Grey Highlands Newspapers

Flesherton Advance, 3 Apr 1929, p. 6

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UWfalB ^1 I :«^ A PERFECT MEDICINE FORimiEONES Baby's Own Tablets Shwrid be in Every Home Where There Are Children The perfect medicine for little ones If found Ja Babjr'f Own Tablets. They ure a gentle but tbqroueb laxative Which regulate the bowels, sweeten the stomach; drive out constipation and Indigestion; break np colda and â- Imple fever and promote bealtbtul and refreshing sleep. It Is Impos- sible for Baby's Own Tablets tr harm fven the new-bom babe a> they are absolute guaranteed tree from opiates or any ether Injurious drugs. Con- cerning them Mrs. Earl Taylor, Owen I Sound, Ont, writes: â€" "I have four children and have always used Baby's Own Tablets. I am never without the Tablets In the house as they are tbe best med:.:lne that I know of for little ones." Baby's Own Tablett are sold by medicine dealers or by mall at 23 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockvllle, Ont. â€" ' «> .- Popular at Last -EifFel Tower at Last Wins Paris by Place in Art and Romances Paris. â€" After dominating the sky Une of Paris for almost forty years, the EifTel Tower has become popular with Parisians. Always intensely partisan wherever the beauty of their city is concerned, the natives otf^is for long after the exposition of fi)90 were unanimous in condemning the huge skelet/i of steel and cable towering above "the Champ- de-Mars. Artists and writers havj changed 'public opinion. For years the tower has been an integral part of the back- aground of all the innumerj.ble paint- ings of the quais. Within the last four years at least four romances have been published in which hero and heroine, typically Parisi"n in every other respect, found the tower a tryst- ing place. Native opinion changed. The immediate result was tribute, eomewhat ' >lated, to the memory of Gustave Eiff.l, the engineer who built ihe tower. The monument, a bust on a circular dais, wil be erected at the base of the tower. It will be In place in time for commemoration of the 100th anniversary of the birth of Eiffel. The engineer was born in 1S32 at Dijon, on the Cote d'Or. ConpMt StM WHii Dsnick Wotk Houm ^ 1 * < CYCLOPEAN STEERING PIECE SWUNG INTO PLACE Giant 55-ton rudder being fitted to the stem of the transatlantic Cunarder Berengaria at Southampton. The huge steering piece was specially made in England. Canada Figures on Immigration Dominion Looks for Onflux of Nearly 200,000 This Year Homestead Filings Gain Immigi-ation to Canada opened up t. little brighter and more auspiciously in 1929, and should the increment re- corded in Jan'iury, which is not a month of active movement, be con- tinued throughout the year the aggre- gate for the twelve months should come much n<;arer the 200,000 mark, says a recent Canadian Pacific Rail- way bulletin. The total of naw ar- rivals in January was 4,164, as com- pared with 3,6a2 in 1928, a.a increase of 12.78 per cent. Newcomers from tho British Isles totaled 1,1.33, as com- pared with 771 in the previous year, an increase of 4C 95 per cent. Citi- zens of the United States totaled 1,573, as against 1,22.3, an increase of 28.61 per cent. The number of en- trant;} from all other countries was 1,458, against 1,698, a declint of 14.13 per cent. Swelling the movement from across the international border, "which was the outstanding and most gratifying feature of the immigration situation in 1923," says the bulletin, were 1,767 Canadians who bad made permanent homes in the United States and Peopl« wfi0 ftrixtf ^ finer tfaingf of life titi»^ clcnund Red Rom Orange Pekoe Tea. A money-bacli guarantee with everjr padcage. «» REDROSE is good tea RED ROSE ORANGE PEKOE i» extra good difflculties arising from inexperience. Prom these temporary placements the association will draw steadily for its permanent settlement activities. Land Values Rise 'Canadian farm lands .though still cheaper than others of their class elsewhere, are rising steadily value. In 1901 the average acre of farm land In CanaJa, improved and unimproved .together with buildings thereon, was $22.13 per acre, whereas in 1911 it had risen to $30.41, and in 1928 was worth 138. Taking the Pro- vince of Alberta as typical of West- em Canada in 1901, the average acre was worth $6.12; in 1911, $21.71, and in 1928, $28, the rise in the first de- Classified Advertisement* ~l B.ABY CHICKS. WE H.