Grey Highlands Newspapers

Flesherton Advance, 18 Sep 1929, p. 7

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i U anaenua TN middle life, when vitality â- '' if not a* 2rtat as it once was, and the blood atream is namrally thinned and d«- Titalizcd, anaemia easily lays hold on the lyscem. At €nt, Jiut a tircci feeling, it quickly results in bodily wealuieas that ordinary tonics cannot avaiL Dr. Willianu' Pink Pills then become a wonderful aidL They supply the necessary oxygen to the blood, inc;-eaie the blood count and renew waning eigor. "I was leized with anae- mia," writes Mrs. Oiarles Lambert of Port Hof-f, Ont., "and was in a very bad state. As a girl I had ta>en Dr. Williams' Pink Pilh for a run-down condition and de- cided to take them one* more. Again the result was marvellous. In a little while I was fully well again." You cannot begin too early to check anaemia. Dr. Wil- liam*' Pink Pills are sold at your druggist's or by mail, postpaid, 50 cenu, from The Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Bsockville, Ont. S45 Eighteen Day Trail Ride reduced lo a fluid state. Later this oil is used in tlie American Hoap In- dustry. 'I'lie 8l<iii3 llietiiselves are tanned anil used for various leather goods. Thx sliins iit tills l<lud ot seal are not used as Iiirs. Tile next lima you enter a leather- ^ouiis sturu to l)iiy a pinseal pocltct- booit, liold (lie articio tu your haiKis and lliirik of this story. Thinit of tlia seals tussliiK "u ttiu ice pans n( the Newroiitidiand coast iu hurricane weallier. Tlilnl< of the hardy men wlio risk their lives waiiting od the ocean lo taiio Ihe pelts. 'I'liinll of Ihu strnriK Newtuundiand vesseltj that hriiiK llieni homo lo supply Itie world with pii'seal nuvelties aud purses for its valiiahles. .> Lights on Horse-drawn Vehicles ,, ., I.e Canada (l.ii).): There can be no The remote Columbia Ice Fields, north of Lake Lonise, was the objective ^,^^^^ j,^^^ ^^ ^^^^^ ^.^^.^^^ ^^^.^^^ ^^ this year of the major Trail Ride of Hie season. These fields are claimed ^..^^.^.y ^ ^^^^^^ ^^^ sonie Kind or other to be the largest body i ( ice south of the Arctic circle, covering :;60 ••square ^(,gg|,gj| ,„ ,(,j ^ear ot hla art when miles in area wliose waters flow into three oceans. Only experienced trail ^ im wa son Ihe main road, It would riders are permitted to lal<e this strenuous trip for which they mu.st possess contribute to a greater degree of safe- at least the silver button emblematic of 100 miles ot trail riding. The Irip.ty with evening trafHc. It would be of ffoni start to finish t. ok eighteen days to complete. Picture sliows two of ' Particular assistance in certain cases the hardy trail riders, W. L. Payne, London, England, and Louis Prevost, of,"'' ''"''^ .Montreal with Guy Thomas, Brewster's guide, on right, together with a section ot the Columbia Ice l-'ields. Ptn BOX PINK PILLS **A HOUSEHOLD NAME IN S4 COUNTRIES '* The Sealing Saga Of Newfoundland Told By Capt. Robt. A. Bartlett in the National Graphic Gives Many A Thrill When Dearth Means Prosperity Vancouver Hun (Lib.): Wheat-grow- ers are jubilant. The price of wheat is soaring: many farmers who had a Very dark outlook are now c.ipetiug a prosperous harvest. And why? Be- cause ... the wheat crop is be-; break Iren«:he3 in the low normal. Bad weather conditians and dynamite, backing, LOST IN A STORM On March 7, the port of St. .lohns. .NewtnuudUnd. is black with men (in that (lay llie sealing Heel sails for tha annual hunt. Eight ships, with ihUO picked men, steam down the harbor. Whistles scream <Jod speed, bells ring out, cannon.=( fire salutes. I have beeu with the sealing fleet I'J limes, and on almost as many Arctic e.\peditions with Peary and others. Sealing is certainly more dangerous than Arctic exploring. The best sealing trip 1 ever made was iu the Houaventure, my llrst steel vessel. The details of it gan go tor the other sealing trijis, too. We start- "'P'* ed out against a cu mile wind, taking '''i"''^'«^"t "'"" ="«l ""^y Prepan waves clean over the bridge, to no time the ship was one solid block of ice. Ne.xt day we reached calm water under the weather edge of the Ice. For a while we made good progress through leads in Ihe ice, but finally were jammed. We had .o resort to all the old tricksâ€" pultiiif out. men lo ice wit^ a.xes and charging sweeten the tea. turnips and beans. Could some ot the old sealing crews take a look at ihese piovisions, Itiey'd Ihink the business was ruined by lu.t- urious living. They had nolhing but hard biscuit and lea, pork and duff, with little grease In the duff. No soft breat whatever. On ship we have what we call Solo- mon Uoss's birthday. He has a birth- day three limes a week. On tliese days tor the noon meal we get du£t. l''or dull. Hour la barrel lo a batch) is stirred with water, currants, and mo- lasses. With a blade like a canoe paddle, Ihe cook nii.