Halton Hills Newspapers

Flesherton Advance, 7 Mar 1928, p. 7

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Motor Pleasure A^rBniH-in" Feature Motoring is Bound to Become Even More Popular Due' V to Car Improve- menta 1928 A MOTOR YEAR Driving a car for pleasure, accord- tectaiK to the experts of tbe motor world, to solng to be America's taT- •He outdoor eprnt In the comlns jnuBmer. One reaaon, they say. Is 4k«t the 1928 models are built for •toawire, and another la that after a ••rlod of stark utility the Idea of Red Rom Orant* Pekoe has earned the patronage and tood will of more tea drink- ers than any other high- Juality tea in Canada, udges of good tea gladly give more for Red Rose ^ange Pekoe because they know that the value they re- ceive is worth many times the fe# extra cents they pay. l.E !Braniford WON Dtp" C0N.c«f rt MixhR Far ChuDar Than To Mix By Hand The lowest piiced, serriceabla mizeryou can buy. Mixes every- , tUiu better and quicker tlun by I hand. Mixes concrete, mortar, leed (nUo. fertilizer, feed, etc. Fays for itself In no time. Write for descriptive folder No. II 600LD, SHAPLE7 & MIHR CO. Ltd. Btaotfonl - Oot Corrugated Iron ASK FOR Wheeler & Bain "Counca Standard" A thick, even, heavy spread of galvanize over every Inch of sur- face. Deep corrugations. Write ui, stating size of barn you want to cover. WE PAY FREIGHT WHEELER a BAIN. LIMITED P«P*- W, 108 George St., Toronto 2 you insure Your Crop Fertilizer Insures a crop above the averageâ€" and D W Fertilizer gives DOUBLE WORTH One Ton D W 4-244 = Two Tons 2-12-2. D. W. GUNN, LTD. â- WO Vine Ave., Toronto, Ont. The BABY Mo mother in tbls enlightened age would give her baby something she did not know was perfectly harmless, especially when a few drops of plain Castoria will right a baby's stomach and end almost any little ill. FvetCul- ness and fever, too; it seems no time until everything Is serene. That's the beauty of Castoria; its gentle Influence seems just what Is needed. It does all that castor oil might accomplish, without shock to the system. Without the evil taste. It's delicious! Being purely vege- table, you can give it as often as there's a sign of colic; constipation; diarrhea; or need to aid sound, natur- al sleep. Just one warning: it is genuine Fletcher's Castoria that physicians recommend. Other preparations may be Just as free from all doubtful drugs, but no child of this writer's Is going to test them! Besides, the book on ca>e and feeding of babies that comes with Fletcher's CMtoris la worth Its weight in gold. Children Cry for Gastoria motAitoIr for recrsatioB has tMes re- sold to the pubUo. The family that has no car wUl now get one. and those who already own cars will find. their li«pplness in tbe purchase ot| newer and better ones. Such is the ! treacrlptkin beins written for tbe American public by some thlrty-flve automobile concerns, we are told, as the best curs for the nervous strain of present-day life. ; "Hio motor-car was orlglnalljv an In- atrument of pleasure, Frederick (\ Ruseell tells u» In the New York "Tlmee," but some years ago It was resold to the public as a thing of utility. Now It is coming Into its own again as an article of recreation, ot what might be termed "necessary { Irieaeure," Mr. Ru8«eU says, continu- In*: i The nation admltfl the automobile's ; practical value to' the average owner, \ but, according to the optimistic fac-; tlon In the motor world, the time- has â-  come when liere must be general re- j cognition of the importance of the t modern motor-car as a pleasure de-j vice. Motoring for motoring's sake ia a thought that will be widely advocat- ed and advertised throughout the new year. It Is the basis upon which the two-car familiy Idea Is being built. Many families (have transportation ' requirements necessitating two or' more cars. Many persons whose j transpprtatloa need.s can be met with ownership of one car prefer two in order that the automotive equipment can be maintained in properly ser- viced condition at all times without interrupton in transportation. But millions of present car owners could use a second car for pleasure pur- poses, and it is because this need ex- ists .that the motor indutry anticipates a market increase in the wo-car idea. â-  Th© trend is plainly evident In the selling points brought out In recent advertisements. One manufacturer urges tile public to try the back roads and enjoy the