations really
stands for, and the problems with
which it is faced.
“Briefly, the League stands for
world peace, social improvement and
justice; Those are tremendous ideals
and can only be achieved by placing
them above the sphere of party pol
itics, and" going ‘all out’ for them.
That is a point to be morne in mind
by all League of Nations societies.
Their aims must be entirely non-pol-
itical, as is that of the British League
of Nations Union.
BUILDING UP PUBLIC OPINION.
“It is a great ' encouragement to
know that there is an active League
of Nations Society in Canada which
is helping, to build up a public opin
ion that not only believes in the
League ideals but is actually willing
to give a lead in- one of the surest
ways to peace—arbitration. M. -Raoul
Dandurand, the Canadian representa
tive at the League Assembly in 1927,
reminded the delegates that back in
1925 the Canadian Government in
formed the secretariat of the League
that Canada was ‘still firmly convince
ed that it was essential to submit
international disputes to arbitration.’
He stated that Canada was ‘prepared
to consider the compulsory jurisdic
tion of the. Permanent CourtN)f In
ternational Justice in legal disputes—
I
, PARIS
• ----------------------
January 15. Jesus and Sinners, Mack
. 1-17. Golden Text—-I
■; to call the rlghtepys, byt
• repentance.—Mark 2: 17,
% SUBJECT.
.the SON of cop AT WORK,
: , ANO REDEEMING.
Intboductjon—The amazing
authority” of Jesus now comes out
in certain statements regarding for
giveness and the necessity of saving
sinners. The religious teachers of the
time admitted that there was forgive
ness with God, but they attached so
many conditions to this forgiveness
that in practice they had no coipfort-
; mg message to offei’ to the repentant.
iTliey insisted on all kinds of legal
;forms being observed before a sinner
• could hope in God’s mercy. Jesus ■
brushed these aside, for he taught,
that wherever there was sorrow for j
sin,^ God’s forgiveness was at once
asstired, Moreover, while the reli-
came not
dinners tex
FORGIYING
: house, and Jesus responds at once. It
[was an unheard-of thing for a reli
gious teacher to enter a tax-
gatherer’s house, and still more to sit
down at his table with such company
as are now present
Judaism forbade tho
quent such mixed
Jesus, the purest 1
world has ever seen,
out hesitation.
Vs. 16, 17. Once
tion offends and outr
tional piety of tho time. The Phar
isees protest to the disciples against
the laxity of Jesus. What right has
he to break down the barriers which
strict piety has set up? Is he not
compromising religion by frequent
ing immoral societies? Jesus’ answer
is very remarkable. He compares him
self to a physician whose duty is to
wards the sick rather than towards
the strong, For the sake of bringing
sinners to God and to spiritual health
he deems it right to go among them.
He has not come to support the con
ventional usages of religion, but to
seek out and to redeem lost souls.
at Levi’s be>ard,
rolig ions to f re
gatherings:but
saint whom the
joins them vnth-
again , Jesus’ac-
ages the con ven-
WAS AFRAID Ta EAT
INDIGESTION $9 BAD
Miss J. Mathews, 154 North St.,
Halifax, N.S., writes:*—“For quite
pome time I suffered from indigestion
and was afraid to eat X suffered so
after, I told my* trouble to a friend
and she told me how sho used to suffer
with the same thing and how
1
Rlood k
1 BlTTERS^J
t Hog Pool Mooted
KAuxscuveA, wmw vuu rexi- ■
gious teachers of the day waited for.U. F. Co., Organizing to Con
sumers to come to God of themselves,!Jesus_went out in search of them. He- trol the Ontario Hog
Business
I Jesus went out in search of them. He ■
J mingled with them, and strove to/Ii awaken in them the stirrings of a I _
YEAR CONTRACTS
the sick, not among the strong. - | It is now announced that plans to
I. THE FORGIVENESS OF sins, 3-12. I form a livestock pool in Ontario by
V. 3. Jesus is preaching in a house. United Farmers’ Co-operative
in Capernaum when the incident now Company are under way, For the
described takes place. The room, time bemg the pool will be confined to
which is on the first landing, is hogs,
crowded, and the entrance and stair- is estimated, to onpg
way also are so blocked that no one [ year to the producer,
can pass either in or out. At this ! These plans are still in the initial
moment four men appear carrying on1 J 1a stretcher a paralyzed man. For the . 3 conference of a rep resen
moment they are nonplussed, as there t-ative from each, coutny has been
is no access to Jesus by the ordinary, ® for Jan. 24 in Toronto. Before
ways. t that date it is planned to hold meet-
V. 4. Determined not to lose their, ings in each of the fifty counties,
opportunity, they resort to the extra-j ’ ” ' “ '
i , .......................................................
relieved her, so I took two bottles, and
I will never regTet the day I did as X
am happy to say I can eat anything
and not bo bothered with indigestion
after. ’’
Put up only by The T. Milburn Co^
Limited, Toronto, Ont.
