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Canadian Statesman (Bowmanville, ON), 17 Jul 1930, p. 8

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PAGE EGET THE CANADIAN BTATESMMq~ BOWMANVILLE, THURSDAY, JULY l7th, 1930 EMPIRE TRADE is Canada's Road to Prosperity World-wide conditions have created an economie situation that presents problems demanding the highest qualities of statesmanship for their solution. Since the war period, new tariff barriers have been created by mnany countries, restricting the outlets for Canadian products and necessitating new trade arrangements. Early recognition of this trend provided the inspiration for Jhe King-Dunning Budget, v.hich bas indicated the path along w!-'iih Cznada :must pmoceed ta ensure a contin.uation of hier com- mercial prosperity. The prompt development of trade within the Empire is the logical solution of the enarmous problemn involved; and the enthusiastic manner in which the King-Dunning Budget hats been received throughout the Empire ensures Canada a most favourable position at the Imperial Conference for the interchange of products. Pros iding a market for Canada's farma products, ensuring the building up of a home-market for ber manufactured products, the policy of the King admin- istration offers the greatest assurance of Canada's future prosperity. LOWER COST 0F LIVING Budgets during the past nine vears of Liberal Ad-niini,,tma-tion have iovvered tariffs on miany conimodities and imple-nents of production; these me luctions have a-.itomar-ically low.ered living costs ta the Canadian public. The king-Dunning BuJg,,t, whichi the TAX REDUCTIONS Salts Tczx-Redu..ed from 6"C'ta 11%. Postal Rates-- Reduced from 3 cents to 2 cents; rnny poctag-e recstablished. Cheque Tax neduced fromn 2 -cents on every S 5 .3 ta 2 cents over S 10.00. Rece-'pt Tax--Abo!i.hied. Transportation Tax-Aboiished. litsu, arcecLx-Abc!i'ned. Telegrapb. Tax-MA.-X-'shed. Reduction in fiee years estima ted to amount ta $1 16,000,000. electorate is asked to approve on JuIy 28th, is an extension of this policy; dairy equipment and machinery in general placed on the free list; tea, porceian and china, free under the British prefemence. TARIFF REDUCTIONS 1922-Sugar, agricultural irnplemnents, textiles, boots and shoes. 1923-British preferential tariff reduced by 10 per cent. where goods imported by Canadian port. 1924-Instrumnents of production used in agriculture, rnining, forestry and fisheries. 1925--Wcll.drilling macbinery and fiuher. r.en's -ngines.' 1926 -Sugar, automobiles, tin-plate etc. 1928-Implements of production in mlning and ishingindusrries; ferrilizers on free list. 1930 Tea, porcelain, china, vegetables, fruits, free under British preference. Reduction jin duties ,ncanh reductior, in Pricet. For Greater Empire Trade Work andLowerCost of Living for Al Approve the King-,Dunning Budget Vote LIBERA&L Ontario Libeval Campaign Committee, Toronto The 011 for the Farmer.-A batte of Dr. Thomas' Eclectrie 0OÙ in the farm bouse will save many a jaurney for the doctor. It is flot only good for the children wben taken with colds and croup, and for the mature who suffer f rom pains and aches, but there are directions for its use on sick cattie. There should always be a bottle o! it in the bouse. Persian Balm is magical in crea- tmng alluring complexions. A littie gentle rubbing and your skin is in- vigorated and touched with the true beauty of youth. Charmîingly frag- rant. Delightful ta use. Coals and caresses the skin. Relieves al roughness and chafing caused by weather conditions. Tones and stiniulates. Enhances and protects the loveliest complexion. Unrivalled as a perf ect aid ta beauty and charm. q .ur ba«bjyii '.