Ontario Community Newspapers

The Colborne Express (Colborne Ontario), 5 Jul 1928, p. 7

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THE COLBORNE EXPRESS, COLBORNE, ONT., THURSDAY, JULY 5, 1928. RHEUMATIC PAINS DUE TO THIN BLOOD: Relief Comes Through the Use of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. The most a rheumatic sufferer can hope for in rubbing something on the swollen, aching Joints is a little relief, and all the while the trouble is becoming more firmly rooted. It Is now known that rheumatism is rooted in the blood, and that as the trouble goes on the blood becomes still further thin and watery. To get rid of rheumatism, therefore, you must go to the root of the trouble in the blood. That is why Dr. Williams' Pink Pills have proved so beneficial when taken for this trouble. They make new, rich blood which expels the poisonous acid and the rheumatism disappears. There are thousands of former rheumatic sufferers in Canada, now well and strong, who thank Dr. Williams' Pink Pills that they are now free from the aches and pains of this dreaded trouble. One of these, Mrs. W. F. Tait, McKellar, Ont., who Bays:--"I am one of the willing ones to tell you of the great benefits I received from the use of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. After lying in bed for seven weeks suffering untold agony with inflammatory rheumatism, relief finally came through the use of this medicine. I could not move in bed only as they Kfted me, and I could only sleep when opiates were given me. The medical treatment I was taking seemed of no avail. Then I was advised to try Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, and soon I began to get relief. After taking six or eight boxes the rheumatism was banished and I had never felt better in my life. It is several years since this happened and I have had no return of the trouble since I may add that I recommend the pills to two of my friends who were suffering with rheumatism and the pills were equally effective in both cases." Try Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for anaemia, rheumatism, neuralgia, indigestion or nervousness. Take them as a tonic if you are not in the best physical condition and cultivate a resistance that will keep you well and strong. You can get these pills through any medicine dealer or by mail at 50c a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockviile, Ont. SMALLEST RAILWAY IN THE WORLD Canadian Per Capita $16.50 Figures for 1927 Also Show Expenditure Averaged $16.01 Ottawa--Total ordinary receipts per capita for the nine Provincial Governments of Canada were $16.50 for the fiscal year 1927. Total ordinary expenditure's per capita for the same period were $16.01. By provinces ordinary capita were:--British $35.23; Alberta, $19.88; $17.92; Ontario, $17.67 ewan, $15.61; New Brunswick, $12.40; Nova Scotia, $12.00; Quebec, $11.88 and Prince Edward Island, $9.65. Ordinary expenditures of each province for its fiscal year ended 1927, according to tie Dominion Bureau of Statistics, were:--British Columbia, $33.75; Alberta, $20.23; Manitoba, $16.16; Ontario, $17.50; Saskatchewan, $15.51; New Brunswick, $11.28; Nova Scotia, $12.09; Quebec, $11.17; and Prince Edward Island, $10.04. -eceipts per Columbia, Manitoba, Saskatch- Great numbers of holiday public railway, which serves Romney, Hythe and Pymchurch. Picture s the tiny train steaming into Romney._______ Canada's Great North Baltimore Sun: North America, one must assume, has got its affairs into very good order when, as a matter of routine administration, the Canadian Government Imports reindeer Jo supply food for Eskimos in danger ot starvation in the distant and desolate regions along the Mackenzie River. Not the extremest part of this vast territory lies outside the attention of authorities. Very little time has passed since Eskimos of the North or Indians of the great plains etarved on occasion or died of disease without notice, hut now even the nomads along the Arctic Ocean are under observation. Beavers For Scotland Canada has donated a pair of live beavers to the Zoological Society of Scotland. These little animals, cap hired and conditioned in Jasper national park, were transported to Montreal and placed aboard the ss. "Cairnisk" when she cleared on May 18. Their destination is the Zoological Gardens at Edinburgh. Says British-Born Not Welcomed Bishop of London Claims Dominions Cold to Old Countrymen CANADA'S FUTURE Dr. Ingram Found Foreigners Preferred in North-West London--Addressing a meeting of the Church of England Council Empire settlement yesterday, Right Rev. Arthur Foley Winnington-lnj Bishop of London, declared tht was disappointed In his recent tour of the British Dominions. He had failed, he said, to find an enthusiastic welcome for a Briton