\TCH M. four varieties, prlca 9a uik Write for free cataiogue. ti ran ton. Ontario. A. HL Swltzer. 4 LTOMOBILE AND TRUCK PARTS .,:\. shipped all over Canada. Satlafac- tion guaranteed. Enquiries promptiy at- ijj I tended to. Lew Autoracbile Wreckers, I 737 Queen West. Toronto. Phone Ad. 7124. The word "Listen" ha.-; never been l^nown to preface anything worth lis- tening to. â€" Kingston Whig-Standard. An American millionaire has left all his money to his lawyer. He evidently believed in saving time. Turkey to Cease Use of Arabic Letters June 1 1 he sea Is his home . ,-* { the ocean lanes his streets . . . the ship his life and his love. He takes a float* log city alon^ his ttiree thousand mile highway as you would walk the sidewalk. â€" A Cunard Captain: a tradition of the Seas. . . Sail Cunard I Book through The Robert Reford Co., Limited, Cor. Bay and Wellington .Sis., Toronto (Tel. Elgin 3471), or ary steamship ofjint. Weekly Stninot to Europe Irom Montfeal land Quebec) CUNARD «V<»^ CANADIAN SERVICE V^-', svaot Cibin, TourM Third Cakin and Third Claa Latin Characters Learned at State Schools Under Re- form Ordered by Kemal People Approve Change Angora, Turkeyâ€" Mustapha Kemal Pasha's major reform in the west- ernization of Turlcey will go into ef- fect officially on June 1. After that date .â- Vrabic writing will be entirely forbidden throughout the country and all Turlvs will be requli-ed to use the Latin characters which they have been learning in special government schools. .-Mthoush state papers have been Pharaoh's Games Shown at Cairo cade ot the century exhibiting the were returning to Canatta to live, as j effect ot active settlement. Due to compared with 1,683 in January, their higher productive value In the 1928. an increase of 4.99 per cent. ,"The month ot January likewise gave indication of an active year of land settlement, with every likelihood ot its surpassing in this regprd 1928, , which was the most outstanding ot I the post-war period. Canadian farm D_l:_.|landa are again coming strongly into 'the limelight as the cheapest ot their kind in the world. Xew transporta- tion arrangements for the Peace River country ot Northern .\lberta have in- duced a flow ot settlers iiito that terri- tory, which doub'ed its population last year. "Projected new railway lines in yet unexp!oited territory in the North- New Tut-ankh-Amen on View for First Time Cairo â€" Howard Carter is continu- ing his work on the 'Tut-ankh-Amen tomb at Luxor and treasures of antiquity are still being brought to view, much to the delight of tourists. The public is now hav- ing its first opportunity ot seeing at the museum the new objects from I ^^^^ '^ focusing attention upon set- the tomb, which arrived in Cairo .•»-!"«°^ent possibilities there. Vacant cently in 90 cases, heavily guarded. I '""•'^ in developed communities are To-day, lovely alabaster vases and ' P'"°'^'°S more attractive to newcom- inlaid faience are exposed to view,; ers with small capital. Considerable e irri- sections of Southern Alberta, is every sign that a consider- volume ot new colonization will also figures, finely worked, of the j "P*"^^'"" '^ ^^'^•'^SPlace in t ot the sacred Ibis and a representa- ! ?