[AGIE» ~~iBRAND OBITUARY David Moffat, Orono Death came suddenly ta an aid resident o! the Orono district, on July 4th, when Mr. David Ioffat passed away at bis home here. Mr. Mofat visited bis f arin yesterday ta flnd out bow the crops were pragress- ing, on retumning homo ho bad bis evening meal and sat down ta read the paper. A short time later ho went ta lie down for a rest and nover awakoned. The deceased man was 74 years o! age, a Presbyterlan in religion and a Liberal in palitics. The f uneral services were canduet- ed f romn Centre St. Church. Omano. on Monday a!ternoon at 3 p. m Deceased mani baves ta mouýrn'bis passing, a wi!e, four sons and two daughters. RAILWAY TIME TABLE Canadian National Ralway <Stanidard Time) WEST BOUND EAST eOUND 4.07 a. mt. 8.42 a. m. 9.46 a. mt. '1.13 a. mt. 1.44 P. um. 1.28 p. ut. 6.46 P. M. 2.13 p. mt. '726 p.m. 6.00 p. mt. 7.47 p. m. 9.53 p utm. 11.21 p. ut. 11.59 P. uM. MI 'raýiniq ar(- daýiiy except those marked -which are Sunda3 only. I Cuo ' ~Canadien Pacifie Railway The Borden Co., Lfmited - Sadr ie 1 40 St. Paul W., Montreal WEST BOUND EAST BOUND Pkme m j, frec oSkku . ..*am. 10.03 a. m. 1 .m. îI. . l I6 2? p. m. 11.2-4 p. rn. 1AMLEM............ .B.....AI! trains dal]y except those marked whIch are dally except Sunday. What mauy people raIl indigest ion very often means excess aeid in thp stomacb. The stornach nerves have heen overetimulated, and f ood saurs. The corrective je an aikali, whieh neutral. izes acide instantly. And the best aikali known ta, medical science iB Phillips' Milk of Magnesia. It has remained the standar wth physicians in the 50 Y" rsince ita invention. limn spoonful of thia harmies, tqste When Pain Co mes Two hours after eating less alkali in water will neutralize in- F.tantly many times as much acid, and the symptoms disappear at once. You wil never use crude methods when once you learn the efficienq. of this. Go get a 8maîl bottle to try. Be sure ta get the genuine Phillipe'1 Milk o! Magnesia prescribed by physi. clans for 50 years in correcting eime acide. Etch bottle contains fll dlso tions--ani drugstore. WHY BOTHER? During the ages, the superstition that were assaciated with the healin 1art have gradually disappeared. In ithe earliest centuries, treatment wasý carried out with ceremonial, incan- tations, mysterlaus potions and dan- ces, and offerings were made ta the spirits. Ta-day. medicine is a science based upon investigation, experiment 1and analysis. In the course o! this development, great progress has been made, not anly in the tmeatment a! disease but also in its prevention. In one sense. progress bas been rapid, but in another, it appears ta be slaw because there is stili much ta ho learned a- bout the mechanisin o! the human body, and thero are still diseased con- ditions whicb baffle us and whicb sem nta be beond aur contrai. One thing that has been clearly sbawn is that many seriaus and chranic diseases have their begin- nings in what are apparently trivial conditions. Every advanced cancer Vas at one timo a local disease which cauld have been cured. Chranic hoart and kidney diseases do not begin as seriaus conditions: they pass thraugh an early stage. Tuberculosis usually f irst shows itself as a mild localized disease. It is for these reasans that we should bother about what we might cansider ta be trivial diseases or even what seems ta be merely a lack o! physical fitnoss. Proper treatmont durlng the early stages is necessary ta arrest the pragress o! mnany disea- ses. The chie! objection ta self-medic- ation is that it delays proper treat- ment, wbich, whon it is secumed in time, offers the only passible chance o! nipping in the bud a condition which may load ta soriaus or chranic disease. The practitioner o! medicine is not a magician. The goad ho can do is limitod by the knowledge ho posses- ses. Ho does not promise cures, but he does offer the benefits o! medical science, and if we are unfortunate enough ta suffer, it may be because we have not availed oursolves o! bis skill. we still delay in securing bis services. and it is such delay whlch leads ta semiaus trouble. Wby bother about minor condit- ions of ill-bealth? The answer is that the best timo tao consider disoaso is wben the mast can be done with it, and that is befare it becomos f irm- ly raoted in the body. Proper early treatment bas much ta offer in the prevention o! seriaus cbranlc diseases against whicb, in their advanced sta- ges. we have nat any specific remedy. Early Treatment is thon the answer t(i Wby Bother? Most infants are infested by worms wbich cause great suffering. and if not