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Flesherton Advance, 5 Feb 1930, p. 3

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THE nerves are fed by the blood. Poor blood mean* starved nerve tit- cue, insomnia, irritability and depression. Dr. Williams' Pink PULi will enrich your blood tream and rebuild your ' over-worked nerves. Mis Josephine M. Martin, of Kitchener, Ontario, testi- fies to this : "I Riffered from > ocrvout tmaldoirn," the write*. "I had terrible licV headache*, dixzincw; felt very weak and could not sleep ; had no appe- tite. I felt alwayf a* if some- thing terrible were going to happen. After taking other treatment without itscce**, on my suter's advice, I tr -<i Dr. Williams' Pink Pill*,ind now i! the** symptoms are gone, ad I am strong and happy Sain." Buy Dr. Williams' Pink Pills now at your druggist's or any dealer in medicine or by mail, $0 cents, postpaid, from the Dr. Williams Medi- cine Co., Brock-rUle, Ontario. M Humans For Sale : \Vhen Are the Cmitzed Gov-. ernments Going to Stop Slavery? By I Selena Nonnar.toa.'B.A. "Remember them that are In i bonds!" The message thrilled through j British hearts in dayi gone by, and this country took the l<-ad in a crus- ade for the freeing "f t!ie slaves. But J this dark blot on civii -arion still per- I sists and even in a Christian coun- try. It is up to us in do our part to remove it and for n r Philosophers ' i us that Man is j marked off fro;>i the animals by the i gift of laughter and tbe usr. of tools. It mlsht be added that animals do not sell each other into captivity. Men jdo. Interesting as it ml^'at be to retrac e the past and to tiad out how human slavery originated, it is much more important to face t'aa present and to grasp the fact that between four and i sis millions of our fellow human crea- Old Timer Retire* Haiti and the UJS. FOK SALE e the marines sent to Haiti II vv Ut^.pi C IUV Uit.**Ubo o^t**, vJ . by Washington the French language a (er remains there impregnable. lover 4* This we are told by certain French ! s _ !:> : editors, who call attention to the fact : that in Haitt the French language resists the American invasion more successfully than it does in Paris. j When the United States established ' order about 1915 ia the tumultuous , republic of the Caribbean, relates ' Pierre Soulaiue in the Paris Figaro, . an attempt was made to pnpagate i the use of English iiv the island. But | tbe blacks, mulattos, and quadroons, I he rejoices, refused to abandon the language of the old Creoles. This in(oria?.nt adds: "TV; newspapers of Haiti are all published in French. The principal cues are the Nouielliste, the Matin, and the Temps. A new Journal, the KAVT.N AND 1IKLL. the lira .t Ti'al worM b**yond. t: '' -oC (KMlIKlM. W. Euclid Av*.. Toronto. ANTED PARTIES TO K.ViT FOR at horn* by han>) or ma*'-. .11*. t ' . .> i'.,- r- >" \"^>* stamp. florae Knit i ing Machine Company. Toronto 13. DR. WATSON'S TO.JI . STOUT AND A-E 'it.* package makes four sraJlons. Hail 75c today ami we will for- ward you postpaid on package of this delicious beverage. M AILEJf * CO. LIMITED TeruJnal Warehouse. Toroii:o PINK PILLS ' A HOUSEHOLD MAU8 IN t4 COUNTMtta " Hack in ISsi wi.en the Canadian Pacific Railway *vs p i.-iiir.^ Through buih !n Northern Ontario on its way across tUe comment, this old-time engine did a lot of jood work and it was fired by James T. Fa'.'.on who had PLEASURE The first great rule is that we must do something that life must have a purpose and an aim that w ;rk should be not merely occasional and Presse, has been lately founded by a ' Spa3mo dic, but steady atd continuous. Mr. Auguste. He has set up a very expensive printing-plant at Port-au- j Prince. The Presse does not contain Pleasure is a Jewel which will only retain Us lustre when it is in 2 - :- ting of work, and a vacant life is tures are even to-day giving enslaved, Joined the; road thres years previously. Oa the last day of 1929 Fallen, for over forty years an engineer. c!o=ed more than fifty year-* of railroad ser- in this beautiful v.-jrld. Where are they? a perplexed read-! er may Inquire. Did not Great K. i- tain abolish slavery once and for all i In 1333? The answer is that the va^t ma-! Jorjty of slaves to-day are in Abys- ' sinia, China, and the Arabian area. Great Britain did, a century ago, make j valiant efforts to stamp out the plague of slavery. In 1772. by I.or 1 .Mans-! field's celebrated Judgment, it became; illegal to hold a slave l:i England. In i language which has been quoted a i thousand times: If slave sets foot on English soil he becomes a free ni;-.n. "The Underground Railway." In 1307 Great Britain abolished th- trade in slaves between any of her Dominions (including England) and' j Afrii-a. In 1833 she completed her ' j task by emancipating all those who ; were held in slavery i.i any of her i i Domiuions. Bat Great Britain could | uot and cannot now control the whole of the rest of tbe world. Readers uf "Uncle Tom's Cabin" '. vice. His picture is inset with that of the o!d '.ocomvive. to the one -on w'.:idt he worked as a > i :. \ merely takes the more secret form of *:ii;i-gi:ns in- human beir. :>. Can ths League Help? Many of the wretched girls sold as slaves are detained religious pilgrims. many from the Far Hast, who never get free again. Abyssinia is another great slave-seller to Arabia. Is there any hope for these miser- able and tortured being.;? Yf> and azaiu no. Their hopa lies, in the I.