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Oshawa Daily Times, 31 Aug 1931, p. 4

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a + san i he bona Sh G, The Oshawa Daily Times : Succeeding THE OSHAWA DAILY REFORMER © (Established 1871) ms ---- An independent newspaper published every after- noon phy ising legal holidays at Osh- Kanada, by The Times Publishing Company. of wa, immited, Chas. M, Mundy, President A. R. Alloway, Managing Director. ¢ Oshawa Daily Times is a member of The Cana- i Press, the Canadian Daily Newspaper: . Asso- i the Ontario Provincial Dailies and the Audit Burean of Circulations. SUBSCRIPTION RATES Delivered by carrier in Oshawa and suburbs, 12¢. a week. By mail in Canada (outside Oshawa car- rier delivery limits) $300 a year. United States $4.00 a year, TORONTO OFFICE 18 Bond Building, 66 Temperance Street. Telephone Adelaide 0107, H. D. Tresidder, representative. 7) MONDAY, AUGUST 31st, 1931 Britain Prime Minister Great Britain's Prime Minister. Ramsay MacDonald, has been repudiated by the British Labor Party because he has had the courage of his convictions. The history of the world through the ages tells us that many men have been repudiat- _ed for the same cause but this does not ap- pear to have greatly damage their reputa- tions in the opinion of posterity. Outstanding world statesmen of every political faith have endorsed the action of Ramsay MacDonald as not only truly cour- ageous but wise. When wisdom and cour- age are combined in any man that usually makes history. . Lights On Bicycles Attention has recently been drawn through the news columns of this paper to the fact that the majority of cyclists using the streets of Oshawa do not carry lights on their machines after dark. The Highway Traffic Act is quite em- phatic in laying down regulations to the ef- fect that all cyclists must earry lights when on the travelled roads of the province. The paragraph in which this regulation occurs is of no less importance than the paragraph calling upon motor vehicle drivers to carry lights on their machines. We would ask, then, why there should be such a difference in the enforcement of the two clauses so far as the local authorities are concerned especially when cyclists are continually placing their own lives in jeop- ardy through their own infringement of the regulations. The Mississippi Train On Friday of this week Oshawa is to have a brief visit from one hundred guests from the Mississippi Valley who are travelling through Canada on the "Know Mississippi + Better Train". We presume this party is desirous of tell- ing us about the beauties and other attrac- tions of the Mississippi Valley, but that is no reason why Oshawa should not take ad- ~vantage of the opportunity to acquaint + 'these goodwill ambassadors with the beau- ties and advantages of the City of Oshawa. Bowmanville has already made plans to show the visitors what they have in the capital of West Durham. They will show them the Boys' Training School, Cream of * Barley Camp and other "points of interest" and will cap their hospitality with the pre- sentation of two barrels of the best apples procurable in the district. Oshawa cannot afford to be put in the shade by Bowmanville and we sincerely hope our City Council and Chamber of Com- merce will not miss this. opportunity to en- 'tertain these visitors in a manner that re- presentative citizens of Oshawa would ap- preciate if they were travelling in an or- ganized party through a foreign land. Swift Justice . We hear so much of tardy justice in the United States that it is only fair to note \. 'any-outstanding instance to the contrary. ~The horrors of the Ypsilanti torch murders had hardly become known throughout the - continent before the Michigan police had got on the tracks of the criminals, and their capture, confession, and sentence, all within twenty-four hours, surely marks a new standard for swift justice in the State of Michigan, if not for the entire republic. This is the real American spirit,--not the spurious thing that masquerades behind the tortuous ways of the appeal courts and the intricate and cumbersome methods by which the process of justice can be impeded. The fact that the Ypsilanti criminals confessed of course made things infinitely easier, but even then the resoluteness with which the officers of justice pursued their duty, de- fying a maddened mob and successfully 'bringing their prisoners into Court, must 'give real satisfaction to those millions of Americans who are still hoping that the "wheels of justice may some time run swift- "ly and surely as they did in the days of old. The explanation of the a pt of the mob to the criminals lies in the fact that has no capital punishment for murder, and it was the feeling of the whole community that such fiends should _ be hanged. It would be a good thing if : Michigan changed her law.