rl Edward, Prince of Wales, / - guuscles, strains and sprains. i THE OBSERVER, DRYDEN, ONTARIO. AN INVIGURATING hoy DRINK ALL THAT 1S @ooD IN BEEF "27 Years the Same Good Tea--and Always in the Sealed Package 87 The words employed as the title to this article constitute the motto of giving consideration to the splendid services His Royal Highness has rendered to the Empire during the years since he reached his majority, it is probably not far wide of the mark to say that no former Prince of Wales strove quite so diligently to live up to the motto of his house. served with the British armies in France through- out the war, not in some safe billet, but well within the battle zone. the war he has hardly had a moment's rest from the really exacting of discharging the duties of a task which has been aptly described as Empire's ambassador to all the world." invaluable service in Canada, Australia, the Prince of Wales, and But in the work of empire, and in conditions for all people following the upheavel of the Great War, of Wales has no. monopoly of the duty and 'responsibility of rendering service. citizen however humble their station in life has a like duty] and responsibility and their own particular field in which to serve. is only to the extent that =ach individual citizen discharges that duty and Each and every gives service for the benefii of others gress in human relationships and conditions can be achieved. j greater opportunities for service to their fellow citizens and to the extent that this is so their responsibilities are Particularly is it necessary in these days that men and women en- trusted with the administration of public affairs should be actuated with a keen desire to serve, because the consciousness of having served one's coun- try and fellow men will, in all likelihood, be the only reward received. Addressing the seven hundred or more Saskatchewan municipal reeves, councillors and secretaries-ireasurer assembled in annual convention a few days ago, Hon. C. A. Dunning, Provincial Treasurer and Minister of Muni- cipal Affairs, after reviewing the difficult financial conditions now confronting Some men and women etjoy greater. Western Canada, and sounding a note cluded his remarks by saying: "Officials of municipalities have a duly gervice. it is municipal, Provincial, Dominion or largely resultant from the hysteria. of over the whole world which will ultimately produce good results. is only one thing for. us to do, only one thing for those of us who are public That is the way the world will be saved. It will not be saved by theorists and shouters but by the men who stick to their job, do their duty and serve with the very best that is in them." servants to do. Keep on serving. The absolute truth of this declaration cannot be successfully challenged. Any person in public life today who is sonal ambition, or to gain some selfish end, or is actuated by any other than a sincere desire to render service, will prove a "1 Serve' These are difficult days for men who are in public service whether Since work "the He has unquestionably rendered New Zealand, India and elsewhere. endeavor to create the best possible the Prince And it that the desired belterment and pro- of optimism and encouragement, con- to their people to perform, a Empire-wide. There is a psychology the past few years which is passing There merely striving to achieve dome per- motive | failure. No mat- | ter how earnestly he may strive for the public good, and even though hel give all his energies and the best that is in him, to the point of great worldly | sacrifices and the ruin of his health, the strong probabilities are that he will | receive but scant thanks from the people who placed him in office and whom | he has diligently sought to serve. The public, as a rule, are ungrateful and | the man of the hour today is rejected with scorn tomorrow. The daily press teems with instances in support of this statement. Hard- | iy a day passes but records the overthrow of some Government or statesman | who has rendered long the welfare of all; rather and valued service to his fellow citizens, while great strikes and industrial upheavels the world over indicate that countless masses of people are anything but ready to yield their quota of unselfish service to selfishness seems rampant, group striving to attain their own ends regardless of the effect on other in- dividuals and group or the nation as a The true and loyal citizen, and the joy the satisfaction of the commendation of his own conscience--and that, | after all, is the most lasting and supreme