promptly dealt with may cause ronstitutional weaknesses difficult ta remedy. Miller's Worm Powders will clear the stamach and bowels o! worms and will sa act upon the sys- tom that thore wlll be no recurrence o! the trouble. And not only this. but they will ropair the injuries ta the organs that worms cause and restare them ta soundness. Mussi"u to Be Discumsd atth. ChatuuaHe tBLACKSTOCK Foilowing is the Public Sehool re- port of the June promotion examin- ations: Sr. IV-Lulu Wright 60%. Jr. 1V-Mabel VanCamp 7i (hon), Ray Graham 72. Lamna Trewin 69,1 Orval Stinson 68. Tom %eyfad Nohd a lm UiI S. III-Frank Wright 56, Elmer WiU Give Bgiliuit %dajg..g Archer 55. Vincent Archer 43. on s'sJr. HII-Ronald Trewin 71, Frank GO IlI~oeWaodard 65. _______Sr. II-Mildred Archer 46. Jr II-Rager Darreil 75 (hon), Tom Skeyhiîl, not.od Australlan Harold Crawford 72, Kathleen Taylor Poet, playwrlght, blographer and j168. Ray Werry 62, Ross Bailey <abs.). lecturer, whom the London lmes 1 First-.-Johnie Werry 82 (hon), describes as "~one of the greatest of Ralph Larmer 79 <han). Pearl liVing orators," has b6en secured ta Wright 73, Ray Stinson 71. came hore and give hie masterful Sr. Pr.-Helen VanCamp 74, Gwen lecture "«With lMus"O1 ansd the Marlow 65, Carl Jackson 60, Rabert Blackshlrta" at the oom.ing Cas-l Jackson 54. dian Chautauqua. r r-ahenWihMro *Tom Skeyhill knowe Muolti- J.P-ahenWihMro the true facto of tbis bandsamw Hill, equal; Dalton Darrell. black-sblrted premler's meteorte Number on RaU 33. tace rise ta power. Skayhill knw h Kathleen Phoenix, ecr Fascisti. He has lived wtth theza, Miss Phoenix is returning after attended their seret meetings. the holidays ta resumne her duties as marcbed in' their torehllgt proces- Principal. Teacher and pupils en- asio; le underst Udstoir move- joyed a picnic at the close of schaol. mont and thoir wooehi< 8tom. NESTLETON WOMEN'S INSTITUTE July meeting was held at the home ......of Mrs. S. McLaughlin on Thursday. July 3rd. Meeting apened with the Ode. Minutes were read and adopt- ~ ed. The secretary. Mrs. W. Jack- son. gave her report o! the district ... leannual meeting. Mrs. Carlaw gave an interesting summary o! the ad- ~ dress by Mrs. Wright o! Odessa, at Blackstack. An invitation ta the Janetville Institute was accepted and Sthe program for that day was put in charge a! Group 3. with Mrs. Percy Philp as leader. A motion was made that the Foderated f ees be paid. Several letters o! thanks for fruit and flowers sent during illness were /' ead. Mrs. Harmy Philp expressed her thanks for the shawer given ber after the fire whicb destroyed tbeir home. Pragram under Mrs. 0. Brawns group consisted of: Paper "Content- ment' by Mms. R. C. Jackson; Mrs.~ S. McLaughlin read some usefulki- chen information; Miss Dorothyi Brown sang. A very amusing con- test ended the pragram. Tbe prize, a tinted glass plate, went ta Mrs. T.I G. Wilson. A dainty lunch was ser-~ yod by Group 2. Meeting closed with God Save the King. TOU SEYDI Mbr. Bkeyhill la an impartlal ob- srvere. Re la neithor for nov against the Ideals which Mussoliti la strtving to put intaoifect. He merely sifts the evidence and beaves Judgmnent to bis audience Tom Skàyhill himseol la a coier- ful and arreting personality. Hoe bas tought a.nd adventured over half the globe. Blinded in the memor- able first landing of the Anzacs at Gallipoli, ho became famous as "the bllnd soldior poet af Auatralla, and in Amorica for bis ervce raislng over one hunidred and thbIrty millIons of dollars for warfna Roelias the unique distincina having ralsed twenty-tbroe millionsi o! dollars In twenty-three minutes 1 at the Metrapolitan Opéra Hanse In New York Cty. Later, bie sikht almost miracu- lonaly restored, ho began a hIfe aI study, travel and adventure. Ho bas been lu the thick of tJhreo wars and three revoîntions. Ho ran the linos into Soviet Russie and was tbere during the Red Revolution. He marched with Mussolini and the Blackahirta into Rame through the gate that Jullus Caesar enterod two thousand years ago. Ho waa In Warsaw in the beart of the Runss-Polish mux-up, and ho vos ont In the Near East when Snyrna vas burnt and the Turks