*'^" tion ot the Egyptian god "Bes," a 1 ^'^®'"® form of vase, which is still sealed, ' '^^^^ probably containing scent, an Inter- 1'^^ accomplished in 1929. esting hand drill for burning holes' Hon|>stead Filings Gaia written In the Latin alphabet «verjinwood and making Are, a gold scep-j "Homestead filings, after recording since the reform was first Inaugurated ' ter inlaid with multicolored gla^-s, â-  an increase ot nearly 150 per cent. In Arabic letters were permitted in pri-| which is a unique find, a lovely silver 192S over 1927, started ott the year vate communications. During this 1 vase which looks as though made , with a further increment ot 66 per time all citizens between the ages of : ye.sterday. • ] cent.. 761 homesteads being filed sixteen and forty have been required' Other exhibits Include a large modfll, upon in January, compared with 457 to attend the national schools to learn ' in alabaster ot a boat, ibis heads form- in the con-esponding month ot the the new characters. ling the prow and stern, a cabin in previous year. Albei-ta showed 3S6 Kemal Teaches Classes | "'* tovm ot a shrine, while in the bow I filings, against 201 in 192S, this being is seated a woman, with two bronze ; 'argely due \o new acreage taken up last few years farm land values many Provinces have risen lately. i "Also because farm labor is com- { ing to be Increasingly regarded as the j logical and surest road to farm own- ' ership. the Governmv-nts figures on ] farm wakes prevailing last year have interest. The demand tor farm workers in Canada at all times is j greater than the supply. Last year the Canadian Pacific Railway was able to fill only about half of the ap- plications filed with it for single male workers, much less than halt ot t'Jose tor domestics, and only about a quar- ter ot those tor families on farms. "For the whole ot Canada the aver- age wages per month of farm help during the summer season ot 192S were for men $40 and tor women $24. In addition, the value of the board is placed at $23 for men and $20 for women. The total wages and board thus amounted to $63 for men and $44 for women. In Western Canada wages were higher, being $61 and $41 respectively in JIanitoba: $69 and $47 in Saskatchewan: $72 and $49 in .Alberta, and $77 and Co2 in British Columbia." He (bitterly): "I should think your many activities would cause you to neglect ^ children. She: "Oh, no; we employ a governess to do that, yoa in I know." Blue Riblioo Master Breeder BABY CHICK BOXES AND LIV-AN-GRO BROODERS .Also a complete lir.e of egg' case fillers, tlats, pads, egg cases, shoolu, wood excelsior and wood wool. I-'se Our Protex Wood Wool Pads for Safe Baby Chick Trans porta tloo. CaTaloffue on request. Donald D. White & Associates london. Omarlo Plow Points AGENTS WANTED Plow Po:r.t.s for all kinds ot Plows. Quality high â€" prices low. Years ot experience have taught us just how to make them right "Not how cheap, but how good." Write us for Agency Dominion Foundries Tweed, Ont. The reform has proved so popular swords, of which only ing board, still highly polished, j forty-two marked out in squares on wjiich are pictures which determine the count- ers' moves. An ivory drawer contains knucklebones and four flat pieces ot that many men and women more than I ?"'""='• "" """^^'' ""'> °"« specimen forty have attended the classes, some j '* knownâ€" that Khepesh swoi-d. of which have been taught by Kemal i •^"°'^^'' f^niarkable exhibit is himself. I The misfortune ot King .Amanullah 1 of .\fghanlstan, who lost his throne because of the efforts to force Occi- dental civilization upon his subjects, has made little impression here. The only concession which the govern- ment has made to tradition has been an amendment making Arabic legal for inscriptions In the mosques and for the Koran, and the temporary postponement ot the adoption ot Sun- day as a legal holiday Instead of the Islamic F'l-iday. Young Minister Dies The d^ath ot Nedjati Bey. the young Minister ef Public Instruction, who had charge ot the reform program, has not brought any reIa.