satisfaction--is the one who, re- 1] | A | each individual or i | whole. | one who in the final analysis will en- | li | | gardless of temporary success, or the plaudits or sneers of others, sticks to | his job and keeps on serving his country and fellowmen. world saved through the great crises of Only so was the | the past; only so can it be saved now. Loyal to Britain Australia Would Like Closer Union With the Empire Hon. I. W. Barwell, Premier of CUMATIC ACHES QUICKLY RELIEVED HE racking, agonizing rheumatic ache is quickly relieved by an ap- plication of Sloan's Liniment. or forty years, folks all over the ~ world have found' Sloan's to be the 'natural enemy of pains angd aches. It penetrates without rubbing. You can just tell by its healthy, stimulating odor that it is going to do you good. | Keep Sloan's handy for neuralgia, sciatica, lame back, stiff joints, sore i At all druggists--35c, 0c, $140. © Made in Canada. TNVENTIONS Sead fer iat of inventions wanted by Manufac- ¢urers, Fortunes have been made from simple fdeas, 'Patent Protection' booklet on request, HAROLD C. SHIPMAN & €O. : PATENT ATTORNEYS 231 BANK STRECT OTTAWA, CAN Caok's Cotton Roof Compound, A eafe, reliable repuining medicine, Bold in_thres ds= Foss, " Smaart, 1, 813 Eo £3; No. 3, $5 per boz, Sold 2 all druggists, or send repaid on receipt of price, res pamphlet. Ad resag THE COO MEDICINE co, TORGNHTS, OKT, (Formerly Windsor.) WN U. 142 South Australia, who is visiting in London, was entertained at luncheon, by the Royal Colonial Institute. Pre- mier Barwell said there might be a very few people in Australia who talk- ed of "cutting the painter," but they were either fools or traitors. Once cut the painter, he said, and the doom of Australia as part of the British Empire was sealed. They were a free state within a free common-| wealth, but united by inseparable bonds of affection and goodwill. The war had proved the identity of the interests of Great Britain and Australia, Premier Barwell said. Their only desire, if there was to be a change, was in the direction of closer union. Australia's greatest need was increased population, - he pointed out. They wanted millions of immigrants. Then Australia would be one of the greatest coun- tries in the world. € said that three thousand letters had been received in two days from boys prepared to go to Australia in connec- tion with a scheme to send out boys to work on the farm. Sores Flee Before lt.--There are many who have been afflicted with sores and have driven them away with Dr. Thomas' Eelectric Oil. All similarly troubled should lose no time in applying this splendid remedy, as there is nothing like it to be had. It is cheap, but its power is in no way expressed by its low price. The Hawaiian Islands have as many Buddhist temples as Christian church--235,000 0 pagans to 20,000 Christians. Premier Barwell | Elevated to Senate F. F. Pardee and Gustav Boyer Will + Fill Vacancies I. F. Pardee, former Liberal mem- ber of parliament fox West Lambton, and Gustav Boyer, re-elected on De- cember 6 last as member for Vaud- reuill-Soulanges riding of = Quebec, have been summoned to the senate, it was officially announced. Senator Pardee fills the vacaney caused by the death of the Tate Sena- tor Milne, and Senator Boyer that created by the death of the late Sena- tor Arthur Boyer. , These two ap- pointments bring 10h senate repre- sentation to full strength and reduce the Conservative majority in the sen- ate by two, the late Senator Milne having been appointed by the Borden Conservative Governmeént, while the late Senator Boyer was a Liberal. TRYING TO RUB OUT YOUR RHEUMATISH Jt Can't Be Done--The Trouble Must | be Treated Through the Blood The pain of rheumatism is some: thing you cannot rub out. Every suf- ferer from rheumatism has been ad- vised fo rub this liniment or that on | the affected part, but after all the rubbing the pain remained. Rubbing did not cure it and can't cure it... Thin blood and rheumatism come together and - if they are properly treated they will go together. Rheu-) matism is in the blod--in poor wat- ery blood. Sometimes cold, weather starts the aches and pains, but it is the condition of the blood that is at fault, and only by correct- ing this, and making the blood rich and red can the rhéumatic poison be driven out. This is what is done in the treatment of rheumatism with Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. Acute and mus- cular rheumatism show improvement as the thin blood is built up, and when ; the blood has been restored to its nor- mal condition the trouble. vanishes. This is proved by the experience of Mr. John A. O'Neill, Port Hood, N.S, who says: "I was a periodical suffer- er from rheumatism for years. I tried many remedies, but with indifferent results, and I had about concluded that the trouble was too-firmly rooted in my system to be got rid of. While I was suffering [rom-an attack a friend advised liams™ Pink Pills a trial. three boxes and by the time I had taken them I felt much better. Then I got three more boxes, and when I had taken them not only was the rheumatism gone, but I was feeling better in every way. If you suffer from rheumatism I strongly advise a trial of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. 