.__.,..._......-....-- gill 1 ' li.$*‘ ~we¢.~= :eval wflw-=!w"i2'~‘f¥“*" ~@£¥iiilH!iU!!§YQQ!iN 'imwrrr ' ' " "Y" ' ' -.-»\H\1un~».»......,..:;.;.'.....~......... ~ - -f-r'-r r ~~~~---rr-- ” ice § . _Tiif MOX.lTVlYK“ln1lllvI'll|v leoellaao-M. (intro I. Irene. I. suntan-laar IH. lltelelnllnaloti nuance Rimin- llnuwdod lil" ill sOv$f» Col il it I WORDS OF WISDOM The inspiring ilrsssngc of 1-Iis Iblcellcncy Lord Bvssborougli, Gov- ernor General of Canada, publish- ed in Saturdays Guardian, is one which should be rc-od and studied by all our readers. His Excellency accepts the economic depression as a fact. but is convinced that the tiling to be done is to work with faith alldronfidencc, and that by safeguarding Canadian cllaractcr p. ltiund’ 5. gil iii; glial so; popular health instruction, 40: cancer control. 20: heart lllklll control 20: total-1000. It would be interesting to know how this Pmvince would stand if scored under such a system. Cer- tainly there has been remarkable Iprogress in recent years through Iihe efforts of the Red Cross Society [and other kindred organizations, |and there is every prospect, under 'the newly organized Provincial !Ministry.of Health and Education, I the future will ture burr or ltseli.'°f this progress being continued to ‘"1 for one," he dcclalr-.d significant- an even great" extent in “W mt' 15', "ani convinced that tilnes would already be appreciably less bad if ure. It is important for our citizens to recognize that while the work of 9. large numbcr of people withuhis department' "Wives ‘mly °°' more imligilmtion than judgment had not contracted the morbid hab- it of proclaiming that there are far worse things waiting for us round the next corner.” His Ex- cellency has put the case against the pessimlsts and alarmists in a 'nutshell ,HEALTH SERVICES How many realize the monetary value of preventive medicine? This is the question asked by a writer in the Canadian Public Health Joum- al. and it is one which opens up a subject of great public interest and impol-tzlncc. Man lives in his own casional notice in the pres, it is going on continuously, and its bene- ficinl effects are permanent and far reaching. BRITISH QUOTA URGED Favorable comment on the an- nouncement that the Ontario GOV- ernment is prepared to prosecute on the basis of Comissioners Whites investigation into the al- leged Motion Picture Combine in Canada is made in the current ls- sue of "Ecl'loes,” the official organ of the Imperial Order of Daughters of the Empire. Expressing the hope that those who gave their evidence generation and is impressed Oniy before the commission will be pre- lv by the conditions as he finds them, failing to realize that his present ared. if called upon, to testify rankly before the Courts, "Echoes" .f colnpnl'ati\'ely fortunate state is Warns its readers of the dahgemus the outcome of an accumulation of effem of a foreign mm combine improvements. The best results of and suggests enmuragihg theat,,e» modern medical science are negative owne.” to show pictures angina” in character. That is to say, they ing jh other countries than the are not scnsatiolml cures but im- United states’ eshechmy pictures of proved methods of preventing dis- British ol-|g1n_ The Order has been ease in its early stages. For this' info.-med on good authority that reason thc general public, accus- mere is ,_ sufficiency of selected icnlcd as it is to judging the value and good British pictures to hh at oi a service by the credit balance least a ten her cent quota of the ' " Ca showing at thc ond of the year, can nadian market- It 'has been no, cnsily sec the advantages to be urged by many inteuechmh religious ments in health services. Yet the itting flow of foreign films de-` E-iinfd by C2\1`i'yiIiEf Ollii iii`iP\T°V°' and political leaders that the unre- , In pl advantages are there. We do not have so many cases of typhoid to- cting ideas and spreading pro- paganda inlmical to Canadian day We <10 DOI? have S0 "HWY W-“'95 ideas and aspirations constitute a m of ciiptherizi. Our infant mortality eriacc to the national character, is lower- These and other savings and it is suggested that those in_ in human life and vXl>€'nSe are iiic I trrested in this matter should urge direct result of the money expended in scientific preventive measures. A