\atIon in the government's ecorts to teach the new alphabet to the 14.000.000 inhabitants. Xedjati died ot appendicitis and It was charged in the Turkish press that the inelTiciency ot his physicians was responsible. The Minister ot Public Hygiene, re- plying to a question In the National Assembly, defended the physicians and declared the death .vas due sole- ly to the gravity ot the illness. Premier Ismet Pasha temporarily took over the portfolio and continued the campaign. It is learned that W'asfi Bey, who has resigned as .Am- bassador to Moscow and who formerly was Minister ot Public Instruction, will succeed N'edjatl. He recently was elected Deputy tor Smyrna. Minard's Liniment for Grippe and Flu. ..> Cost of Living Quebec Eveaement (Cons.1: There are four immense regions of different character in the United States. The in lae Peace River country, which sec- j conditions of life vary as much from jtion accounted for 33 per cent, of the one region to anotlrer as between two a [Provinces filings in 192S, Filings in Nvidely-separated countries ' like, for â-  In the j resembles other types ot Tut-anlih- 1 both Prince .\!bert and Moose Jaw north-east, the north-centre and the' Amen furniture, the fibre springs re- 1 offices recording large increases, far west certain industries and cer- j malning in an extraordinary state of j British Columbia more than doubled tain labor unions are formidably or- 1 preservation. its filings, figures rising from eleven sanized. Some artisans, such as auto-j Interesting examples of games to twtti'yfour. Manitoba was the mobile workers, construction hands i played at Pharaoh's court are alsolonly Province to rei.'ister a decliae, and railway workers.- receive salaries j shown, including a fine ebony gam I Sswes droppln,^ from flfty-ou'i to | which seem very large, even in com- parison with the salaries paid in Can- ada. But in Xew York. Philadelphia. ! Chicago, Seattle and San Francisco ' the cost ot living is materially higher I than it is with ns. I Xchwe^IerX ivory, which were thrown as equivalent of dice, and another miniature Ivory gaming boards. Other lovely new e.xhibits are now on view, and many smaller, which are still unpacked, and unlikely to "The Canada Colonization .\ssocia- tion similarly started ott the year in an active manner, .\fter settling 667 families in 192S. bringing its record THOI^OBIttD-"- |~\l.'R trvMtcn it* Iftd k^ iutfc !« ^^ r«>iv;u.-tiort, ^\''..[r 3*own md R. 1. Rnl*. Aate^tt. -BUtk pMiCtoni. \V'lu(i Wti \ >n<l up. UV% ill* tklimr ( ! «>i*» ii.-€ FKtE Cmc^X BOOK. SCIiWEi?liR'5 HATCHERY ; N'Trthampton Buffalo. N'.Y. R75. BBII3CEB17SO. ONT.. CAB*. and Pneumonia Ne^iffted bron.-hial oi'lds aru dan- ffeii)Us. Stop them instantly with Buckley's MLxtiire. Its action in re- lieving: the coimh and clearing the tubes is amazinsly swift â€" and sure. All druKBists sell "Buckley's" under a positive (guarantee. Buy m twttie ^ today, and be safe. W. K. Backler, Limited. 1 4;: Mutual St.. Toronto ; an of colonization since Inception up to two I 3, OSS families on 715. 7S9 acres ot land worth $29,6o3.95S, twenty-five fami- lies were placed on 3,227 acres of land worth $53,490 in January of the present year, all with the exception of be shown before next winter, when ' five families in Ontario being in the it is probable that the Tut-ankh-Amen ' Western Provinces. The association tomb will have been completely has an elaborate pro?; am of settle â- ^••- cleared. » t He who said "The Sabbath was made for man, not man for the Sab- bath," would also have said, "Mar- riagt\was made for man, not man for niarriasre." â€" Dean Inj:e. Tmt <Win •! Uit* all aMI Iraank m aWllu ciM ««k |M way-tlnrlhtM. Hart.iiom* â€" Vp-to-Datt SPECTACLES on $0 Days Trial LA » •ud jreii ••celadti ttet wiUcnablaraato •Ml tiw wallMt prist tad tkt l«M««BttlitMtMWlt>]Wthftll«y«fc W« kao* roa iriU b« 4aa^M4 frttk Mail Thi* C»upM* T»-Dtvt I I NMW ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Australian Gold Yield Declining Largely Increased Costs of Production the Cause of Diminution Jlelbourne, Vic. â€" Gold is to be found practically all over .