in any part of the Empire. That was not what he had expected. "I tried to point out at Toronto, on my trip through Canada," he said, "that we were filling the North-West with Russians and Poles and people from God knows where and that statement got me into considerable difficulty. I found Southern Europeans were welcomed perhaps even more enthusiastical than Britons. "It is disheartening to our fellows to be called a 'so and so Tommy' when they arrive in Australia," continued the Bishop in referring to British immigration to the antipodes. Our young men are not keen to go out there and the tone of East London Is "keep out the Jews and let us have the country to ourselves." Rev. M. Dixon, of Calgary, said continental emigrants to Canada were successful there because they went out as families and not like many age pengions English peoples who went out to Canada to see how they liked "this Godforsaken country." Keep Canada British year 1927, British subjects leaving the United Kingdom to take up permanent residence outside of Europe numbered 153,505, of whom 52,916 came to British North America. The next largest movement was to Australia, which received 40,991. New Zealand received 7,841, British South Africa 7,572, India and Ceylon 6,476, other parts of the British Empire 6,937. The United States received 25,-662 and all other foreign countries 5,110. In the face of a general decrease in British emigration, Canada was the only important country wbrich showed an Increase in 1927 compared with 1926 and easily led all others in the total number of Britishers received. Don't Make aTby Out of Baby- -Babies Have'Nerves- By RUTH BIUTTATN Fear of Poorhouse by Aged Lacking in Saskatchewan Ottawa.--Old age without fear of the poorhouse is an actuality in Saskatchewan. As a result of an agreement between the Provincial and Dominion Governments, persons of seventy years and more who have resided in the province for at least twenty years and who are British subjects will be paid a $200-a-year pension, it is announced in a bulletin of the Depart-.^, ment of Colonization and Development of the Canadian Pacific Railway. Half of the amount of the pension is paid by the Dominion Government and the other half by the provincial. Saskatchewan is the second province actually to begin old age pension payments. British Columbia has been paying them since last September and, up until the en dof March of this year, has disbursed about $240,000. Yukon Territory has also accepted the scheme, but it is not so far in effect. Manitoba has passed the necessary legislation to take advantage of the and it is expected that payments will begin there | during the summer. | Alberta, another prairie province, and several of the Eastern provinces GREAT HELP TO YOUNG MOTHERS Baby's Own Tablets Have Many ~" Uses and Are Absolutely Harmless. To have in the house a simple, harmless remedy for the minor ills of babies and little children is a great boon to young mothers, and this is exactly why Baby's Own Tablets have been found in thousands of households. The Tablets regulate the stomach and bowels,' break up colds and simple fevers, allay the irritation of cutting teeth, yet they have no drug taste and the children like them Concerning the Tablets Mrs. Ruthin Crommiller, Ruthven, Ont., writes: "Kindly send me your little book l the Care of the Baby. I have two children, one four years of age and the other a year and a half. Both In excellent health and the only medicine they have had is Baby's Own Tablets. I always keep the Tablets in the house and am happy to rei iend them to other mothers." Baby's Own Tablets are sold by all medicine dealers or by mail at 25 box from The Dr. Williams' Medi 3., Brockviile, Ont. ;0,000 for July and A Chicks from Blood-tested Stock 9 of 200 eggs a s paid o e COD. ] live delis Toronto.--Right Rev. Arthur Foley ' have the matter under consideration Winnington-Ingram, Bishop of London,1 of paying their old-time citizens a stl-isited Canada in the summer of 1926,'pend annually to ward off the wolf of and arrived in Toronto on August 17. I poverty. He explained on his arrival that h( visiting the British Dominions mainly ln the interests of the Church of England Empire Settlement Scheme. During his stay in the city he addressed several gatherings and on each occasion emphasized the necessity of keeping Canada British. Speaking at a luncheon, tendered .him by the civic authorities, the Bishop | of London said he believed Canada was one of the future great nations of the earth. "You have the right outlook across the rockies," he declared, "but you 'have not the people to develop the resources of the country. You need \ people of British stock and should not depend upon immigration from I continental Europe." j Addressing the Empire and Cana-In older' dian