safe water supply, for example, rc- lleves the community of the bur- den imposed by outbreaks of ty- phoid fever. Diphtherla prevention is relieving the community of an- other burdcn. School hygiene 'is helping to build a sounder nation and is saving t-he taxpayer money because the ht child takes fewer years to' get his education. Sew- age disposal and sanitation add their quota to the commllrlity sav- ings. Go through the list of pub- lic health activities, milk controi,_ mental hygiene. inflmt welfare, etc., and nnancial gain can be shown to upon the various Provincial Gov- emments to enact legislation which will require at least this quota throughout the Dominion. This, it is contended reasonably, would provide a leaven for the time being and would open the door for further dcvelopment of a fairer and freer market for first class fllms no mat- ter what the country of origin. A WORTHY CAUSE The annual collection for the Protestant Orphanage will be so- licited today, and we commend the Suggestion in the advertisement that our citizens be as generous in result from each service, though too \ frequently the u\'cl‘agc man is ln-1 their contributions as possible. In- Sl§liZ\.ltl0l'lS S\lCh 85 the orphgnggeg ciined to take it all for grunted. lperform 8, work of great necessity To provide lt standardized system and importance in the community Of rhtilig 00mm\ll1liy health W°1`k» ,and deserve every encoulagcment. the American Public Health ASSOC- iflnanciaily and otherwise. There htlon has developed an nl'-ipmilal :crm which takes into account the various branches of the work whe- ther operated by a health depart- ment, by another official body 01' by voluntary workers. The work of each branch is set out in detail and a system of scoring is used to give a numerical value for services performed. For instance a total score of 160 is allowed for the com- municable disease division- The various phases of this work arc scored according to the extent and efficiency of the service pro- vided; reporting of diseases, invcs- tigation and recording, and the various other activities are consid- cred separately and ln complete de- tail. The other main divisions and scores are as follows: Vital statis- 1'cs,50; venereal disease control. 50; tuberculosis control, 00; mater- ‘nity hygiene, 80; infant hygiene, 90; pre-school hygiene, ao; school hygiene, 120; food and milk con- trol, io; sanitation, so: iab°r°i»°f¥- 1 Iii-fe fifty chlld.ren in the Protestant iofphanagejand the fact that there ,lmve been no deaths or serious ill- iness dumig the year, speaks for litself. This is the eighth successive year in which no deaths have oc- |currcd, and the management of the institution has been most satisfac- torily oonducted. The good people who are interested in looking after ihe Orphanage will be ‘oh their rounds today, and will expect the rsema liberal support that has been received in the past. EDITORIAL NOTES It 18 .lust as easy, comments a Saskatoon exchange, to make er-mrs in times of depression as in times of prosperity. Those who are not buying what they nr-ed while prices are low are making just as D18 an erorr as they made a few years am when thbsgbpught things they didn't need when`pelg¢, were blah. “~ . Q 'tomb near Lewistown, Illinois, were found the bones or a DN lb llln1l._qal.‘¢na- lnatth Isaac! llnllacbeasie Rig which U wanted by ur: Lkfll d|litIll0‘ Ill Whole _ hun. ur -In' mnondumnw --2" - . IIONDAY. NOVUIQI. I. llll speak; what they want h the é__“_ .--;» , be fo x "m.|m in Bnlllflefll 1; Lg thougllt to date UQ 3* 33,0 3, C., len eenturlel elrlll' r' mm 11,.. .arllrst wheels known to hh” Mm “gen in EUYDC. It !¢l'll° rovirulioatlan of the honor of the 'M pun of a two-v-'h¢¢l¢\l ¢ll‘\~ party by the public rzpudhtion of those guilty in tin turpitudcs brought to light in the leauhar- naie enquiry. Opm warfare will :not be made ll'll\1etA the leader of fthe Opposition unless it ia that he iwlshu to protect' his friends flgalngt political! degradation with iwhirh they are today threatened. .That is already shown. Failing to lobtsiu the moral satisfaction which ithey claim, they will call a con- ,vention of the party, probably next August, where Mr. King will be culled upon to explain his 101"- atlon for his partisans now in trouble. The present depression