country that has re- mained unexplored only because pre- vious cars were not designed to make boulevards out of country lanes. An- other insists that its product is essen- tially a pleaure car, the Idea being extended to convey the thought that even general utility with such a car 1» a pleasure. Swank and style are emphasized from the lowest-priced products ^ the finest. With the in trod action of "swank" I into cars of the lowest-price class, ' Mr. Russell continues, th& present year offers new opportunities of pleas- i ure motoring to persons of moderate means. We read further: Where it Is necessary to consider the economic angle the picture tor the year reveals many families Und- Ing their fun in ownersialp of one of the swagger, inexpensive sport models which will be used only In fair weather and as an adjunct to the more substantial but less colorful motor equipment on the other side of the garage. In the motoring plans of many other families the situation will be revers- ed in order to emphasize t)Qo pleas- ure angle. Men who use their cars for commuting, for Instance, prob- ably will purchase the new Inexpen- sive cars for general utility, and then sign up for a fine car which will be used for the strictly pleasure de- mands of the fmaily. It is antici- pated that this spring will find cars in better condition and more persons on the highways. j The new security which the motor- ist now feels when wending his way home from business, we are told, gives I him a chance to think of the pleasure I he is going to 'have from a short spin in the second car after dinner, I or the enjoyment he will feel in I parading It with the family in it on ; Suntlay afternoon. Instead of hav- ' tng to spend hours in keeping one \ engine efficient, he can now really j enjoy devoting a few hours each â-  week to keeping two cars looking their best. Going further into tine psychology of the owner of a 1928 model, Mr, Russell concludes: By pleasure he means new pride of ownership. He Is commencing to take as much interest in his new car as he does in his new home. Up through the large production years following the World War car owner- ship had been growing into a com- I mouplace. You needed a car, so you ! i bought one. It looked like every! I one else's car unless you happened to ' j have bought the most expensive. : You got an occasional thrill out of ' buying a new one, but yoo thought I more of the increasing traffic, skid- 1 j ding, freezing, carbou, valve-grinding, i j engine knocks, rusty nickel trim- 1 j mings, the high cost of gas, stalling, ; time payments, and the way the ' varnish on the hood cracked off. 1 I What a contrast 1928 presents! j Traffic has become a gams. Skid- I dlntr has nearly passed out of the plo- { ture with well-designed cars. Freez- ; ing id obviated through new types of ! anti-freeze which last the entire sea- sou. .\ntIknock fueis have convert- ed carbou into a u.seful agent. Valves , are of better material, and when grinding Is necessary the work is on I a flat-rate basis. No more gTiessIng | as to how long the car will be In jjie • ' service station. . ' Comparatively few- engines develop i knocks. Chroomuni plating does I away with the, worry of keeping the trimmings of the car bright. Cars ' are doing more work on less gasoline. ; Stalling Is virtually a thing »1^ the I past. Cars are priced so low that jiany buyers are paying spot ea.sh ! and saving interest charges. RHEUMATIC PEOPLE Clew of OM Tribe CAN OBTAIN RELIEF Sought on Wand lor By Enriching: Their Blood With E^p^^j^^ ^y, gtudy ReUcs Dr. WilHama' Pinli Pills. lUieumatIsm is a disorder of the blood. It attacks peoplo when the blood Is thin and impure, thus selling up InSammatloa of the muscles and joints. Wet or cold weather may start the pains of rheumatism, but Is cot tho cause. The cause Is In the blood. of Unidentified People Believed to Have Exis- ted There 400 Years Ago «« is good tea Chicago. â€" Sparsely settled Isle Iloyaie, lying In the northwestern part of Lake Superior, Just south of j Hot applications or rubbing with Unl- j t^e Canadian line, will be the scene I ments may ease the pain, but do not | uug summer of an attempt to learn reach tho cause and the pains are q, ^ race of men who dwelt there soon back again. To get rid of this probably between 1000 and 1600 A.D moat painful trouble you must treat it through the blood and for this pur- pose nothing else can