Dryden Observer, 2 Jun 1922, p. 3

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the - burg and embarked ed hazardous by the presence of ex OBSERVER, DRYDEN. ONTARIO. = & BEAUTY OF THE SKIN is the natural desire of every woman, and is obtainable by the use of Dr. Chase's Ointment. Pimples; blackheads, roughness and redness of the skin, irritation and eczema disappear, and the skin isleft soft, smooth and velvety. All dealers, or Edmanson, Bates & Co., Limited, Toronto. Samples free if you mention this paper WCRLD HAPPENINGS BRIEFLY TOLD The new automatic phone service has been inaugurated in the city of Lethbridge at a cost of $225,000. Japan will establish a scientific laboratory on the Scuth Sea Islands to study typhoons. .Orders directing the return to the United States by July 1 .of all troops now quartered on the Rhine were is- sted by Secretary Hughes. Sir Robert Horne, chancellor of the exchequer, speaking in the House of Commons said £9,323,809 had been collected under the entertainment tax in the last eleven months. | - With a capitalization of $109,600, an | incorporated joint stock company of farmers and agriculturists has been formed at Fort William for the pur-| pose of gopumie selling ot dairy and farm product Rum' runners low the Canadian border will be hunted by wireless, ac- cording to iv by Commissioner Haynes from Col. Roy C. Vandercook, head. of the Michigan department of public safety. A Washington despatch states that the House has approved provisions of army appropriation bill which calls for a reduction in the enlisted strength of the United States regular army to 115,060 men by July TL The fino arrived at Boulogne from Ham- passengers © and mails for the voyage to Buenos Ayres. She is the first Transatlantic vessel under the German fiag to call at Bou- logne since the war in regular service. George Richardson, 'who blew the charge when the Light Brigade rode up to the guns at Balaclava, died re- cently "at Liverpool. It is believed that he is the last of the gallant Six Hundred. He possessed 16 medals given for valor. Toe hydrographic office of the US. Navy Dept. issued a warning 'to mar- iners that the North Atlantic steam: ship lanes, normally used from Feb- ruary 1 to August 31, may be render sufficient German steamer Antonio Del-| 1g91 The Submarine Evil Almost Useless Except for Attacks on Merchant Shipping If we are io build submarines, and even more submarines than before the war, naval competition will be per- petuated in a new and dangerous form, Nor can we regard the re- strictions on their use which have been accepted at Washington as a safeguard against their fu- ture misuse, The restrictions are of importance, and we do not doubt that they have been adopted with sincer- ity, but such rales have been made be- fore and then broken by nations con- fronted with Imminent defeat. Ex- perience has proved that submarines are almost useless except for attacks cn merchant shipping, and if we are really determined to rule out such at- tacks from among the more hideous possibilities of warfare _there is only one way to do it, ana that is to scrap the submarine--ZLendon Observer. A POISON STOREHOUSE . INEVERY HOME You may not think so, but that's what happens to every one of us when the kidneys are affected. The kidatys are the filters that remove from the blood the waste matter that acts like deadly poison on the vitality and health of the system. Dr. Ham- ilton's Pills stimulate the kidneys, ex- pel fermenting matter from the bowels, restore the liver and. stimu- late all excretory organs. No medi- cine will clean up the system, tone the blood, make you feel fit and fine a8 guickly as Dr. Hamilion's Pills. Useful and. needed in every home. Dr. Butternut, 25¢ dealers, or The Catarr- hozone Co., Montreal. a Acreage e Under Pl Plough Land Ready for Peat is Well up to Average in Manitoba That there will be 4,902,000 acres in ba ready fcr the plough this is a statement made in a re- port issued by the provincial depart- ment of agriculture. This acreage is well up to the average. ~ Figures obtained from the agricultural depart- ment. show that in 1921 Manitoba land was ¢ ted in preparation for the 1922 op as follows: New breaking, 157.000 acres; summerfallow, 1,612, 000; fall ploughing, 31,133,000; total, 5, These figures com- favorably as regards fall ith those available for the which were new breaking 4,902,000 a 188,060 acres; summerfallow 1,410,000 acres; fall ploughing 2,730,000 acres; total, 4 a 0 Qacres. Miller's Worm Powders act so thor- oughly that stomachic and intestinal worms pass from the child without be- ing noticed and without inconvenience to the sufferer. They are painless and perfect in action, and at all times will be found a healthy medicine, strengthening the infantile stomach and main tion, so that, besides being an effec- tive vermifuge, they are tonical and health-giving in their effects. Radium Expert Dies Professor Johan ¥. Fischer, who was popularly credited with knowing more abecul radium than any other vited to address the convention, Hamiltonls Pills of Mandrake and. 