'These Pills are sold by all medicine! dealers or will be sent by mail, post paid, at 50c¢c a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Williams' Medi- cine Co., Brockville, Ont. He Would Reduce So PREY said to Bill the other day: "What made the tower of Pisa Jean?" and Bill said if he knew, he'd vy it. Internal parasites in the shape of | worms in the stomach and bowels of "children sap- their vitality and retard physical development. They keep ! the child in a constant state of unrest and, if not attended to, endanger life, | The child can be spared much suffer- ing and the mother much anxiety by such | using a reliable worm remedy, as Miller's Worm Powders, which are | sure death to worms. .8, Took Bulk of Shingle Output "Over 2,000,600,000 shingles, ninety- five per cent. of which went into the | United States market, were cut -by mills in British Columbia during 1921, according to the annual report of the Shingle Association of British Colum- bia. This report is on all grades. Not Quite Sure Polite Peddler (to small boy swing- ing on gate).--Little boy, is your mother engaged? - Little Boy.--Come in and I will see. I think she is married. Luck in Thirteens Dame Fortune has smiled on a French policeman of Strasbourg. He had the winning number of a lottery fund-----131313--which entitles him to a million francs (nearly $250, 000 at normal raté of exchange). / Teach Children Teo Nn Cuticura Soap Because it is best for their tender skins. Help it now and then with touches of Cuticura Ointment applied to first signs of redness or rough ness. Cuticura Talcum is also excels lent for children. Soap25¢. Ointment 25 and 50¢. Taleum 25c. Sold throughout the Dominion, lg Lymans, Limited, 344 St. Paul St., W., Hontreal. Minard's Liniment for Coughs and "Colds damp | me to give Dr. Wil I first got! | Hodgeville; ' Sickening Calomel Not Favored. More Agreeable Medicine Prescribed Calomel and Blue Pills are not used as they once were. When the head aches, when the stomach is upset, when the liver is not working right, don't resort to harsh calomel, use a pleasant agreeable remedy lke Dr. Hamilton's Pills. Being largely vege- table in their composition, Dr. Hamil ton's Pills are extremely mild, yet they surely flush out all impurities and wastes. No remedy is so well adapted for general family-use. For) constipation and bowel trouble; Dr. | Hamilton's Pills can't be improved upon. Good for the young, the old,' the sick, the well ones. The bene- fits of Dr. Hamilton's Pills are mani- fold. Needed and useful in every] home; 25¢ all dealers or The Catarrho- zone Co, Montreal. | Fountain Pens Not New First One Was Invented Two Hundred Years Ago It will be news to many people that { the fountain pen was invented 200 {years ago. One of these ancient pens was recently offered for sale in Lon- don for $200. James P. Maginnis, lected fountain pens for forty-five years, is now showing his interesting collection--said to be the finest in existence--at the South Kensington Museum. It shows the gradual de- velopment of the fountain pen from the nib- constructed to hold a large supply of ink. 'All the early eigh- 'teenth century fountain pens are heavy, and are made of metal. Most of them have quill nibs. { se | Catarrhal Conditions \ Catarrh is a local disease greatly influ- enced by constitutional conditions. It therefore 'requires constitutional treat- ment. HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE is taken internally and acts through the Blood upon the Mucous Surfaces of the System. HALLS CATARRH MEDI- CINE gives the patient strength by im- proving the general health and assists Nature in doing its work. All Druggists. Circulars free. F. J. Cheney & Co.. Toledo, Ohio. The By-Products Grogan.--Of1'll not-take it. It's too high. There's as much nourishment in a pint av paynuts as in two pounds av steak, anyway. Butcher.