equal Dr. Wil- liams' Pink Pills, which from first dose to last actually make new, rich blood, thus driving the rheumatic poisons from the system. Mr. Henry E. Amlro, Lower East Pubnlco, N.3., tells what these pills did for him. He says:â€" "I had an attack of acute rheumatism so bad that I could not walk a hundred yards without so much suffering that I would feel faint. I could not do the least v-tark and any movement caused great pain. I was under the care of a doctor but did not improve much. Then reading of a similar case in a newspaper I decided to try Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. By the time I had used three boxes, there was no doubt they were helping me. I took altogether about a dozen boxes when I was entitrely relieved of the trouble, able to walk four miles to my work, chop wood all day, and then walk home again. To anyone suffer- ing from rheumatism I can strongly recommend Dr. Williams' Pink Pills." You can get these pills through any medicine dealer or by mail at 50 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medi- cine Co., Brockville. Ont. II Red Rose Orange Pekoe is the best tea you can buy In clean, bright Alumimxm y The saga of the vanished people must be read from a heap of molder Ing stones, which apparently com posed the sides of a tribal house, and a series of mine workings cleft through a copper lode with primitive tools. The location of tho find on the 44- mile long island has been known only by its discoverer, William P. F. Fer- guBonT-« newspaper editor of Frank- lin, Pa., but now he has shared the secret with Eugene F. McDonald, a Chicago sportsman, and tho latter Is preparing to head an exploring p:irty 1 Canton.â€" Wholesale murderers of there this summer. propertied classes are taking place In McDonald will use his own yacht i Kwangtung Province. The Commun- and B. A. Massee, another Chioagoau i ist activities, which resulted In up- whose hobby is«Bxpioration. Is having ! heavals' in Canton In December, when Million Chinese "Turn Red" and Slay Wealthy Kwangtung Province Land Owners, Merchants Mur- dered as Communists Lure Farmers and Laborers Qassified Advertisements FOUXiTBT A 1 QUALITY KOCK. LEilHORN, AL Wyandotte, Red Baby .L'hicks, flB.uii per 100 and up. Hatching; egge, $8.00 per 100 unU up. I'edlgreed Cm^lter- els. }6.00 each, and up. 36 Page illus- trated Cataloeue Free. L. R. iluild & Sons. Box T, Rockwood. Ont. i.\BY CHICKSâ€" WW tS varieties of Baby Chicks. \ • 'Ka for free catalogue. Price 10c and up Swltzer. Granton. Ont. a.VTCIl .'•"OUR. ;o for A. H. Undoubtedly, a son of the Prince of Wales would be heir to Uio th;own. â€" .^kansas Gazette. The Unknown Soldier His dreams have all grown lovely with the years. The bullet-ache within his breast has flown. As have the horrors; the dried, sear- let smears Upon a comrade's sleeve; the an- guished groan Of some young prisoner; the rat-a-tat Of busy, calculating guns; the sound Of bursting shell, of shouting; and the spat Of wet French earth when shot ploughed through the ground. The din has passed away. Now flow- ers spill Their quiet petals like a fresh caress. There is dim relaxation in the thrill Of cool, rich soil, in the forgetfuiness It fosters. He Is like a sleeping boy Whose brow Is damp, w^lth tired brown curls that cling. He has that same exhaustion, that same joy. That pure oblivion of everything. This Is the Unknown Soldier. His dear grave Is hallowed. So we, very grateful, say: 'He signifies the bravest of the brave; Hs is above the common run of clay." Yet, what Is braveryâ€" If it must show Its potency in carnage? Oh, they tread The truest road of bravery who go Along the path of Peaceâ€" <;od's path â€" instead ! â€" Margaret Stineback. « a ?15,000 yaclit constructed to make up the serond siiip of the party. Ferpuson made his discovery in 1922, but has been unable to identify the people who dwelt on the Island or to determine liow long they lived there. They may have been Xorse. Ferguson Is convinced that the Isle dwellers were cot Indians. By de- cayed pine trees, he has fixed their habitation on the island at between 400 and 900 years ago. He has found broken hammer-heads of stone, many small stone hammers and several fire platforms. WHY TORTURE THE UniE ONES Mothers, do yoii think It fair to tor- ture your little ones by forcing :he!H to take ill-tasting oils when they need a laxative medicine? Don't you find that