'and this year to 50 per cent. 1ing it in vigorous opera-| CASTORIA For Infants and Children fn Use For oye) 30 Yeors Always bears the Signature of A SS es Irrigators to Meet Convention to he Held at Creek and Brooks in July The annual convention of the West- ern Canada Irrigation Association for the present year will open at Maple Creek, Saskatehewan, on Wednesday, July 26th, and two days later will move to Brooks, Alberta. Some uf the most prominent irrigationists on the American Continent are being in- and in view of the growing importance of irrigation in Western Canada the meeting is promised to be largely ar- tended: The largest single irriga- tion project on the American Con- tinent is in Alberta, and irrigation de- velopment is going ahead at a rapid pace. Maple Reynard's Menu Fox = breeding, looked upon as a speculative craze a few years ago, has now become a stabilized industry in Prince Ldward Island and is being practiced in'other provinces with suc- cess. Investigations carried on un- der the auspices of the Council for Scientific and Industrial Research at Ottawa and dealing with such ques- tions as the origin and extirpation of intestinal parasites, dieting of ani- mals and minimum age for mating, have produced much data of value to the breeders. BABY'S HEALTH I THE SPRING The spring is a time of anxiety to} mothers who have little ones in the home. Conditions make it necessary to keep the baby indoors. He is of- ten confined to overheated, badly ven- tilated rooms and catches colds which rack his whole system. To guard against this a box of Baby's Own Tablets should be kept in the house and an occasional dose given the baby tc keep his stomach and bowels working regularly. This will prevent colds, constipation or colic and keep baby well. The Tablets are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine" Co., Brockville, Ont. White Packers Handie B.C. Herring All herring packing is now complet- ed and there ate only about 1,000 tons left in the market to be moved to the Orient. Already 25,000 tons have gone forward to that destination. Over 50 per cent. of the herring packed in British Columbia this year was pro- cessed by white packers. Four years ago Japanese packed 100 per cent. of this dry-salt cured herring, but last year this was reduced to 70 per cent. Hard and soft corns both yield to Holloway's Corn Remover, which ig entirely 'safe to use, and certain and Satieinetony in its action. The Beginning of the End Petrograd, named in -honor of the Czar Peter the Great, who built it, is tensive ice fields. : "Papa' Maiss, be the oldest world on the active list, has just re- tired on his well earned pension, aged He had been a teacher for 70 years and absent from his desk only 12 days through illness. 90 years. age of 54, who was reputed to He paid a schoolmaster in the knowledge. radium The Emergency launched 2,312 hulls. man in Denmark, has just died at the heavy price for While experimenting in he lost several fingers. 1921 he visited America. fleet corporation to be renamed Lenigrad, a Moscow dispatch teports, in honor of Lenine, his | who unbuilt it.--Topeka Capital. In - Beyond Possibility It will be time for Germany lo squeal if she is ever compelled to pay as many marks to France as she left there--Philadelphia North American. pres esis a i fn Rey of Bad lo pour " oon |Z 5 al © tlemonty of yr, 2s Econ, ay 22 Eo S eeazoeate so ZZ: Cea pan of Les hare = bi [¥ 51 ow Gun cas --, on a She ta Bade of Wheat ang Barley en areris Sandia Postum Carey Ceo. Lig, ons, Sums - -- wry i 2 ose Suppose Sato would recognize the fact that there's no gain but much loss in keeping up hostilities with the stomach! Suppose the ancient aggrava- tion of improper food on indig- hen Will There Be A Disarmament of Dining Tables? i nant digestive organs should be settled with guarantees of sen- sible diet and tranquil digestion! The saving would be beyond all possibility of counting. Yet millions go on declaring ~ war on the stomach and accept- ing war in return-- loading up on starchy, heavy, unbalanced and highly-seasoned food at breakfast or =| ing why comfort, hap- =%| piness and efficiency are out of reach, % is 4 dn; = X \ lunch -- and wonder-. Grape-Nuts --the Body Builder "There's a Reason > Made by Canadian Postum Cereal Co., Ltd., Windsor, Ont. Grane Nis makes a friend of the taste and an ally of the stomach. There's a charm and satis- faction to this delicious foed which prompts appetite to say, "There's a meal!" and digestion to answer, "Thank goodness, here's peace at last!" Grape-Nuts is the perfected nutriment of wheat and malted barley--sweet, crisp, and won-- derfully nourishing. It digests quickly, and provides the neces- sary elements, including the vital mineral salts, for body, nerve and brain, = Order Grape-Nuts from your grocer today, and let a delighted taste pass a treaty of peace along to an enthusiastic digestion and assimilation. | only another | humble Viscountess; Interested in Western Canada American Farmers Ars, Anxious %o Take Up Land Hers {By G. C. Porter, of Winnipeg) Minneapolis, Minn.