\es it into a paste and adds fat from boiled pork as shortening The dough is then pack- ed into snial canvas ba^s and boiled I for Iwo or three hours. Pork is boiled lalong-iide Ilia flufl', and when duff and I pork are ready the cook alls the roll 1 and hands it out. On Sunday morning Ihe crew gets "brose" â€" boiled bread and codfish with I pork gravy spreal over it. Butter, ! fresh beet, salt fish, potatoes, and lur- meeling when the headlights nf an aulomohile coming in the op- posite direction prevent, even when they are dimmed, one seeing the cart j which l.s directly in front of one's own i car, anil it is seen often enough too I late. i More cups to the pound, more flavor in the cup, more tang to the taste. That's what makes Red Rose Tea so popular. Every package guaranteed. ea REDRpSE is good tea RED ROSE ORANGE PEKOE is extra good Rotherhithe and Its Memories IS THERE A BABY IN YOUR HOME? Is there a hany or young children in your :iome? If there is you should not 1)0 without a box of fiaby's Own Tab- lets. Childhood allnieuts come quickly and meai s should always be at baud The gcnuB loci of Rollierliithe, like that of every otliei part of the fascin- ating .longeries of amphibian com- nuiaities, called collectively, Thames- sile, i« a possession peculiar to itself. It is a thing impossible to defino with any exactitude, made up as it is of so many and such vario'..j components, appealing to each and all of the sensos in turn; of sights, and sounds, and smells, pleasing and unpleasing alike â€" of chance-see name:, on street cor- ners, or over warehouses, or on the fronts of waterside inns â€" of scraps of ol 1 history ar.d old association â€" of the crying of gulls and thff wash and gurgle of the tide unJer the wharves, ard the comings and goings of ships along the centuries. And yet â€" vague and elu.r've and indescribable as it is â€"there is in it, none the less for that, someth iig entirely individual and un- mistakable; so tha^ if any one fa- miliar with the region in general were t be suddenly dropped down in a par- Cla8sified Advertisements wo STI2A.M PUMPS. l.N PRFIFECT cnniliiiun, larse c.-ipaclty. WallUns. {oom 4::i. 73 AOelakle St West Toronto. I3I.\'13 STEAM UOII-ER. 150 H.P., vorv cheap, iiiiply Watklns Rooin Ti AdcluidB Street West Toronto. T H 4-1. ti) promptly fight ihem. Baby's (Jwn Tablets are the ideal home remedy, j ticular corner of it "he had never seen regulate 'he bowels: sweeten I uef ore, he would probably be able to .say and at once unerringly: "This is They regulate 'he Ih stomach; banish constipation and I indigestion; lireak up colds and slm- j pie 'evor.iâ€" in fact they relievo all the minor ill? ot little ones. Concerning them .Mrs. .\loise (,'abotte, Makamlk. I Que., writes. "Baby's Own Tablet! are the best remedy in the world for â- little ones. .My baby suffered terribly 'from indigestion and vomiting, but the !Tabl3is soon set her right and now have cut down the expected yield. Hence price sure going up. Industry with (lur armored prow. Anu so at last we got through lo ica where lay are wh eked out to Ihe men at meals for ihemselves except on Solomon Gosss birthchiys. When wa get among young seals we boil or fry Ihe seal meat. With onions and butter, I like it better than porterhjuse steak and in the North it prevents scurvy. Each man ieavin:: Ihe ship has on his back a "nuniiy" hag, in which he carries an orange or two lo ((uench his thirst, some raw oatmeal mixed with sugar, a tew hard biscuits, and a piece ot seal or pork. This Is his grub tor a day on the ice. A soalei must be (|uick aud careful in his work. Every hole in a skin she is In perfect health." The Tab- lets ara sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., vile, Ont. j worker and a man who can kill, skin, aud