the child's dread of these medi- cines often do more harm than good? Baby's Own Tablets are the modern substitute for these nauseous doses. They are the very medicine the child 1.000 persons were slain, arc reassum- i Ing appreuiabie proBortlons. Dlsor- i ders have occurred at various locall- ; ties. ; The coast area 100 miles north of I Hongkong, centering around Hleche- i chin and Hongha bays. Is the out- ! standing stronghold of Communism. Million Farmers "Go Red." There more than 1.000,000 farmers, fishermen and saltmakers have "gone ; Red." They have established a com- ; mune, wiped out titlos to land and ; confiscated property of the wealthy. The movement is spreading. Whole- sale murders of laud owners and mer- ! chants have occurred. In many cases ' whole families were .wiped out. Many villages have been beaieged and razed by reds. The village older:; were decapitated and iheir heads v.ere mounted ou poles and sent to villuK'" neaiby r,s a warnliig of the f.izo to I;- vislied on the i.vi'.abitanls in ca;.e thev opposed oonimunism. The movement has resulted In the evacuation of Kuropean Catholic and Protestant missionaries from the area to Swatow and Hongkong. Authorities Adopt Drastic Policy. The provincial authorities are striv- ing drastically to curb the movement. KEEP i um Clean and Heaitny WITH COTICORA 'Children Like Itâ€" So Will You At the first aitn of i Cold, buy -Buckley's". The first dose does two thiriK^ â€" relieves the cough instantly and dcliehta tile taste. Differeiu iioin all other remedies for Cougin. Colda, Bronchitis. Prevent: "Flu", Pneumunia and ail Throat and I.unB troubles. Sold everywher'? under money-refunded cuaranicj. W. K. Backley, Limited. 142 UnRmr St., Torai:(o 3' ^^\i^F MIXTURE ^^r ^H^^ uncle tip piovcs it ^i^fl requires and aro so pleasant to take that they are as easy to administer | The Communist activities are also de- as a glass of water They are the per- 1 veloping into an acute situation feet remedy for all the minor ailments of little ones, being absolutely guar- anteed free from iniurious drugs. Baby's Own Tablets accomplish all that castor oil and other bad-tasting remedies can do. In fact they ac- complish more as they do not leave the child exhausted from its struggle against taking medicine. They re- lieve teething pains, banish indiges- tion and constipation, break up colds and simple fevers and promote health- ful, refreshing sleep. They are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at CuTIOsitV 25c a bo.\ from The Dr. Williams' I Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. {Mercy! What is that great big thing • ♦â€" iBy the house of Mrs Horner?â€" ANTI-JEWISH STUDENTS Iwith one paw Ted scratched his head around Hoping, souhwest of Canton, where tho government took TOO Com- munist prisoners last December. They were mostly around twenty years old and included many girls. The prison- ers boasted that all Kwangtung would be under the reg flag within a month. The government Issued an edict say- ing any one possessing firearms would be summarily shot. The chief of the Canton detectives has veen executed for alleged Communist sympathies. _ o Retain Yoiir Hak. Mirrard's Liniment : umu;..'.t Bi'owtll^ of hair. K'>e;)- ijlossy and kill.'' il;i:ul:-iiff. YOUNG WOMEN SUFFER MOST ON STRIKE IN HUNGARY Protest Against Bill in Parlia- ment by Closing and Guarding Univer- sities And hastened to the ooruor. It lookii like those old ear muffs That lady tried to sell me; But for my life 1 cannot thinkâ€" My puppy brain won't tell me. These Two Found Relief by , Taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Ayer's ClilT, Quebec. â€" " I have been teaching i^or three years, and :it the t!id of the It couldn't be an animal: I wonder if it's lined? It I just hurried 'cross the street. My mistress wouldn't mind. If it's a prize for some nice doggy- And oh: if I should win it: â€" I don't think she'd mind, because 'Twill only take a minute. Alas: you see Im bandaged up. Which makes me look quite fat. It wasn t any prize at all. But Mrs. Horner's cat. 1 "Canaaa For Me." Here we have an English lad "who came across story-book thrills in the Canadian 'West. He is Richard Barnes, of Kent, later cowboy of the 2XY ranch in Alberta. He went broke, was hired on the ranch, was shot for criticizing a shady poker play, was subsequently deported from the U.S.A. because he lacked entry papers, was burnt out \n a Windsor, Ont., hotel, walked on foot to Montreal dressed In cowboy outfit, and from there embarked with nine cents in his pocket for England on the Cunarder Ascania. "A great life!" he declared, and promised to acquire an English wife and to .settle in Canada this summer. 