Clubs of Toronto, on August 19, he over- j the Bishop of London spoke of the ised by^ties which held together the component parts of the Empire and stated his anxiety that Canada , retain its British stock. He said he realized Much of the children can be traced tc stimulation during infancy, regarding baby as a sort of animated toy for the amusement of parents, r latives and friends. Baby may 1 played with, but not for more than „ quarter of an hour to an hour daily. |tne necessity for filling the open spaces Beyond that, being handled, tickled, of the broad Dominion, but appealed caused to laugh or even scream, will to Canadians to guard against allow-sometimes result in vomiting, and in-' jug foreign population to outnumber 1 variably causes irritability, crying or ' tueir own pe0ple sleeplessness. j Fretfulness, crying and sleeplessness Records Show Differently from this cause can easily be avoided Ottawa--Canada continues to a xL *ri-L-j^-SbL3i|Vn*3»COnSidera' British settlers thai! ahy other J.ZZ, uut >.u" ttl l see what! C0Untry, according to an official bul- harmless Castoria. It's amazing to; Department in London. The Bntii see how quickly it calms baby's ner- records ves and soothes him to sleep; yet it 1 -- contains no drugs, or opiates. It Is Re j j>oge Oranee Pekoe ha* purely vegetable--the recipe is on the I jK°!e "rang6 rekoe Has wrapper, "Leading physicians pre-' earned the patronage and scribe it for colic, cholera, diarrhea, ' good \vm of more tea drink-constipation. p«3 on s'tomacli and; ers than any other high-bow.^, reVerishneBS, loss of sleep and 1 „ „ - i ; t _ t~, :n fanaJa «1 'other "upets" of babyhood. Over ^U,a f j * ^a"a°f-fs million bottle* used a year shows Judges of good tea gladly Its overwhelming popularity. | give more for Red Rose With each bottle of Castoria, you , Orange Pekoe because they get a book on Motherhood worth Its , fenow that th x th re_ wnlzht In gold. Look for (Jhas. H. I . . . ,r Fletcher's signature on the package five is worth many times so you'll get genuine Castoria. There the few extra cents they pay. are many imitations. - 1-E THE EXCEPTION "There never was a married man without a mother-in-law. you think?' "Of course, there never was." "Don't you think Adam was { married man?" Minard's Linin t for t Imperial Preference and the U.S.A. Providence Journal: (The growing tendency of American shippi Canadian ports is attributed partly to the British system of imperial preference. The United States Shipping Board is investigating the question.) Obviously we cannot change the Brit-igh imperial preference system unless ^ve have Something substantial to offer in return. The> Shipping Board/s awaited with deep in-explanation of the conditions that ere said to exist but also for recommendations concern- ing wa e of the •affic. coverings may be discarded for Summer, the housewife has a busy day making blankets and cloaks safe from moths. Furs, Persian rugs and other valuable objects are packed off to cold storage, while everyday household and personal effects are taken care of in the house. For generations housewives each year have taken up the cudgels against these destroyers. Many of otterviiie "poultry Farm, ottervllli old-fashioned remedies cepted still by science, such, sunning clothing to larvae. But other science has pronounced worthless-tobacco extracts and tobacco powders, lavender flow-cayenne and black pepper, dust-of allspice, of air-slaked lime, of salt, of eucalyptus leaves, hellebore, | quassia chips, angelica root, pyre-1 theum stems, powdered sulphur, | borax, colocynth pulp, sodium bicarbonate, lead carbonate and lead known to shoot distinguished and well beloved bishop is so absent-minded that his family is always apprehensive for his welfare when he is away from them. Not long ago, while making a journey by rail, the bishop was unable to find his ticket when the conductor asked for it. "Never mind, Bishop," said the conductor, who knew him well, '11 get it on my second round." However, when the conductor passed through the car again the ticket was still missing. "Oh, well, Bishop, it will be all right if you never find it," the conductor assured him. "No, it wont, my friend," contradicted the bishop, "I've got to find that ticket. I want to know where I'm going." Many a .fellow \ the office is only ho's RED ROSE TEA!is^oodteaM Red Rose Orange Pekoe is supreme is In clean, bright Aluminum. Fighting Moths Classified Advertisementi baby chick3 business opportunity U.S. Bureau of Entomology . Outlines the Best Plan for the Annual Treatment of Winter Clothing When a succession of mild days in- j dicates that heavy Winter clothing ! aby chicks--WE^jHATCrl^FOUR for 1". type for long leap. Excellent opportui avers. Reason for selling have been replaced by rr 1 The Mover, Hamilton. the Crawls Four Days With Leg Broken Courage and Scout Training Save Life of 12-year-old Boy xide ; San Francisco.