--Montreal Star. The Newspaper However ugely] radio may be as a means of entertainment, its value as an advertis- ing medium or as a means of disseminating useful information is not to be compared with the usefulness of the daily newspaper which goes into the homes of the people day after day and is passed from hand to hand and religiously read by practically every member of the family who realizes that the printed word is the last word and usually absolutely to be depended upon. Unlike the radio, the newspaper does not "tune in" for a brief 15 minute whirlwind speech--and at a time when perhaps only a handful of people may be listening in, nor is it disturbed by storm or static or poor connection. It is constant and dependable and if laid down under necessity af one mo- ment or another is picked up again later that the messages and the news that it car- ries may be fully read. It is not a "fifteen minute" affair but of much more perman- ence and substance.--Kingston Whig-Stan- dard. ' Editorial Notes The methodical way in which the Lind- berghs are approaching Siberia and Japan indicate that Mrs. Lindy is not a back seat driver.--St. Catharines Standard. When Malthus predicted the eventual overproduction of the earth he did not fore- see the era of automobiles, gunmen, and synthetic liquor.--Quebec Chronicle-Tele- . graph. "I don't like those sad, depressing films," said a man the other day. "I enter a movie theatre optimistically and I don't want to come out misty optically."--Montreal Star. An authority on table etiquette says: "Never break your crackers or roll in your soup." Well, who ever really wanted to roll in their soup, anyway ?--XKitchener Record. Divorces and marriages are both on the increase in United States. Why not when so many of the divorces are for purposes of remarriages 7--Port Arthur News-Chron- icle. . A correspondent tells us that he has tra- velled over a thousand miles in a car for which he paid only £5 a month ago. He evidently knows how to drive a bargain.-- The Humorist. If all the actors in Hollywood were laid end to end it would probably be because they were making scenes for gangster pic- tures.--Judge. Other Editor's Comments ITS A KEY (St. Catharines Standard) : The classified advertisement when published in the newspaper, not infrequently shows a "pulling power" astonishing even to those who are familiar with what can be accomplished through the agency. Though occupying little space and inconspicuous both as to position and size of the type used, every want ad in the daily newspaper is read hy "hundreds of persons. And in that number there will almost certainly be some who are interested in the adver- tiser's announcement, no matter what it may be. It is not surprising, therefore, to find the classi- fied columns being put to strange uses. One of the most novel is revealed in the report that an eminent psychologist, desirous of making a sociolo- gical study of women occupying high school and financial positions, used want ads in American and British newspapers as a means of getting into touch with such persons. This suggests that more extensive use might be made of the classified advertisement as an adjunct to science. If information is desired and there are people who can furnish it, it is practically certain that a want ad will reach them. It may be desired to buy something or sell something, to obtain a situation or to obtain help, to recover something lost or discover the owner of something found; whatever it is, the classified advertisement is likely to bring it within reach if anything can do it. BITS OF HUMOR Conductor: "Hurry up there--these people want to get on." i § Timid Passenger: "Yes, it's all right for you, youre thinking of your jolly old bus--I'm thinking of my bag of eggs." You haven't lost cverything until you've lost hope, i -------- The age-old problem of mothers-in-law cropped up for discussion at the men's club. Mr. Cum-Munday waxed bitter in his remarks against them. "My mother-in-law has only visited me once since 1 got married, ® he mentioned. "Well, you're jolly lucky," sail Mr. Go-Toosday. "I can't see what you've got to complain about." "Lucky, you say," said Mr. Cum-Munday. "Why, she's never left." BITS OF VERSE had TUNNEL The light of day goes a long way into the tunnel-- Not sunlight itself, but water-light Distinct from the sun's golden wine: It pours through the neck, and we jerk along the . funnel Straining with us the last grey vertical line. But in vain, for the eyeballs press against black pansies i And globe-feather poppies that cannot grow in the t; . ; Eye-fuls of weighing dark softness. Then ne of the petals is torn, and in faster succes- si From grey to grey brick-line brightening = the. ck; ; : Till unbroken brook-light, and out between fields flooded i) Flower-deep in the sun's wine, Eye "Care "and Eye Strain by C. H. Tuck, Ope, D, (Copyright, 1988) YOUR CHILD AND THE EYES Part 26 The amount of use of the eyes of a child varies with the child. The aim of the teacher is to in- struct, and gvade by grade, the progress may be measured as studies learned from the printed page. If some