--Canadian Gov- | ernment Agencies at this point and the railroad Natural Resources De- partment Agents, are in receipt of let- ters from points as remote ag Califor nia and Florida, from farmers who want to move to Western Canada. Some of them are from men who went to those States as recently as three years ago to iry fruit growing, lured there by advertising companies own- ing large acreage. They are dissat- isfied, and are anxious fo get back North. Must Be More Co-operation Co-operation by the people of West- ern Canada and more co-operation in: helping get settlers on the land is what the railroad men, immigration Government agents and real estate men with whom I have talked em- i phasize as a prime essential if the full advantage is to be taken of the trend that is setting in from the States towards the vacant: lands over the line. How it Can Be Done Howard Everett, president of the Luce Land Company, speaks with wide experience in this field. He told me of the days when the Luce Comi- pany was taking thousands into Sas- | katchewan. They looked after their particular settlers and helped locate them on the land. There was not the co-operation and help for those new arrivals that he would like to have seen and such as is necessary if every settler taken in is to be anchor ed to the soil. The machinery was not there for the co-operation purpose. The spirit of encouragement was there but there was no organization. 'Mr. Everett did not think that this should be left to haphazard chance. There should be organized bodies to meet these new comers. If the people were worth advertising for and worth sending highly paid agents over the country for, they were worth taking care -of until settled when they arriv- ed at their destination. More Attention at the Border : Many of the men with woom I have talked emphasized another weakness that is proving most expensive. It is the handling of emigrants going into Canada when they are at the bor- der. Of course, there must be immi- gration officers to interview these people seeking admission -to Canada, but one Dominion Government agent told me that last year 250 being sent into the prairies to go on farms were turned back at the border by the Can- adian Immigration officers. Those familiar with the working of the Gov- ernment Immigration Bureau in the States assert that they think a certi- ficate from any one of these agents issued to a prospective settler in ord- er that he. can get his cheap railroad ticket on arrival in Winnipeg, should be sufficient evidence for the admis- sion of such- person on arrival at the border without further information. if You Have Neuralgia Rub on "Nerviling" Apply Nerviiine to the sore spot. Notice the warm glow that spreads deeper and wider as Nerviline's sooth- ing infiuence is carried deep into the sore tissue. How quickly the pain is eased. In a little while you have forgotten it, the soreness has actual ly gone. For neuralgia, sciatica, rheumatism, Nerviline is a boon. Large 35c bottles. Sold everywhere. Poise and Brains : No People on Earth Have Political Talent Equal to the British The British are a very great people. The marriage of Princess Mary is example of how they manage to do the right thing befote the final crack of doom. Remember the worid war and how the British Empire came out of it bigger than ever. Look at Ireland--for years given up as hopeless. Think of Bal- four coming to Washington and put- ting across the four-power treaty, while getting the naval holiday, and going home with both Japan and America the sworn friends of old John Bull. No people on earth today have political talent, experience and skill equal to the British. Congratula- tions to- the former Princess, now a and, if you please, felicitations to old England on leading the world just by poise and | brains.--Springfield Republican. Minard's Liniment prevents Spanish Flu Dry in England It was worth placing on record that rainfall in the British Isles was small- er in 1921 than In any other year since 1815. The total was only 12.50 inches, while the average for the hun- dred years from 1816 fo 1913 24.41 inches, and the usually accepted normal--the average for - the {hirty- five years from 1881 to 1815---1is 23.50 inches. February, with 0.12 inch, was the month of least raln, while July had only®).15 inch. i was | 1 'has He Never Saw Wife fell And Strong Says Railroad So ife {an "If anybody wants to hear about Tanlac, they ought to come out to my house. My wife is so enthusiastic I believe she would be willing to talk all day about it," said M. Burns, St. Rose, Man., well-known Canadian Na- tional Railroad man. "It is natural that she should be de- lighted with the results she has ob- tained, because she is like a different person now from what she had been for three years past. Stomach trouble and indigestion made life mis- erable for her and she was failing day by day. "Tanlac proved to be the very thing she needed. She says she never felt better in her life and I can believe if, because I know I never saw her look- ing as well and strong as she does now." : Tanlac is sold by all good drugeisis. National Council of Education Conference to be Held Toronto in 1923 Into the minds of a group of citi- zens of Western Canada, there came in 1917 the idea that a concerted at- tempt should be made to rally the best public opinion of the nation be- hind the schools of the Dominion, the direction of which is assigned by our constitution to the Province. It was contended that the Education Depart- ments cannot be fully effective if unsupported by an interested and alert public opinion. The preliminary conference held at Winnipeg in October, 1919, called the National - Council into being. The next conference is now being organ- ized by that council as a definite ex- pression of its aim and proposed ac- tivities, as a means of creating public opinion and invoking its entire force on behalf of an educational ideal. This Triennial in. conference is to be held at Toronto