doteated the Greeks. Mr. Skeyhull la a powerfui and drs.xatic orator witb a gift for painting word-pictures thant old bis audience onthralied. BOWMANVILLE bAUTAUQUA JULY 18, 19, 21, 22, 23 PRICES BEDUCEJI Adults-2.20 (tax included) Children-$1.O0 (no tai) Buy a Season Ticket and enjoy 9 delightful programes for les than 25e each. TICKETS NOW ON SALE NOW TELLS ALL HER FRIENDS 0F SARGON "I expocted great things a! Sargon and it has nat dlsappolnted me. For months I had been a terribly run- MRS. M. ROBERTSON down condition, tired and indisposed all the timne and was subject ta sev- ere headaches. There was a neuritis condition in my shoulder and arm., and constipation had such a hold on me that 1 developed hemnorrhoids. Six botties of Sargon drove the pains out of my body, I sleep better than I have in years and have a wonderful feeling of strength and energy. I'm telling aIl my frlends about Sargon. "Sargon Pilis have given me such wonderful relief f rom constipation tllat I don't notice the hemnorrhoidal trouble like I dld, and I'm enjoylng splendid health In every way."-Mrs. M. Robertson, 15 Alice St., Hamnil- ton. Ont. Sargon may be obtained In Bow- mnanvlle f romn Jury & Lovell. BENEFIT SOFTBALL GAME BowmanviUle Loses 15-9 to Fort Hope Sanitary Works A few weeks ago a bat siipped from one o! the batters hands In Port Hope, flew througb the air and crasbed into Eric Munro's face. fracturing bis jaw. The team de- cided that the only faim thing for them ta do would be ta bald a game, charge a quarter apioce. bring in an outside team and give the proceeds ta tbe unfortunate victisu. They ar- ranged with a team f ram Bawman- ville ta play in the bilIside town iast Frlday nigbt. The game was ex- citing f rom start to finish, the teams being cuite evenly matcbed. There were several hamers and long bits. Once the baU travelled out into the taîl daisies and rolled under one o! the spectators cars. "Deac" God- ard strotcbed bimself to get the bal and finally reached it. When lie staad up he was iaugbing so bard lie couldn't thraw it. The chap in tbe car asked Deac ta chieck the ail wblle bie was under. The game flnisbed with the invaders havlng the lesser score-15-9, but everyono was satis- [lied. A returl game wiil likely be played bore shartly. I yo thugh te ou"dgive "SALADI TEA 'Veb b am .the gai. Napanee Express is day this week. 'Jl baving a ha 1 STOPS r ~No mat tt w iti la a litt% ache or a big pain, no matterT whaer It cmmm f*m - -e41 .g*l Us ma nUUy porbof a o. .e orfie..a 0oldZUTOO TAB.ETS M i ishN la l 20MXé Mb -OW 0" êou Râ &W d - hOi"4 T Ino Eacls pad wiI killifles ail day snd every day for three weeks. 3 pada in eaeh packet. 10 CENTS PER PACKET at Dru gguais, Crocers, Ceneral Stores. WHY PAY MORE? THEl WILSON FLY PAD CO., HamîUton, Ont. l 4 You Neyer Know It's a mnistake ta drive your car without complete protection- a mistake that's always dlscovered too late. When the los s suffered the consequences of procrastination may prove ex- cessively costly. Why flot investigate our policies o!flire. thef t and liability lnsuranoe? To-day caUl or phone 50. J. J. MASON & SON Real Estate and Insurance Brokers Phone W0 King St. E. Bownanville Il In Passing Other Cars...Dont "Cuit l," One of the greatest dangers on the highway is the driver who insists on passing other cars when there is no space for hinm in the traffice lime ahead. If he should meet a car coining in the opposite direction, a crash follows-with injury to persons or cars. It's a good rule to keep in fine, unless you have a clear view of the road ahead, and there i8 a place ln the traffic lime which you can reach before you meet on-coming trafic. Dont be a nuisance by "cutting in". It is discourteous to other drivers and creates needless danger. You may have a crash,.. and even if you don't, you are liable to a fine under the Highway Traffic Act. The Kegatone of Safety on 7Ta King la Highway and aU other moade and atreet Vie. HON. GEO. S. HENRY c aimn18 -- - - - m 1 PAGE ]EGMET TKE CANADIAN STATEMUN, BOWMANVMLIC, THURSDAY, JULY 17th, 1930 zý tl m C t: fi n ,hairman 1186 - - 1 HIghwa >mmittee

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