pan -that is, haul the pelts to a marker â€" lem" tion. worthy ot a good deal ot atten- strives tor the greatest possible pro-, a great patch of seals. Imagine yonr-| duciion. Agriculture is compelled to , self in Central I'ark surriunu. .: by j poiMl the other way. A lime ot plenty ; thousands ot sheep and newborn costs a man ten cents. A skillful is apt to be a time of hardship, a ' lambs. This Is what it looked like. | worker can skin a seal in a minute, time ot dearth Is apt to mean pros- 1 1 Put tone crewsâ€" ;:34 menâ€" on the perity. Right there is a "farm prob-,'ce. They began killing and panning! the seals, knocking them on the heads 1-U in a day is a good hand, with a gait, removing the sulps or j One Of the hardships of sealing Is pelts, and hauling them lo markLU-s. ' ice or snow blindness. Although all Markers are colored dags, like golf i men carry goggles, and are lectured flags, stuck in Ihe ice at each pile ot!and threatened with puni.shment it sculps, so that the ship can come lo ] they don't wear them, they are often pick Ihem up. careless. They raise their glasses. The crews killed some SOOO seals perhaps, to wipe the sweat out ot that lirst atteruoonâ€" all young ones. | their eyes ami torget to pull them because the "white coals" are the | down again. Then, before they real- sealer's "rst choice. For three full i^e their danger, they are blind. I days the work went on from daylight 'don't know ot any worse sensation, to dark. On the fourth day a furious i It is like having sand thrown in The Young Plan New York World: The Voung plan Is realistic If one overlooks the un- reiliiles of French policy which are Us pionilse. But the British, as we noA ran see, are striking at the un real premises. They are Insisting on an I'lid of French diploinatic privilege in Kiiropean affairs, and la this insist- aiii-f they have set their feet on a path which, though ditticult, dangerous .surely Roth-rithe It Is nit, perhaps, so historical a locality as Blackwell, or even as Its. own near neighbor. Deptfordâ€" al- though, as shall presently be seen, it has associations in tliia sort by no means to be despised. It is not ci-aly like Wapping, nor leathery like Ber- mondsej. . . iis p>i;'.om'_>iant smell ... so to speak â€" is that of lumber. . . You may walk its streets all day and seldom see a black face, or a yel. Brock- i l"w. or a brown Its romance is the wi rld-old romance of. sea-fariug, and commerce, and toil. It is an honest place, a workaday place, and â€" for all its superficial covering of London grime â€" a clieerful place. . . There are pleasant glimpses to be caught ot the river and its busy traf- fic, or funnel.^ of many colors and the flags vt many nations, ot bustling lugs, of the brown sails ot barges- even, once in a way. cf a square-rig- ger, a fair lady of old time. . . . There is a sudden vignelle. perhaps, of a swan sailing. Incredibly white, ama/t- inply aloof, among the crow:ded ship- ping. There ai'o old, rickety, lean- ing riverside inns whose nnnios are the names of battles ling ago, or ot East Indiainen wliose timbers liave| long been dust. There are tarry j odours from dark caverns wher? barges have been built for goner.a-i lionsâ€" now. alas! given over to the construction ot the dumb barges and | lighters which are slowly but surely | displacing the picturesque brown sails ot tradition. There are ancient j watermen's shops, all but deserted,; yet where you may still, now and COMPASSION There never was any heart truly great and (fangeroHB, that was not also tender and compassional; it Is this noble quality that makes all men to be ot one kind; for every man would be a distinct species to hiiiiselt were there no sympathy among individuals. â€"South. fi lBLS WANTED HAiimnEssi.N'n a.\d beal'ty CI/'l.TUItE la the mpst remunoratr.e or.'