. Patriotism
Great Britain Gets Gift of
£100,000 Toward Reduc
tion of National Debt
Great Britain is wondering about
the identity of the mysterious indi
vidual who has made to the Nation a
lwwIi6, »v5St. The hog business in Ontario lar£e and welcome gift, said to
crowded, and the entrance and stair- is estimated to bring $20,000,000 a amount to £100,000, which is to ac-
wn-tr oier, czi — —1 ----- . - « • ‘cumulate at compound interest over
a long period to reduce the national
debt,
The fact of the gift, though not the
donor’s name nor the exact amount
concerned, has come to light, owing to
a clause having* been Inserted by tho
. Government in an obscure corner of
The’^first of 'these ‘meetings’* recently enacted law. The clause
■■ • - •_ -• jremoves a hitherto-existing prohibi-
: {I tion of such bequests accumulating
a much Targer'scale'than^the1’Ontario ;morQ than 21 years- and ls undorstood
I ordinary expedient of getting up on
1 the roof, probably from, the rear, and
I lowering the paralytic though an
. aperture made in the tiles. The plan
is no sooner devised than carried out.
The paralytic on his pallet-bed is let
down right at Jesus’ feet.
V. 5. The extraordinary boldness of
the act impressed Jesus as a great
illustration of faith. Had he not been
preaching about God’s immediate will
to establish his kingdom in human
lives, and about the necessity of fSTtlr
as the means of obtaining divine for
giveness and power? And hero, right
before them, is an example of what
faith means. . What, difficulties the
men have overcome in order to get
their friend into Jesus’ presence!
Jesus accordingly turns to the para
lytic, and gays, “Child, your sins are
forgiven you.” He doubtless saw in
the man’s wasted form and expres
sion the traces of a past life of sin.
The Jews were familiar with the say
ing, “There is no man healed of his
by sickness, till his sins have been for-
when the representatives will be se
lected. ’
was held recently in Petrolia.
The hog pool is expected to be on
INSPIRED.
One is immediately intrigued O1US uttve lor.
its exquisite femininity. This stun- given him.” But Jesus always sought
ning Parisian model No. 1702, fash- to get down to the roots of human
ioned of Creme de Menthe chiffon, need. He saw beneath the physical
derives distinction from its detail jn : ravages of sickness,’ the spiritual
cut. r— - -- - J ’L1' v
hips, adding a loose, flat bolero at
back to vary its smartness, and silver i
metal shoulder straps extend aroundFha u i : K*vcness, Wiuiour insistence on any°PeU at /J16 back*; legal conditions, shocked a number of
The skirt is made in three tiers with "
the selvage used for the'edge of each
tier, and loose hanging circular pan-
elswit h picoted edges furnish the
new side fulness to flutter to dance
tunes. No. 1702 is in sizes 16 years,
36, 38, 40 and 42 inches bust. Size
The bodice fits sleekly over the Ldai»a?e wrought by sin, and his first
- task is to minister to the evil con
science.
, Vs. 6, 7. But his declaration of-for-
' giveness, ^without, insistence on any
legoi Cuixiulivus, shucked a number of
scribes who were present in the room.'
These critics had come earlv, and
were occupying seats. In their eyes
the word of Jesus was sheer blas
phemy. God alone could forgive.
Vs. 8, 9. Jesus, on the other hand,
knows it to be the will of God to for-
igive this stricken sinner. He cannot36 requires yards 36-inch or 5^ thUtaTS rX^for
yards 40-mch material, and % yard ■ sin, any other condtion of divine for-
1%-inch lace banding. Price 20c the- -----M ’------ ....
pattern.
HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS.
Write your name and address plain
ly, giring number and size of such
patterns a3 you want. Enclose 20c in
stamps or* coin (coin preferi’ed; wrap
it carefully) for each number and .
address your order to Pattern Dept, •
Wilson Publishing C'o., 73 West Ado- .
j wheat pool. It is hoped to not only
| control the marketing on the ex
change but the export of live hogs
as well under- a rigid contract sys
tem. Producers will be asked to sign
up to market their entire hog produc
tion for the next five years through
fhe pool.
SUCCESSFUL IN WEST.
J.,J. Morrison, secretary of the U.
F. Co-operative Company, stated that
the system - now employed by the
wheat pood could not be applied to
livestock selling in view of the season
able nature of the stock and the var
iance of grades. Definite plans would
be made at the gathering on Jan. 24,
he said.
The. pool has been working success
fully in the West for' nearly a year,
and similar principles will be follow
ed here, Mr. Morrison stated.
Backers of the pool claim that bene
fits of the Government grading now in
force will go directly to the farmers.
They also state that it will be pos
sible to prevent a glut on the To
ronto market, and consequent drop in
price, while a scarcity exists on other
markets. They expect also to do their
own exporting to the States and
Great Britain.
Unsatisfactory,, conditions which
have prevailed during the past year '
would be removed by the new plan,!1
they state.
A Really Bonny Baby!
A monster baby that weighs as
giveness is necessary. And he knows
that this right to declare forgiveness
is supported by his consciousness of
God’s power being with him to heal.