very serious vis- ual weakness is developed it makes it very bad indeed for the one so afflicted. However, edu- cation does not necessarily depend upon what is learned from the printed page only. Those with poor vision may take their train- ing and obtain graduation from sight-saving classes with a stan- dard as high as any of us, It is true they could not keep pace with those of better vision in the better vision classes. This is due to their handicaps. Place them in the proper class and give them intellicent care and training and many a bright student mentally develops where their handicap neglected would point them to a much lower place. a When the eyes of growing chil- dren in our schools and at home are jeopardized, the assistance of your Optometrist should be sought and the proper attention given before the danger becomes too great. (To be continued) ORVILLE ELDER, PUBLISH- FR OF THE WASHINGTON (IOWA) JOURNAL SAYS: THAT newspaper advertising is the life insurance of any com- munity. Take that influence out of any town or city and "the mourners move about the streets; the merchant weeps for his cus- tomers and refuses to be com- ferted, because they are not." Newspaper advertising has be- come such a fixed part of the in- tricate mechanisms of retail com- 1aerce that the wheels refuse to go around without the advertis- mg grease. It is not the mission of newspaper advertising to tell the customer where to buy some- thing that he doesn't need. It is the mission of newspaper adver- tising to help a customer supply his needs satisfactorily, promptly, and at a reasonable price. The columns of newspaper ad- vertising in your home paper, or papers, are a '"'directory' to which you can refer with the assurance that in so doing you will receive instructions that will expedite your shopping "expedition; tell you where to go, when, and what yon can do when you get there. THERE WILL BE NO BEWILD- LERMENT, NO, DOUBT, NO CON- FUSION. THEY DIRECT YOU IN A MANNER THAT REQUIRES THE LEAST ROSSIBLE PHYSI- CAL AND MENTAL EFFORT AND IN THAT FUNCTION MIN- IMIZE INTERFERENCE WITH YOUR "FAVORITE PHANTOM." SHOW INCREASE IN POPULATION Census Figures | Show Cities and Towns on Up Trend Ottawa, Aug. 31.--A further preliminary census announce- ment covering the population in a large number of cities and totvns which were not covered in the previous statement, was is- sued this afternoon by the Dom- inion Bureau of Statistics. The bureau stated, in making the an- nouncement that returns are sub- ject to correction as additions on account of closed houses and ab- sentees have yet to be made. The figures given are as of June 1 of the present year. Twenty-nine out of 36 Ontario cities and towns listed show in- creased populations, the most notable being Timmins with a gain of 10,299 and Sandwich with 6,281 more than in 1921. The city of London gained 10,063 and Oftawa 17,145. Oakville and srimsby both show increases. The seven centres registering de- creases are: Wingham, Parls, Mitchell, Milton, Chesley, Am- herstburg and Trout Creek, the latter in Parry Sound district. The announcement covering cities and towns in Eastern Can- ada, includes: Ontario Population Cities and Towns 1931 1921 Loudon . 71,022 60,959 Ottawa 124,988 107,843 Poterborough . 22,289 20,904 Amherstburg .. 2,764 2,769 Aurora ...... 2,307 Bala .... 346 Bracebridge .. 2,451 Bruce Mines .. 4717 Burlington, ... 2,709 Chesley 1,708 Durham Dsgex'. . ; 'Gieorgetow 'n., Goderich ..... Grimsby ..... Hanover ..... Huntsville . Kearney . Keswatin o Kingsville . .. wea sae Little Current 1,096 'and to take 1,835 1,683 3,743 8,867 4,131 642 10,696 880 LR] Newmarket .,. Dakville Paris ...ce0e Powassan Sandwich .... Smooth Rock Falls .... Tecumseh .... Tilbury ...... Timmins .... Trout Creek .. Walkerton Wingham WILL DESPATCH GOODWILL SHIP Canada To Send Products in Special Vessel to Australia Toronto. -- Preparationg for the despatch to Aus- tralia of a good will ship, laden with Canadian goods for export to the Commonwealth, are un- der way, according to a state- ment issued by J. E. Walsh, gen- eral manager of the Canadian Manufacturers' Association, Plans for the special voyage are the result of the trade agreement re- cently concluded between Can- ada and Australia. The vessel, the Canadian Con- structor, of the Canadian Na- tional Steamship Lines, will leave Montreaj Oct, 256 bound for Australian ports. A similar trip for which arrangements are now underway here. The Canadian Constructor, 10,500 tons, will sail from Aus- tralian ports, laden with a var- fety of Commonwealth products for sale to Canada, leaving its last port of call Sept. 6 and ar- riving in Montreal Oct. 17. The statement draws the al- tention of Canada exporters to the "unique opportunity which is offered by the good-will steamer to open up trade with Australia advantage of the substantial concessions provided under the treaty. A very large range of Canadian products," fit says, "under the provisions of the treaty are conceded the