--That may be, but there's no gravy an' nothing for the cat an' no hash the nixt day.--Boseton Trans- cript. ~ Asthma No Longer Dreaded. The dread of renewed attacks from asthma has no hold upon those who have learned to rely upon Dr. J. D. Kel-| logg's Asthma Remedy. So safe do! they feel that complete reliance is' placed on this true specific with the certainty that -it- will always do all that its makers claim. If you have not yet learned how safe you are with this preparation at hand get it to-day and know for yourself. Why He Asked ~ "Ma, do we keep a hen any place?" "Why, no, my son. = Why do you ask that?" "I heard pa tell the new maid he would take her out riding when he sent the old hen away for the sum- met."--Boston Transcript. DISTRESS IN THE THROAT - - CAUSED GREAT ANXIETY Not an uncommon experience, was that of Mrs. H. S. Wilmot, of Shulee, | N.S.: "Many remedies failed, still splendid results were found . in 'Ca- tarrhozone.' I have been a most dreadful sufferer from Bronchial trouble and Catarrh. On damp days, I would hawk and suffer great dis- tress in my throat. I used all kinds of medicines but didn't get permanent relief till I used Catarrhozone. It strengthened my throat, stopped my cough, and made me well" Try Ca- tarrhozone yourself--see what won- ders it works on a bad throat, or | colds, catarrh, bronchitis. Different | from the, old way, because you | breathe CAtarrhozone. Get the dol-| lar outfit which includes the inhaler and last two months. Small size 50c. Dealers, The Catarrhozone Co., Mon- treal. - ; Saskatchewan Villages Number of Villages in the Provinces ls Now 348 With 14 incorporations during the 12 months preceding, the number of villages in Saskatchewan was increas- ed to a total of 348 at the end of De- cember, 1921, it was reported by offi- cials of the Saskatchewan department | of municipal affairs. 3 In addition to the 14 hamlets raised to the status of village, one village was created a town during the year. Star City became a town November 1, 1921. : The following are the new villages | incorporated during the year, to- gether with the dates of incorpora- tion: February 3, Ruthilda; March 3, Birsay; March 14, Bateman; March 31, «Beatly and Domreny; April 28, Iusinger; May 31, Burstall; June 22, November 18, Kelving- ton; December 14, Lintlaw; Decem- ber 15, Ridgedale; December 28, Plunkett. ; Cuticura Soap Pa without mug. Use Minard's Liniment for the Flu who has col- i Woman Aviator Has Given up Flying Ruth Law Carried First Bag of Mail to Philippines Ruth Law, most famous of woman aviators, is through. Ten years of airplane flights and air circus stunts throughout the United States and in other lands have given her all the {ame she wants. Now she will be just Mrs. Charles Oliver, a wife. It was Rodman Law, her noted daredevil brother of movie fame, who attracted Ruth Law to aviation. She | began preparations in 1911 and in 11912 made her first flight, in one of the old machines which had the driv- Ter 's seat in front of the motor, un- protected from. the elements. For four years she appeared in ex- hibition flights, none of longer dura- tion than 25 miles. Then she sprang into fame with a sensational flight from Chicago to New York, breaking the American cross-country record and non-stop flight record. She flew from Chicago to Binghampton, N.Y. on the first leg of her journey, a dis- tance of 590 miles. Her time from Chicago to New York was 8 hours 12.5 minutes. During the war she tried every means to get into the army air serv- ice without success. Then she went to France and sought to enter the French - air service, but the French could not be persuaded that air battles should be fought by a woman. ; In 1919, Miss Law went to Japan. The Aero Club of Japan offered her a ruby for each time she looped the loop over Tokio. She brought back 28 rubies. She inaugurated the Phil- ippine air mail service, carrying the first 'bag of mail to Manila. Miss Law seemed to lack nerves. She has even stood upon the top of] an airplane, driven by another, while the machine looped the loop, and she raced Gaston Chevrolet in Toronto in 1918, flying just above the race track, as that famous automobile driver set the pace below. Miss Law says she never accident. had an Murdered! Put right out of business, a whole family not of good honest folks, but of Corns--sore, troublesome corns that sting and bite. Extractor is the only painless sure re- lief for corns, it never fails, 25c everywhere. Earth Getting Warmer Professor Says Western Ontario Will Be Italy of Canada Within a brief period, geologically Speaking, London may became the Cairo