This is the point of v. 9. If
has power to heal, they may be sure
also that he is commissioned to for
give.
Vs. 10, 12. Jesus puts the matter to
the test. He commands the paralytic
to rise. At his word the mental and
spiritual forces which have crushed
the man’s life' are overcome, and he
rises from his couch. This amazing
communication of power to a helpless
cripple produces a profound impres
sion. But Jesus draws from it the
■ Irrigation in Alberta
Irrigation on modern lines in Al
berta elates back to 1891 when consid-▼ p* , VW XUVX lYLlGLl
it Jesus &rable tracts of land were reclaimed
< to lifyye been especially designed to
enable the present gift to bo accept
ed.
The Treasury has received many
donations, amounting in al since thp
war to over £1,000,000, for reducing
the" debt. Stanley Baldwin, it will be
recalled, set an example in this re
spect by surrendering a largo portion
of his own personal fortune for this
purpose, Most of tho gifts hitherto-
have been in tho form of cancelled
war bonds. 9
With the law as it is now changed,
others are expected to follow the un
named donor’s example.
A photograph so small that it is
just on tho verge' of invisibility is be
ing exliibitdd. in London. The ideal
camera for newspaper men, is per
haps the thought of many who dislike
publicity. <x ...
........-—»>----------
It would be natural fo-r those who
favor Mr. Hoover for the Presidency
to point out that the complex govern
mental machinery of to-day needs ail
engineer.
It has been said that there are two
side'*, tn the prohibition question, bat
in the slang nf the youth of to-day, eno
side “is all wet.”
I
by the use of’waters from Sheep
creek. In the following year more > Or, Wood’s
extensive developments were under
taken and since then there has been
a gradual Increase in then umber
irrigated farms, so that in 1926 the
rigable area under the schemes
operation totalled 1,181,000 acres.
of
ir-
in
. .....t ii—
Ottawa, Ontario—-Plans are under,
way In the post office department for ‘
the substitution . this winter of a
weekly air-mail service for the pres
ent ten-day dog team mail, to serve:
Red Lake, Woman Lake, Woman
River and Narrow Lake in the mining i
XJU.i WMV.JTO. JLV V,UQ ail CAUl 41UX umuiy .. , ■ . V.a ,---- — ------ _ -act for a business-man to leave his companies nave alreadj’ been ap-j ternational Justice in legal disputes— a Messiah in infant form, and they:desk and papers without further ado,' Froached P°stal authorities,!
subject to certain reservations,’ and are already worshipping it and of-.^ut still more extraordinary is the nnd K 13 expected that tenders will be !
also ‘to study the means whereby the[fering it gifts to secure its favor. |sequel. Levi invites Jesus to his;lot shortly.
much as a man is being worshipped in conclusion that^ he is. authorized,
Jolo, In the Philippine Islands. .
though only seven months bld, it
weighs lOst. 10 lb., and eats ten
pounds of rice at a meal. It has to
be carried to the table by two men.
The natives of the islands have de
cided that so great a person must be
: though man, to declare sins forgiven’
II. THE RIGHT TO REDEEM THE LOST,
■ 15-17.
V. 15., After the above incident,
Jesus calls ‘.Levi, the tax-gatherer, to
join his company as a disciple, and ' n nP n„7o,.*rtLevi obeys. It was an extraordinary: ft.rea> Northwestern Ontano.
! proached by the postal authorities,!
Mrs. Sam Duggan, Scarth, 'Man.,
writes:—“Last fall I had a very hard
cough which became firmly lodged on
my lungs. Your
Norway
P8n®
Syrup
1 recommended to mo and I startedwas
taking it.
“At.that time I could not get any
more than half an hour’s" sleep ‘ at a
time for the continual coughing, but,
now,’ I very rarely ever cough.
“I have recommended ‘Dr. Wood's’
Norway Pine Syrup to many others.”
See that you get “Dr. Wood’s”
When you ask for it; put up in a yellow
wrapper; thrde pine trees the trade
mark; price 35c. a bottle, largo family
size 60c.; put up only by The T.
Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont.
MUTT AND JEFF—By Bud Fisher.
WHAT KAV<=
Ycu mc-RG,
JGFP O<0
/]T FOkJNL SoNaC^
UMtTFb STATES
COIMS- IN r*'y
vC-V pock FT,
Sir sibA»€v;
t'M OV(jR A
BGRRY ...
THAN t THOUGHT Jj
I wM
/ B6RRY! 1 thought
You SAID THOSG $0 yovrf
NOV FAMILIAR
VJlTH 0UR
mongy’. r’tu
ckVlaim
Our VARIOUS /-
i’ shall jotty
wgll ABPftGc/Nre
Youfc YRguBlgI-J
f THG , SMALL
COIN IS A 'j|*r
AMb THfc LARGG
COIN '$ TU/O-B»TSl
TuuO BATS i S
f=«UG TTMGS . AS
MUCH AS A
*