is not the first that has struck the con- tinent or the world. In Harper-S Weekly on Oct. 10, 1851. “It is B- gloomy moment in history. Not of most men who read this paper- hu there been so much grave and deep apprehension; never has the this time. I`n our own country there is universal commercial approaching winter without em-` ployment, and without the DTOSDENI of it. ' In France the political caldron‘ seethes and bubbles with 1111091'-. tainty; Russia. hangs as usual, like a cloud, dark and silent upon the horizon of Europe; while all the energies, resources and influences, of the British Empire are sorely tried, and are yet to be tried more sorely, in coping with the vast and deadly Indian insurrection, and with its disturbed relations in China. ‘It is a solemn moment. and no man can feel an indiffer- ence (which, happily, no man ple- tends to feel) in the issue of events. "of our own troubles no man can see the end. They arc. fortunately, as yet mainly Com' mercial; and if we are only to lose money, and by painful l>0l/efiy ¢°_ be taught wisdom-the wisdom- of honor, and faith, of sympathy and of charity-no man need seriously despair. And yet the] very haste to be rich, which is_ the occasion of this widespread, calamity, has also tended to des-, troy the moral forces with which’ we are to resist and subdue the; calamity. Y *__* I In Hamilton the other day.; Benudry Leman, president of the Canadian Bankers' Association,l voiced a note that is too infre- quently heard in Canada today~| 1-le suggested immigration as a' cure for depression in Canadcsl There seems to be a prevalent no-, tion that every new immigrant arriving in Canada takes a job away from someone else. The_ basic truth that immigration of the right kind builds purchasing, power and productive power and thuscrcates prosperity. is generally lost. Canada's greatest periods of prosperity have been periods when immigration came in rapidly. Whether the prosperity created the immigration or the immigrat- ion created the -prosperity is a question upon which there is as much difference of opinion as on the question of which came first, the hen or the egg. We must think says the Toronto 'the Crown Colonies and Depend- lcncles into our own fiscal uni; and by arranging between that unit and the Dominlons ci series of ,limited fiscal partnerships. That must see about it. A compilation for the ycnr 1930 made by the National Geographic Society discloses many interesting finds. Near Lenclster, Pennsyl- vania, traces were found of two hitherto unknown Indian tribes. Traces of another unknown tribe arltedating the Susquehanna and conutoge, Indians were found in picture writing on rocks on islands in the Susquehanna River- In a historic Indian leader. some 800 pmhigwrio graves were found along Oklahoma and New Mexico in- vestigator! came upon the re- mains of three sepfrate types of 01135 goom|,_e¢tim.ated in date , - No Mol: will tloul I 1" ‘i’"° °' ”‘° rmmyzgnfxf rlnslcmcs asm lun I‘""'° i’““"“ °"" ‘ ‘ ‘ ltan wheel is Pi‘°i*°»°\5' ""7 fu' 'Nm I Your are hearing ao may Joke. being the worlds flrltuizgla :Z from our humorista about phyaic-gvery _fact “fat " W" n 1 lan: blaming everything on the 3““°t°" Wim ‘mmhn ' .B in ` teeth when they can't find out any "Y" 5"gg°S'“§ mm' NIE” bf” other cause for an ailment. And the °°mid"“ble PNK?" 8 t I tin reason mr thu is likely that the “ml” I" me ""°,‘;f“"‘ Z ° hurnorist himself or some memberiwheel' It is pmba ° au mm of his family has been regwred to ,used one wheel before he learned to heahh by having wma mnctedguse two. This, however, is not at teeth removed_ Every physmmhlll certain. It is easier to walk on and practically. every family can §‘:“'° le? mm t° h°pd°n.l°n°;_l Mn: ,testify to the fact that the under-fig p°`”‘me man “li ip; tn mining of the system is very ofteni“'h°°I5 1" p°"s_'°“° e D 5 e due to ,mented teeth gather. Afterwards, perhaps, he Dr. Wm. Lintz, Brooklyn, N. Y.'1"“"‘°d S°’“°fh11‘8 0! the 'princip- observat.1ons based on the study K?