of North America, from which long caravans may proceed across the sand-heaped wastes of an Amoari- can Sahara Desert, which will cover what we now know as the United States. This amazing possibility is presented by Prof. J. W. Russell, of the department of geology in West- ern University, who believes that the earth is growing warmer. He submits that that which has hap- pened before will happen again; that the world is now just recovering from a long-continued glacial period and will soon be enjoying again so genial a climate in some sections that or- anges may be grown in Siberia and the famous Indian corn belt will, with- in a few hundred years hence, be found in what is now known as the wilds of Labrador, He pictures as a possibility the United States as a vast desert, in which will be buried all the great in- terior cities, leaving only a small ar- able fringe on the borders of the two oceans, as is now the case on the north coast of Africa, Buffalo, St. Louis, Memphis, Denver, Kansas City, all these will be deserted and crumb- ling ruins of former greatness, ex- plored by archaeologists or inhabited by desert tribes, the last survivors of the race evolved from the great Amer- ican melting pot. On the other hand Canada will be the land of promise. Hudson Bay will be one of the great commercial seas of the changed earth. Its shores will be lined with thriving ports and seaside resorts. Western Ontario will be the Italy of this tropical Canada. Orange and lemon trees will supplant the Niagara fruit belt and spread from Hamilton to Windsor. Mother Graves' Worm Xxtermina- tor will drive worms from the system without injury to the child, because its action, while fully effective, is mild. The water supply of the city of Tunis is obtained from the same source that supplied Carthage, and some ancient cisterns are said to be still in use. joan rite =n -- Clear ond Henitl hy 88 Ee tard Boek Murine Co. Chicago. USA 'Putnam's Corn | HERMAN KURTZTISCH "When it comes to eating, working and sleeping, I'm like a different Ts from what I was a short time ago," said Herman Xurtztisch, 406% Nor ris Place, Milwaukee, with the North- western Life Insurance Co., in relat- ing his experience with Tanlac. "My whole system was about to give way as a result of two years' constant suffering from stomach trouble and I was so run down and worn out I was hardly®ble to work I actually dreaded to eat, as after every meal I suffered so terribly from heartburn, and I was so nervous I got little rest day or night. "If it hadn't been for Tanlac tm firmly convinced I would have had to | resign my place. It came to my aid in the nick of time and I am strong for iL. Tanlac was worth at least fifty times what it cost me." Tanlac is sold by all good druggists. pars Japan Wants B. C. Goods Cedar log shipments to the Orient have taken a sudden jump forward: | and during the past few weeks over 1 30,000,000 feet have been booked on various steamers bound for Japan. The demand for cedar in Japan is in- creasing and the British Columbia market is finding difficulty in supply- ing the requirements. ~ DANDERINE tops Hair Coming Out; Thickens, Beautifies. 85-cents buys a bottle of "Dander fne at any drug store. After one ap- - plication you cannot find a particle of | dandruff or a falling hair. Besides, | every hair shows new life, vigor, | brightness, more color and abundance. MONEY ORDERS | Dominion Express Money® Orders -are on sale in five thousand offices throughout Can- ada. HELP WANTED--MALE ANTED--Men to grow mush- rooms for us; $25.00 to $50.00 per week; send 3c stamp for illustrat- ed booklet, and particulars. Toronto Supply Co., Cumstock Bldg., Toronto. You are hol ex periment- {ing when you use Dr. 5 Chase's Oint- el for Tezema and - Skin Irrita- tions. It relieves at once and gradu- ally heals the skin. Sample box Dr. Chase's Qintment free if you mention this aper and send 2¢, stamp for postage. 60¢. a rr all dealers or Edmanson, Bates & Co, Era ited. Toronto. BLACK DF BON 100%P PROTECTION FOR LIFE from one vaccination with - Cutter's Liquid or Solid Blackleg.Aggressin, Abso- lutely safe. Cutters Solid Ageres- sin Injectors work just like Blackleg Pill Injectors, If Cutter's Aggression is unobtainablelocally, write The Cutter Laboratory "The Laboratory that Knows How" Berkeley (U.S.License) California N.B.--OId Style Powder and Pill Vaccines still made for those who prefer them. BOOK ON DOG DISEASES and How to Feed Mailed Free to any Address by the Author HH; CLAY GLOVER CO., INC : fears © | 129 West Fourth Aen i Street, 27 York, Dog Remedics W. N. U 1412