.esslon indav WE OFFER THE MOST ITF-TO- SATE COURSE IN CANDIDA. Hundreds of satisfied eraUuules. Write for free booklet. Toronto Halrdressing Academy 137 Avenue Bd., Toronto. Sept. W BUNS • RIFLES • CARTRIDGES SPORTSMEN'S SUPPUES ( 'hfafer or lirttcr Write fcrrCataUigut T. W. BOYD & SON 3;i; None Da« SL W., HONTRUl ^30weekl4Jy ^ WiM'ifn Kftrn up to to 530 wffkly. -cwiiiK. siiare tinif, IluUiit; tVucks Hume, plain cflsy sewinjj, experience iin- iiece^sarv. materials ready cut. instructions furnish-^''. Dresn Specialty Co. Dept B 445 St. r. Xi- : r. MouireaJ WEEKLY NEWSPAPER FOR SALE Well equipped for publishing and printing, doing good business. Must have substantial down pay- ment. Good reason for selling. Apply Box 8, WILSON PUBLISHING CO, LTD. 73 Adelaide St. W Torsnto Shoi^<â„¢dM J';-,..;'.4" ,;;iij-iilied shorthand â€" .ind typing mas- .,uj in spare time ntliomc. Easier to ItMrn and write. Typewriter sup- plied. Write for Free Les.son TODAY. Dominion School Telegraphy Ltd. I>cpt. W 1,. I T'lniii!.) Stop Sneezing the \ pockets because one ;an go finil inconvenient, leads Ihjuldation o tthe war. to a final The correct length of the skirt for davtime wear will be three iuches be- low the knee. For dressy afternoon and evening wear the skirl proper varies iu lengtb from S to 15 Inches from the Hoor. Trailing lines are ob tallied by godets and flounces which often form a slight train. L U X O FOR THE HAIR Ask Your Barber â€" He Knows gale sprang up, with blinding snow and [reezitig weather, and only by Ihe greatest labor did we salvage -6,ljU0O of the pelts scattered on the ica pans. But that was the biggest calch, e.tcept one last year, ever brought In from the ijult of St. Lawrence. tjeaiing is a hard life. Men on board ii sealer are Jammed like sardines. Going out. every available bit ot space is filled with coal, ice-flghling equip- ment, sealers chests and gear. It we get a quick "pickup," many ot the | f'ose wet clothes oft or have them men are "burned out" by a big cargo j f''eeze on him as stiff as the pillar^ ot i ^g^^jp^ o,,^ .\nierian friends ot skins, which lakes up their bunk ) '-ot's "ife. The two seek the big!i*ci-i: -^,g gijg|,(est (race of a claim. Canada space, and they've got to double up in , pinuacle of ice, and in the lee ot it thepvin develop it herself and liave it tor j "''^"'" wet man strips off his clothes. His buddy lerds him all the clothes he can ! vails, she wi spare, while they wring out the wet | ^y^^ qj jf then, get a boat to put you over the water as In days gone by.â€" C, Fox I Smith, In ".Vucicnt Jlariners." Nip tliat cold iu the bud Minard's. Heat and inhale. with 'eyeballs. Water runs out of the eyes, j them at night without a light." 'with a good dose of it, men have al- •> I .> ; most become insane. The St. Lawrehce Waterway stop Colds vi/ith Minard's Liniment. [ Then, again, there is the danger ot I Vancouver Province (Ind. Cons.): | 'â- ' falling into Ihe water when a long dis- ; xhe question of electric power Is an' * GOAL lance from the ship. Here is a sealer important one. Canada will get more â-  The man who conquers is the one I who has slipped into the water. He power out n° the development than^^'*") moves steadily, persistently, over has "gone down till his cap floated" jjig united States, but this is because : '•'•8' '"«'•" towanl his goal, unmindful land he Is soaking wet. His "buddy" | g],g i^y ^ g|.g.^ nmny inore miles of I "''"^'l'^'" "'^ 6°"' '^ always in sight or jhas fished him out with a galT. A gale [river than her neighbor. On the ln?,i>ot- lot wiud is blowingâ€" freezing weather , ier„.ational seolion, the powjjr will be 'and no shelter. But he has to get j Jivided equally between the two conn The leading French style dictators tries. To the power on the Canadian i'"»^'« "''"P^^'' ^es^HeH. while, black haven't I ^'"^ purpleâ€" the latter running to the dahlia shades â€" for normal evening already crowded quarters. There Is some relief la the watches, when one man is out and another can use his berth. A sealing ship carries provisions tor two months and a halfâ€" potatoes, cod- flsb, flour, meat, lea, and molasses to It the present sentiment pre- not export a single kllo- -I WhenPain Comes ones. Then he must haul the clothes back onâ€" an awful task. The chance of losing his men on the ico iu a fog or blizzard is a work that always besets a captain. It must be remembered that this work goes on at the worst time oi year, when gales of wind aud snow are Ihe usual thing.! Every morning a skipper must de- 1 cide whether to put his men on thej Ice or not. and the decision is often fraught with an.iiety. In 1914 the steamship Newfoundland put its men ashore just before a terrific blizzard. When the weather cleared n«xt day, 77 men had beeu lost, frozen while they attempted lo get back to the ship. On another trip the Greenland lost 