Australian-British preferential tariff rates." QUEBEC LOSES BIG BUSINESS Ceases To Exist as Popular Martimonial Bureau seve 2,430 1,952 ses The city of Quebec has lost all its charm as a matrimonial bureau since Mayor Lavigueur ceased an- swering letters from English and Canadian girls seeking husbands in the Dominion of Canada, but a huge pile of letters, accompanied in the majority of cases by photographs, is mute evidence that a number of lads and lassies were keenly desiru- ous of plunging into the sea of mat- rimony, Despite the fact that the Mayor has personally stopped replying to letters, there are a number still ar- riving and epistles from Brighton, North Devon, Salisbury Plains, Chi- chester, Durham, Rutland, Liverpool Bexhill, Margate, London, Leeds, Stoke-on-Trent and a host of other places are.on file, as well as mes- sages from Lanarkshire, Glasgow and other Scottish points. Two girls, Betty and Hilda, have written, expounding their ideas on what they would like in the shape of Canadian husbands, but they failed to enclose their photographs. although they described everything about themselves. One girl writing from Chesterfield states that she would like to be "a housekeeper on a farm for an old couple or a bachelor. "If anyone would invest $50 or $60 by sending me a third class ticket, they would never regret it," she writes, adding as an afterthought: "Please do not publish my address, as it's wonder- ful how it finds its way back to our local papers and gossipers." Jean, of Verdun, sent a letter to the Mayor, asking him to find her a boy companion, while a young man in Guelph, Ont., wants to find a wife, as does a youth from Queen's County, New Brunswick. People living in Chicago must have heard of Quebec being a mat- rimonial bureau, for Oscar S., of that city, wrote Mayor Lavigueur asking him to find him a wife. Now, when anybody writes relative to finding a husband or wife, they re- ceive a printed letter from the May- or, and the matter is closed, the let- ter being filed away, and there the matter remains, In the City Hall there is a thick file of letters and photos, the lat- ter being of blondes and brunettes, as well as in-betweens and ranging from good-loking to plain. There are girls in all walks of life who scek a fresh start in Canada, A dentist's widow, who is now work- ing on the outskirts of London, pen- ning a wistful message to the effect that she would like to find a hus- band in Canada, The City of Quebec acquired in- ternational fame through an Eng- lish girl resident in Greeec writing to the Mayor and asking him if he could find her a Canadian hushand. The girl's letter was published in various newsparers, and a Mont- realer wrote to the Mayor, the out- come being that the pair were mar- tied some little while after. . This happy ending started a flood of letters from all parts of England and Scotland, and finally caused or- ders to be issued to the effect that no more were to be answered. "There," a self-satisfied 'com mercial' said, "that's what I think you should do in the matter I'm not a lawyer, but this is a bit of advice that costs you nothing." "Well," replied his companion mildly, "it's worth itl" THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES MONDAY, AUGUST 31, 193 Honor Indian Hero M¢hiiosh, Ojibway Brave and Indian guide attached to th French River Bungalow Camp, is as modest as he is courageous. It is three years ago since, with heavy odds against him, he rescued Miss Elfreide Ossman and Dr. J. Schwartz, of Chicago, from the eddies of the Blue Rapids on the French River into which they had been flung from an overturned canoe. Hg told not a word of his exploit which came at last to the notice of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police. Enquiries were set on foot, the facts came to light and the upshot was the presenta- tion to Meshkiosh this month at the French River Camp of the bronze medal for bravery of the Royal Humane Society. The pre- sentation was made by the Indian Agent at a gathering of 120 guests of the camp headed by Manager Jack Strathdee, at which the Chiefs of the tribe in full regalia of feather headdress and richly em- broidered coats participated. Meshkiosh (left, bareheaded) is shown in the photograph with the medal which is being examined by an Ojibway Chief. MISSISSIPPI T0 BE DISPLAYED Special Train With Dele- gates From U.S.A, Here Sept. 4 Two hundred and fifty ambassa- dors of good will from the state of Mississippi, U.S.A, will arrive in Oshawa in a special train via the Canadian Pacific, Sept. 4, to sell the health, wealth, culture and beauty of their home commonwealth in Dixieland to the people of Oshawa in particular and Canadians in gen- eral, The special, which is named "The Know Mississippi Better Train of 1931," is making an extensive ten- day tour of the United States and Canada. Special cars containing displays of natural and manufaectur- ed products of Mississippi will be open to the public. Dennis Murphce, former gover- nor