}:;Eeu5;u;? oxcgg C353: 32,100 psticgtierwxre C3321, 23,3: ese barrow, with its great central ,ng f,,,'f,en0se throat ,mn cnes,I\rhee1 and its carefully-balanced ailments tells us that ihieeie he w ‘our present troubles, but of de-,upon his body glimmcd down dmtn on the scaffold For three |veloplng the immense potential_ through thc water as an offering centuries num, the time of C0hnn_ wealth which is the heritage oi’ our to the deity. Every succeeding from the adventurers: few lived to ,tall the tale. There is no need to if-epoat the sad story of Relelgh's :second voyage in seach of El Dorado, nor of his retum, czp- tivity in the Tower, and death. r “E`en such is Time, who takes in i trust ,Our youth and joys and all we I have. . dust. rote on the eve of his bus, the imaginary Mar El Dorado. race. We can do that by bringinglsunrise the rite was repeated, and the Golden sea by which stand the ‘ln the course of centuries the bed of the lake was paved with gold, to iwhich was added the ornaments of 'the ca.clque's followers. Only a 'mighty nation and at rich could tis the task which the statesmen of have such a prodigal head. El Ithis age find before them, and they Dorado became it symbol to the in- vading Spaniards: it meant not so ,much a man as rt golden oily in a .land of gold. In seeking that city ;Spaln spent more lives and sank more treasure than in all its other 'adventures in the New World. 'And as the seekers sought it over ;an area of a million square miles it lreceded always before their ad- vance. n’ News of E1 Dorado came to the `insubstantl~l city, was delineated on maps. So late as l'I40 a. search for it was made. Popular im- agination was irlfamed by an Indian who pointed to the dim radiance of the clouds of Magellan in the southern sky; this, he said. was the reflection of golden ore on an island in the lake of legend. That is, in truth, where El Dorado belongs-to cloudland. The Only Thing that Gave Relief "Two year! ago I had bad back- ache," writer Mr. J. G. Haffner, - fpaintings were rliscowrrrl in south- the Buck Warrior River in Ala- been built by Indian: some '100‘ 'bama. In the Cimarron Valley nf Aylesbury, Suk. “I tried different medicines but coulcli-l'¢ get any rc- llef. I than tried a few bores of Dodd'| Kidney Pills and have never had any trouble since. Thanh to Dodd’| Kidney Pills.” Dadd'e Kid ney Pills nlmuhre and on weak kidneys. You will be d bmw noon they befn to elunu vyurlg. 00 Doodle and eel the Hd- " as 0 aame time Bukache, Rheu- ,£|';'|¢, qndaehowd all Iallmsnu duo ill. from 200 B. C. was unearthed in New Mexico. Prehistoric Indian lwestem Color-ado. Ah f~l,~.b0.-rm; system of canals supposed to have years ago was discovered in the Gilt and salt River Valleys. ,jlnglneers ofthe Bureau of Re- ‘clamaiion building q ,md ,pong Drehiltdlb inhabitants. A pueblo the Lower Yellowstone came acrosa` I Wififled iiirciii, of several acl-ea. ~.-. -~--.~....,.. ,..,..,,.... sf. --ug-.»~»~-\~~w'»-rn~.f--.---.-~`~" ~_.,¢¢|»n»o---- - _._-.-.-..-... . - Job in a real estate agency. Leave footprints on the sands of time And you will be applauded; But leave them on the parlor rug And jawed you'll get, not lauded. The University Correspondent ex- plains that the above notice was in- tended to prevent’ English visitors nays Us with but are andlirom walking about the hotel in their mountaineering boots. I FREE 250 Tube Colgates Tooth Paste will bc given with any one of the following article!- 25o Tube of Colgatea Tooth Paste, Silo Tube of Colgate: Shaving Cream, 35o Tube of Palmolive Shaving Cream, 50|: . Bottle nf Palrnollve Shampoo or -filo Bottle of Vaseline llalr Tonic. Don'¢ miss this bargain as we have only a limited quan- tity. ' DRUG SPECIALS I $1.00 Bottle of Eno: Fruit I Salts . . . . . . . . . . B90 $1.00 Bottle Russian Min- eral0il......... . . . . ...Bile ' 00c Andrews Liver Salts.. 491: $1.00 Abbe!! Salts two 8 0|. Bottle of Wampolea Milk of Magncsia I5o 16 Oz. Bottle of Parke Davis Milk of Magnesln 500 16 0:. Bottle of Wam- polee Antlseptlo Month Wuh ‘lilo The 2 MAGS . PHONE 815 Mail Orders Given Prompt Attention. ` f \ | °‘ l=o°i°° s -= nos . slscu .I ~uE \>'Q ily '\*° ' '11 >- , "_ __, \ . I' ~ I ‘|he`rCho~oo ` , ".1 .a. \ Re¢.‘hade Mule _. ,_ .___ _ _______.,_,___ 6 .iii f ¢ BEBUK_w"m tion ls a gracious act, and one, ` 1 - 1 ` , r ' Highest Class Foxes' ` With Superior Pelts I ' Result .from regular feeding or ~- ` ‘lMPERIALS”. I . , ._- I MANUFACTURED BY IMPERIAL BISGUIT C0., LTU: Box 4-L' ""'\\°lottet0Wn, P. EJ it \¢l*\ ..» ¢ I *.‘ .iii 375,. in petiole 'ifn ntrol. much ation lands n -< l h ..l