--Crawling on har and knees for four days from the r specified in this category °' Half Dome to Mirror Lake on t . . „. . ------- ™_ !floor of Yosemite Valley and part ken leg, 12-year-i by the United States Bureau of En- , tomology. Cedar chips and shavings *he way Jul? said to be only partially effective. George Monhe.t of Piedmont, tough a herculean fight for life--and won. The boy, missing for about a week and for whom all hope had been aban doned, was found alive, collapsed oi a rock at the edge of Mirror Lak< to-day, according to reports here, irtually naked, The first essential in battling moths to make sure that no larvae are hidden away along the earns, in deep folds or in pockets of the clothing to be packed away, and then that all absolutely tight. and bleeding and suncracked, his body covered with bruises and one leg broken. The boy had, in four days, crawled on his hands and knees from the rim of Half Dome down an Beating and brushing and cleaning ust precede laying away, and furs ispected of being infested must be gone over with a fine tooth comb. lodged on material to be put away may be killed by ironing, by ai^st7erpend"icir exposing in superheated rooms or by abIy never attempted bel leaving several hours in the sun. Or ,ieved impossible, the fabric may be dipped for ten sec- ( But hjg courage and boy onds in water heated to 140 degrees lng saved nls lite Fahrenheit. A strong solution of neutral laundry soap also has a killing effect. The Bureau of Entomology consid- most heroic of boyhood Young Monheit disappeared a hunting trip near Vernal F Since his disappearance p< _ naphthalene in flakes or balls the Bearching panic best preventive of destruction from yosemite without s moths, provided the clothing is close- 'Deijevea it possible ly confined and not packed on closet ]et a]one a Doy 0f shelves or in drawers where the neariy a mne high fumes may readily escape. Paradich- where he was las lorcbenzine, gum camphor and pyre- Empire.) thrum powder are also pronounced effective. For Hay Fever--us Playgrounds for Children Le Canada (Lib.): Never a day passes by but we read in the paper that children have been struck by motor cars or heavy lorries. The accidents are, alas! too frequent in the summer, especially while the school holidays are on. Parents should impress on their children that they must not play ln the streets. They should be sent to the parks and playgrounds. Let Cuticura Soap Keep Your Skin Fresh and Youthful The "star" soprano of the village made. a brave attempt to sing "I'll hang my harp on a weeping willow tree," but her voice broke on the top note. After three unsuccessful tries, a voice from the back of the hall suggested kindly: "Try 'anging it on a lower branch, Miss!" The Master--"Sambo! you good-for-nothing scamp, where have you been loafing all day.. Didn't I tell you to lay in some coal?" Sambo (indignantly)--"Yes, sar, Ah's been laying in de coal all day, though there is a lot more softer places where ah'd rather Reduce the Acid TIRED, WEAK, NERVOUS WOMAN BENEFITED Sick stomachs, indigestion i The stomach tomachs and i Take i excess acid, unhappy over-stimu- lated. Too, much asJkl. nja^es the. Excited Boy--"Come on, quick! The j stomach and Intestines sour, ould man is batin' the ould woman Alkali kills acid instantly. The best again." Policeman--"Why don't she ] form is Phillips' Milk of Magnesia, be- herself if she wants to make complaint, or have him arrested?" Excited Boy--"She's too busy. She's got 'im down and is bumpin' 'is head on the flure." harmless, tasteless dose neutralizes many times its volume in acid. Since its invention, 50 years ago, it has remained the standard with physicians everywhere. spoonful ln water and your „, jondition will probably end flve'minutes. Then you will always know what to do. Crude and harmful methods will never appeal to you. It may save a great many disagreeable h°BeSsure to get the genuine Phillips' Milk of Magnesia prescribed by physicians for 50 years in correcting excess acids. Each bottle contains full direc-any drugstore. Praises Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Asbestos Mines, Quebec--"After1 the birth of my second child, I was --^always feelingtired,' nervous and weak and had headaches; backaches and ter-i rible pains every month. I suffered two years before I tried Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. I got four bottles at first and it did e a world of good, would not be without it in the house now, and have another six bottles-in. I recommend it to every woman I know." -Mrs. T. Barritt, Box 114, Asbestos Mines, Quebec. ISSUE No. 26--':

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