at] entire cost of its or-| Easter, 1923, the ganization having been most gener- ously undertaken by the Rotary Club of that city. the conference-centre for a Dominion- wide educational campaign in which all cities and towns will be simultan- eously interested by notable speakers. With this in view, committees are now in course of constitution at the more important points, and through them, Canada will be asked to con- sider vital aspects of Education, and formulate opinion and suggestion as a means of interesting the public in the pressing need of a 'new light" in edu- cation, in its widest interpretation. For these committees, a programme of subjects is being prepared in which discussion and research is desirable at this stage. These topics might usefully include the "Pros and Cons of Co-Education," "The New Zealand system of School Administration" (New Zealand with a populaton of one and a quarter millions, has only nine school hoards!) ~ "The Cinema in Education," "The Residential Consoli- dated School for Rural Districts," etc. ste. The programme for the confer- ence itself has not yet been decided upon but proposals will be submitted to the executive of the council and to the Toronto Committee within the next two or three weeks. Representation from Great Britain and France on what is hoped may be } considered a satisfactory basis to all, been assured, and the council must now concern itself with the im- portant question of speakers to repre- sent the Dominion and the United States. | Invitations wilt be issued to depart : ments of education throughout the Empire and of certain foreign coun- tries, ing eminence, and to organizations of an educational character, and the con- ference organized on as tmpressies a scale as Dossible. Wash New Cars Often Water Tends to Harden Finish and Preserve It "Every automobile should be thor- oughly washed after returning from a trip in the country. ; In no case should dust or mud be allowed to remain on the car for any length of time, for the chemicals in the mud acted on by the heat of the sun will destroy- the luster of tae varnish. Tar and grease should also be removed if high-grade finish is to be retained. The oftener a new car is washed the better it will be for the varnish, as water tends to harden the finish and preserve it. After the varnish has once been hardened the car should be washed ag seldom as pos- sible. Care should be taken in the winter not to have the temperature in the garage too warm, ag too great a change In temperature from the in- side of the garage to the cold weath- er outside is likely to "check" the paint. Worms sap the strength and under- mine the vitality of children. Streng- then. them by using Mother Graves' Worm Exterminator to drive out the parasiics, Attached to the Aquarium in New York City is a hospital where fish are treated for their ailments. Toronto will be made | to educationalists of outstand-| as : 8 | 'Minard's Liniment for Cough and Colds Newsboy Claims World' s Record Has Sold 113,000,000 Copies of London Evening Star Harry Willams, a news vendor, claims the world's record for seliing a single newspaper with a total of 13,000,000 copies of the London Evening Star. He joined the sales force in January, - 1888, when the Star was first published. In recogni- 'tion' of his services he has been given a substantial pension for the vest of his life. Williams' record for one day's sales came on August 4, 1914, when the public was clamoring for war news. On that day he sold 29,- 000 copies. The tea tree is an evergreen plant. Lift Off with Fingers Doesn't Tart a bit! Drop a little "Freezone" on an aching corn, ingtant- ly that corn stops hurting, then short- ly you lift it right out with fingers. Truly! Your druggist sells a tiny bottle of "Freezone" for a few c¢ cents, sufficient to remove every hard corn, soft corn, or corn between the toes, and the car luses, without soreness or irritation. MONEY ORDERS It is always safe to send a Dominion Dx press Money Order. Five dollars costs three cents. INVENTORS -- NOTICE OU can make money in having that IDEA PATENTED. We will place your PATENT before the proper MANU- FACTURERS and BUYERS. SEND for FREE LIST of IDEAS to be INVENTED. The RAMSAY Co. ARNPRIOR Patent Solicitors ONTARIO n Best forBaby Best : for You Sm ~~ ody lather them ~ freely with Baby's OwnSaap lg10-21 ALBERT SOAPS, LIMITED, Mirus MONTREAL Had Fearful Eczema "If mothers only knew the value of D. D. D.** writes Mrs. A. Ashby of 88 Charles St. W., Tar onto. Write her for the story of how D. D. D. relieved her baby of a bad caseof eczema that completely covered the head and face. We keep on publishing these statements weekly from ali parts of Canada, telling of the really marvelous resulis secured by the iiguid wash, Why not get a bottle of D. D. D. today on our positive guarantee? lich goes like magic, 51.008 bottle, Try D BD. D. Soap, t a @ x @ ZZE Jotion for Skin Disease If you cannot call at a local dealer's write to the D.D.D. Laboratories, Dept. 'W _U-76, 27 Lyall Ave., Toronto, and they will send you free trial bottle if you en- close 10¢, which merely pays for postage | and packing. 1 BOOK ON DOG DISEASES. ; and How to T'eed = | Mailed F¥ree to any | ives ns | Autho H., CLAY Gov BER NC, 129 ist Fourth Street, New York, U.S.A, America's Pioneer Dog Remedics =, WwW. N. U 143

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