4 Budapesi. â€" Natloualist sympathiz- ers in the Hungarian universities suc- ceeded in keeping all students from attending classes as a protest against a bin with numerous clauses, now be- fore Parliament, which would allow an increase in the number of Jewish students attending these institutions. The same bill when first introduced last November was the cause of the anti-Semitic riots at Budapest Uni- versity, during which a score of Jews were injured and the schools were closed for several days. , The Nationalists occupied all the j On fishing trips Jake^Minard s entrances and refused to allow any | ~ , . . , . of the students or Faculty to enter. "DW J'ou marry that girl of yours, j Thev were not molested by the police I or .do you still cook your own break- , because an old regulation prohibits 1 fast and mend your own clothes? police from entering the properly of ; "Yes. ' universities. . ' The bill being debated in Parlla- '. "I know a thing or two ment, though It would Increase the ' AVhat's the of'ier one . ' number of Jewish students very little. ! â€" â€" ^^^ is bitterly attacked by the National- ists, many of whom belong to the party of Count Bethlen. whose Cabin- et presented It. The blil will probably be passed this week, when there is danger of fresh outbreaks among the students. "Really?! year I always feci t::cd and have no ajjpctite. I was L', \v f u 1 sick each ::'.onth.too.havin!.? pains in my badt iHitil sometime."- I w.-u? L'blged to sti;;) v.orking. A friend '•ceo mm en dcd Lydia E. Pink- ham's Vi'getablo Coi.Mpouiid to me and I heard many wcmcn toiling how good itwas so I Ihoc.'jht.it would help me. And it did. Now I take fi.x bottles every year and recuioincnJ it to others." â€" DONALU.\ I'.laNTEfX, Ayer's Clitl", Quebec. "Unable to Work" Canning, Nova .Scotia.â€""! had ir- regular periods and great sulfeiir.g at those times, the jiains causing vomiting and fainting. I was teach- ing sciiool and often for sonic hours I would be unable to attend to my work. Through an advertisement in the papers I knew of Lydia E. I'ink- ham's Vegetable Compound, ami it has been of great benefit to ino, \.ho troubles being coin]jietcly relieved." â€" Lauka j. Eaton, Canning, King's County, Nova Scotia. G ' um MInard's Liniment fer Corns, " Where Silence Should Reion, Reggie â€" "I have such a cold. Mips Sharpe, my head is just rii:!?;nc with noises." Miss S. â€" "I didn't know a vacuuhi over transmitted sound, Mr. Sapp." SCHWKOLERS"TMOR0-8RED BABV I . "LIVB AND LAV •< CHlCKSl CVir Srctdtri are bred for high icfir, P''"'JuctK''n. White, Eu'Wn |.inJ Du(F Leghorns, DarreJ inJ f White Rock.. R. I.Uedt An- CC1W5, Buff OrrlngtoQft, white WydndottcH. 1 2cftndup. 1005ft live Jdivcry siurantccj. Wtire todiv for FREE CHICK fK-OK. iCHWEOUR'S MATCHERV uo iMnMVTsii. IVFriauA % MUSKRATS AND OTHER RAW FURS are bringing our shippers pxi'ep- iionally high prices and .'i'i BONUS EXTRA. We pay all poslage and express charges. SHIP NOW. Send Fop Our Free 1928 Special Spring Price List. Levin Fur Co. LIMITED 172 Kina St. East Dept. B TOi^ONTO. ONT. i)^:' PHIIUPS; O»MA0y '<S> for Trouble* due to Acid INDtOESTlON ACID STOMACH MEARTBO'*'* MtAOACME <}AS£S- NAUSEA^ WhenP^ e ain Mmes ISSUE No. 9â€" '28 What many people call iiidigcjilon very often niean.s exces>^,v-'id in tho slomaih. 'I'ho stomach nerves havo !),"cu over-stimulated, and food sours. The correctitvo is an alkali, which neutralizes acids insUint];-. .•Vnd the !)ost alkali known to medical fc:curo ia Phillips' Milk of Ma.3;:ir'i^!. It has remained stiitidard with physician:! in I the .50 years since !'>:i Inveutio;!. I One spoonful of this harmless, i,.bto- is ;.:.iall iu v.aler uill r.e>!tralize li^ â- ;:i:il!y many tnno!i .ts much aciifr ami Uio sympioniR disapp^'ar at once. Ymi will never use cruiic methods whea onco you Iriir.i (h.- ctlictency of this. Co r.cl a .--m.'.ll hi)U!o to try. :i3 .-jtiro to get the genuine Phillips' M T; (.f >Iag!:c9ia pre.=ciibed by physi- (:'.V.\a for 50 years in correcting excess acld.^. Ka<h bottle con'.tius full d:ro>> liouc â€" any drugstore.

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