48 men during a storm. Often, too. In a storm, the ship Itself gets "nipped" In the le and Is sunk. Ot 57 famous seal- ing steamers, 2D have been lost. What do the men get out ot all this hard work'/ The vessel may make a I Empire Solidarity i IlamiUon Spectator (Ind. Cons.): I There has been a great dea lot t:i!!: 1 about the possibilities ot making the i Urilish commonwealth a self con taiti- jed trade unit, and grandiose proposals ot moie or less practical teasibility have been made; but the talk period ^appears to be happily passing now In- ito the stage ot concrete action. The { energetic manner In which the British j administration Is exploring the oppor- ! |tunities and the steps it Is taking to' I bring about definite action cannot fall to produce good results. ! ChUdrenGyl for *^ iCASTORiAl A BASY RBMEDY APPUOVED BY DOCTOR^ fOSCOUC C0NSTll>MION.Dl«VRHH[* What many people call Indigestion less alkali In water will neutralize In- quick pick-up and be through In a few Very often means excess acid in the •tomach. The stomach nerves have been iiver-stlmulated, and food sours. The (orrective Is an alkali, which neutralizes acids instantly. And the best alkali known to medical science Is I'hllllps' Milk of Magnesia. It has stantly many times as much acid, aud the symptoms disappear at once. You will never use rude methods once you learn the efflclency ot this. Go get a small bottle to try. Be sure to get the genuine Phillips' days; again, two months vessels have been out and returned without a a sealer P"""'''"'"' °' 20,000,000 gets Is food and a "crop note," an ad- ' ""^^^ °' Kâ„¢^^"* vance ot $9. One-third ot the net Propably^wll be is divided among the crew. earnings .. _..„ Milk ot Magnesia prescribed by physl- , Shares have run as high as $233, but ^ I growth remained the standard with physicians clans for 50 years In correcting excess the average Is about $60. U the 50 years since Us luventlon. One spoonful ot this harmless, taste- acids. Each bottle contains tuU dlrec- tloDSâ€" any drugstore. iWhen the skins reach St. Johns, the valuable fat Is scraped from them and Minard's Llnlmer.tâ€" The King of Pain Canada's Increase i Saskatoon Star (Lib.): The natural Increase and t;ie balance o* Immigra- tion over emigration now combine to produce an annual gain ot 1..3 per cent. The doubling period at this rate is more than halt a century as it was before 1900. That Is to say. It will be 19S0 before Canada has a unless the is accelerated. It The opening ot the I Hudson Bay route, the exploitation of ^ minerals ot the nortii, and the ot trade with the Orient are have that effect . â€" :- She looks 20 years younger •â-  I have taken Knischon Salts for 7 ycaisi and eiicloso my pliuto at. .')0, to ask your opiiiloa ot my record. I liavo lieea iiiarrieil ;!0 yi«m have :! BoiiH, 21t, :!&, lit; also '.: graiiiiwuis, 6 nnil '2i> moiillLs. I put iliiwn uiy yoiiihlid apiM-sranco to Kriischcn Salts taken eacli niuniliiR. I Kliniilil never thluK ol elaillug tlic Jay without taking them. " I Mn bit. b\n. In helRht, weight 110 poiinilt. I can assure you my Uiisbaud Is very proud of uic," Mrs. .\. It. Orlclo&l leUer oa niB for laipecttoa. 7\> prf nerve ynnr youthful rhann yo» »ii(»< jprf/fnf your health. Charm and Tirnnty are mainly a matter of health, so arfl vitality nfid riffour. All Kill he j/nurn if you pin your faith in Vie " mile ilaily 'limrlul. Start to-morrmr, and you n-ill feft yean younger before you ar^ iMnv daya older. Krujchen *all» In nhtalnable »t drUR and department st4>r?fl In Caiiaila at 75e. a liottle. A iKittlo c.iiilaliis riioiiKli to last for * or fl moaUitâ€" itowt hoAlUi lot Uall-a-ccat a day. fSSUE No. 37^'29 FARMER'S WIFE GETS STRENGTH By Taking Lydia E. Pink- ham's Vegetable Compound ^^"ilton, Ont.â€" "I am taking Lydia E. Pinkliam's 'Vegetable Compound through I he Change of Life. It helps me and I cannot praise it too highly. 1 was troubled with heat Hashes and my iinbs were heavy so I could hardly walk to do my farm work. 1 saw in the newspapers your ad about the VogPtalile Com- pound and thought to give it a trial. The first bottle gave mo relief and 1 have told others what it dofes for me. I am willing for you to use my letter ii you choose." â€" Mhs, D. B. I'ETEKS, Wilton, (.)ntario. Ask Yoiu Neighbor

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