and recently elected lieutenant governor of the State of Mississipoi, is general chairman of the tour. All aboard the special train are Mis- sippians excepting H. B. Watkins, advertising manager, and E. W. Hadland of the Masonite Corpor- ation, Chicago--the products of which are manufactured at Laurel, Miss. The train will make stops at Bowmanville, Ottawa, and Toronto, en route on its homeward bound journey to the States. With this seventh annual the "Know Mississippi Better Train" will have traversed every state in the United States and Mex- ico, and every province in Canada, covering a distance of more than 40,000 miles, tour, SURVEY BAY OF FUNDY FISHING POSSIBILITIES Biological Board Probes | | ire and marshmallow roast. Deep Water Resources to Determine Commercial Prospects Saint John, N.B.--Although a survey of deep-water fishing pos- sibilities in the Bay of Fundy has not yet been completed, it has been established that the situa- tion is much more satisfactory than had been anticipated. This was the view expressed to the Saint John Board of Trade by Dr. A. G, Huntsman, of the Biol- ogical Station at St. Andrews, who is in charge of the survey. Possibility of the deep-sea fish- ery resources of the bay being of greater potential value than here- tofore believed was the most im- portant point brought out at the conference, at which representa- tives of the ' fishing industry, members of the staff of the biolo- gical station, and business men were present. Comparatively little was known of the deep-sea resources of the Bay, because up until the present, efforts of.the fishermen had been largely concentrated on the in- shore and shallow water catches, Dr. Huntsman pointed out. Nei- ther boats nor men had been a- vailable for venturing far from shore. "We are convinced that the re sources are there," said F. M. Sclanders, commissioner of the board of trade, 'and it would seem as though the most effective way to have them developed would be to interest some large fishing concern with the necessary capital and experience to go at it in the proper way. We are al- ready working with that end in view." Until two years ago, all the haddock used in Saint John had come chiefly from other than lo- cal resources, and until the last year and a half there had been lit- tle cod and haddock fishing in the bay, it was shown. Fish were much more plentiful near the mouth of the bay than near the shore, where activity varied great- ly in intensity. One cause for the decline in shad near the head of the bay was said to be excessive and un- | controlled fishing and sawdust from nearby mills polluting the rivers. This was being remedied. and this year had seen more shad in the rivers than at any other time in thirty seasons. The Biological Board's survey is concerning {itself chiefly with establishing the commercial pos- sibilities of deep-sea fishing, be- yond the limite now fished to a certain extent along the shore, Change in Feminine Fashions Injuring Textile Industry | London,-- (By " The Canadian Press)--A blight has fallen upon the weol textile industry. silk, blind faith in the father-to- gon tradition of ownership, the entiquated nature of so many of tne mills contpared with those of foreign rivals are discussed by an expert, A. J. Cummings, in The News-.Chronicle: "The wool textile industry has teen terrifically hit all over the world by the change to domestic fashions. Whereas a costume in 1914 took cloth of the orler of 5% yards, in 1930 it was of the order of 23 yards. [trol of West Indian insect is being carried out by Dr. and The | The stockings | "Since the popilation of the Empire may be estimated at about 450 millions, an additional population of some 45,000,000 could be supported by the same i effort as is now exerted, if it were possible to eliminate insect pests." An investigation into the con- pests Mrs. Myers on behalf of the Em- pire Marketing Board, the chair- Joan of which is Mr, J. H. Thom- Two Years' Work Dr. and Mrs. Myers have spent nearly two years in the West In- dies searching for insect para- sites to prey upon pests, One pest alone, the froghop- per, destroyed £300,000 worth of sugar cane--about a quarter of the crop--in Trinidad in a single year. Dr, Myers has an international reputation for his knowledge of insects, and his wife has endured great hardships and privations in her work for science, Although the work in the In- dies has not been hazardous or dangerous, it has been particular- ly strenuous, especially for a wo- man, In addition to her quest for in- sect pests, she has carried out an investigation of the history and habits of the lesser known tribe of British Guiana, and is at pres- ent preparing a dictionary of their languages, INSTITUTIONS T0 BUY EMPIRE G00DY WHERE POSSIBLE | Empire Board Is Assured of Good Customers for Empire Products London.-- (By The Canadi Press)--As -a result of personal visits by members i rire Marketing Bo county or boroug mental hospitals their tender forms « fy that goods purch "Empire" wherever pe Doard"s officers have now all the local authoriti tal hospitals in Enrland and Northern Ireland. 