\ustralia, I but tor various reasons, not the lea.5t I ot them labor troubles and conse- quently largely increased costs of production, the yield is declining very considerably. In 192S the total gold obtained was 457.201 ounces fine, which is 47,Si6 ounces less than in 1927. The decrease applies to all states. in Victoria the amount won wa.? less by 4,621 ounces than in 1927, and the New South Wales yield fell short by 5,200 ounces. The closing of the rich Mount Morgan mine in Queens- land, which also abounds in copper, gave Queensland a very low return, but with the price of copper now at an attractive level, there is a big pos- sibility that capital will be forthcom- ing to enable work to be resumed there. Mines In Western Australia, the richest of all the states In gold, main- tained a steady output, the yield bein? not far below that of 1927. ment for the present year, with 400 families definlte'.y ready (or settle- ment at the opening of 1929. in addi- tion to which a reservoir ot 500 fami- lies is to be created and maintained at that strength This is being ef- fected through temporary placement, while a cottage scheme Is being de- veloped for the benefit of British set- tlers. Only those families will be immediately settled on the land which have sufficient means ot their own or which insist on immeiliate settlement j children, such as coll this to further offset possibility of colds, biliousness, etc. NEW BABY DISTURBS! TIRED OFFICE WORKER ! "When my oldest boy was just a ! tew weeks old he was badly constipat- 1 ed from my milk.'' says a Nebraska I mother. "He kept us awake so much. my husband almost slept over his | desk at the office. Then my doctor ^ got us to give Baby some Castoria j and the next day he was much better. His stoma.il and bowels began acting perfectly and he gave us no more trouble." .Avoid imitations of Castoria. T'ae Flectcher signature marks the genuine, purely vegetable, harmless Castoria, doctors everywhere advise for those ills ot babies and constipation. IXTURC Acu liiie a /liuhâ€" a iintlc lip prova it 75c and 40c FLU About two hours after eating many people suffer from toar stomachs. They call It indigestion. It means that the itomach nerves have been ove^ stimulated. There Is excess acid. iThe war to correct It Is with tn Master ot t le House (nervously) : "Better not light the fire with paraf- . . ^. , nn. Norah. Remember you promised ! •"'•"• '^^^''} neutralizes many times to live a week's notice b«tor« you "» T°*"?*v. * . ov.,,. . >,.,w , left us" ^*' 'â- '*'" *'^ '• Phillips' Milk ot ^ ____ I Magnesiaâ€" ju»t a Mlnard's LInlmtnt pr«v«nti Ptu. water. i,astelesa dose hi It U pleasant, efficient and harmless. It has remained the stand- ard with physicians In the 50 years since Its invention. It Is the quick method. Results come almost instantly. It Is the ap- proved method. You will never use another .vhen you know. Be sure to get the,gei.ulne Phillips' Milk of Magnesia preset ,.-<d by physi- cians for 60 years in correcting excess acids. Each bottle contains full direc- tions â€" any drugstore. Claims Jlany Victims In Canada and should be guarded against. Minard's Liniment Is a G'-oat i'revep.t^itive. bei-is nne of t'le oldest remoiiie* used. Slir.arJs Liniment has relieved thousands of oases of Grippe. Bionchilis. Soro Throat .Asthma and similar diseases. It is an Enemy to Germs. Thousand.s of bottles b«inB. u.^ed every day. For sale bv all d.uRgists anj general dealers. Btinard'i £lnlm«nt Co. I^td. Tarmonth.S'.S. MOTHER OF TWINS HELPED Restored to Health by Taking Lydia E. Pinkhain's Vege- table Compound Mitchell, Ont.â€" "1 had uttle tnin babies and for quite a while after I was so weak I could net do my work because of pains all the way up my legs at the back. I also had headaches anii got very little sleep. I took Lydia K. Pinkhain's Veg- etable Compound, and soon i was able to get up and do my work. I have taken three bottles and I am f ne, do my work without trcuble and am gaining in weight and strength. I â- ^•ill g:adly recommend the Vegetable Coinpoimd to anyone.**â€" Mrs. F. STAnc.v, Box '^20, Mitchell, Ont. ISSUE No. 1 3â€" '29

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