1 | rot met with a single refusal of co-operation. Tender for cov=- ering about 1,250 institutions in England and Wales alone: have | been sent to the Board for scrut | iny and suggestions, All the ioce FOUND have $2,000 IN BLANKETS BOUGHT | | AT AUGTION SALE worn by women were, as to ap | jroximately 90 per cent, wor- gted in 1914, Today it is a rars thing indeed to see a womdan in worsted stockings. ficial silk. Those changes doomed hundreds of mills and firms al! cver the world. As we were dom- ipatingly, overwhelmingly the greatest textile country, we were immeasurably the hardest hit." Modern Girl Independent In Outlook (By The Canadian Press) Winnipeg, Man. -- The British leaders visiting Canada under the auspices of the Overseas Education League had their first real test of Canadian hospitality at Nipigon camp where a special programme of entertainment was arranged by Mrs, @irvan, including Indian canoe races, a log-splitting contest, a bon- . While in this city Miss Gertrude Richards one of the party said: "The modern girl is far more inde- pendent in her aftitude towards life than the girls of a former genera- tion. She is reliable and takes a keen interest in all worthwhile things. I don't agree with a tithe of the stories about their abnormal use of lipstick and cosmetics. Their outlook on life is far too healthy for that. It is proved also by the fact that nowadays girls don't read the cheap novelette. Many of my girls are reading for the university, and they naturally set a very high standard for the others." SCIENTIST SAVES SUGAR-PLANTERS Woman Discovers Pest That Destroys Sugar Crop A sclentifis discovery, which may mean a saving of millions of pounds a year, has been made by a woman working in the mnorth- west corner of British Guiana, South America. . In the dense South American forests, Mrs. Myers, the wife of Dr. J. G. Myers, has discovered the original food-plant of the su- gar insect pest, which causes en- ormous destruction of the cane crop every year. As a result of the discovery the search for parasites to combat the sugar insect can now be pursued with every hope of success. The scientific value of Mrs. Myers' discovery can scarcely be over-estimated. "Not less than one-tenth of the human effort in the Empire on basic industries, such as agricul ture, is dissipated by our insect enemies," states 'Dr. W. R. Thompson, Director of the Para- site Breeding Laboratory at Farn- ham Royal, Bueks, in a preface to a report on Insect Pests, And feminine | underwear has also moved to arti- | | Honest Purchaser Restores Bond to Estate of De- ceased Woman Toronto, Ont.-- (By The Cana- dian Press)--Writing in the local press on antiques "The Collector' tells of an auction sale recently lield at Mimico, Ont., by Frank Waddington: "The audtion was occasioned by thé death of an oid resident, a woman, who not to put too fine a point upon it, had - acquired the reputation of being a hoarder, one who put not her trust in banks and strong boys, but rather preferred to secrets her wealth in unexpected places about the house. Impetus was lent to the bidding by the announce- ment of this peculiarity before the sale and the further statement that relatives had discovered money to the extent of about $50 hidden in various pieces of old furniture. The sequel to the tale is that one of the bidders, a deal- er, bid in among other things a pair of old blankets which he took home and, mindful of the infcrmation he had received, ex- amined them thoroughly, when he discovered sewn hetween the layers $2,000 in registered bonds. As an honest man there was but one thing for him to do, anu ne did it. He sought out the trus- tees of the estate, told them of his discovery. and restored the bonds for delivery to their right- ful owner. 4 Simple Remedy For Bad Stomach Gives Swilt Relief | No Need of Strong Medicines op Diet. Safe and Simple Home Recipe Keeps Stomach in Fine Condition If you are a victim of Stomac. Troubles--Gas, Sourness, Pain or Bloating--you may have quick and certain relief by following ithis simple advice. 3 Don't take strong medicines, artificial digestants or pull down your system with starvation diets. For within reason most folks may eat what they like if they keep their stomach free from souring acids that hinder or paralyze the work of- digestion, And the best and easiest way to do this is to follow every meal with three or four tablets of Bis- urated Magnesia -- a pleasant, harmless; inexpensive, and handy tablet form of Magnesia that promptly neutralizes acidity and keeps your stomach sweet and clean. A week's trial of Bisurated Magnesia tablets, which any good druggist can supply at trifling cost, should quickly convince rou that 90 per cent. of ordinary stomach distress is absolutely un- necessary. Be sure to get Bis- | urated Magnesia Tabletsl

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