^a r -:-? of Nations. Their despair lies in tbe difficulty first of getting the League ' to move strongly tn.uirh; and, .-eo ond. of ensuring that those nations like China which have abolished slav- ' ery on p: >>r should abo'i--h it in fact. ; American prohibits ;he nnmifac- ' t'ire, transportation, and *ale of alco- holic drink: China prohibits slavery. Of the two prohibitions, the American THE RESPONSIBILITY OF A FOND MOTHER can hostile toward foreign lar.^ :agea. "The latest number of the 1'resse to reach France contains photographs Xo. 222, sister! of the demonstration by students on strike. The striking students remain- I ed within the limits of a pacific de- ' moustration designed as a protest ! against the minimum salaries paid j their professors in comparison to the I magnificent compensation received j by American teachers sent to Haiti." But in other parts of tie island, we are then advised, the demonstrations were marked by bloodshed. As this French Journalist points out, in the tropics, rifles and revolvers are even more dangerous to handle than else- where, and he goes on: "The approach of the Presidential to call a doctor. At Just such I e ' ectioa " cites tte emotion, and times as rhese it is trat Baby's Own J"?""*" """" f ** ? aiuans ' Tablets are found to be mother's 1 ^y claim, as against the interven- greatert help and friend. ' I tlon of tjle Cannes, an Independence Most childhood ailments arise from of wnlco the y nave never made * a derangement of the stomach or good use sinoe the da ? 3 ot Toussaint a single word accessible to an Ameri- of lne wo .- 3t uain3) though the islands of leisure that stud a crowded, ..- "- occupied life may be among the things to which, we look back with i- greatest de!:ght. Lecky. ASPIRATIONS Every true aspiration la the world finds something even higher '.'.: self which it climbs as the vine, year after year, climbs rae towering oak. Her child is a never-ending source of Joy and a never-fatting responsi- bility to the fond mother. It not in- frequently happens that minor ail- ments of the child distress and puz-i z'.e her: she does not know Just what to do, yet teels them not serious en- Managing Director: "Have you met our London manager?" Visi r or: informally he called me a liar or..-e.' Better Than Gold will recall Eliza's celebrated Journey ' i 3 P robaD 'y th e more eff-ctive. So | over tho ice. Like every other fu?i- ' i the American slave before the Civil Our s to Take the Lead War of 1S65, her idea was to get north Ths great new step which must be I Into Canada, whereiir as Canada was taken by the League is to make slave- trading an : iteruation; '. crime like piracy, which any law abiding nation can summarily stop. Britain U work- bowel?. Baby's Own Tab!*ts will immediately banish them by cleans- ing the bowels and sweetening the lhe - v are w eak enough to regret it. stomach. They relieve colic, cor- The Government is directed by an rect the digestion, banish constipa- executive body composed of the make teething pains disap- COULDN'T WALK FOR J-AT But lost her flabbiness in two weeks Louxerture et Dessalines. Their She was cr:i:p.ed by - = vdu -d Old Bones May be Worth a a British colony, she would automati- Fortune and a Smoking ' cally become a free woman - Fire a Pointer to Wealth. and passing them on at night to the An American artist named Motr"' iest safe halt wero sai(I to "The Those who assisted fugitive slaves ' thus to freedom by sheltering them ing hard for this, but a few continent- al cations dread the summary naval travelled to the Pribylov Islands 'in a' L'der s round Railway." But all sealing vessel a year aso to paint ~ hucs cannot solve their prob- soma pictures of seals in their native lem b >" the sin -Ple method of getting noble book: "Slavey; home, and one day noticed a curious on ' tue soil of tne British, Empire, offence ag;-.'.ist the bank of sand lyins c;ose along the' "'though no doubt some hundreds do shore. " - n freedom tnat way every year. Me c!ug into It, and found beneath the sand a mass of bones. They were seal bones millions of them wliicSi had been flung up by the sea in the' course of centuries. further search has shown that t^ere are miles of these bone deposits along the shores of the ishnds. One pile is a mile long, half a mile wide,' and six feet deep. Now, bones are' nne of the best of all fertilizers, and the value of the find is simply gigantic, - Tar greater than that of any gold mine. This brings to mind tbe case of the wandering prospector who. years ago, while crossing ; - desert in Wyom- ing, came across the bHy of a horse' which, though it must ^ave died long; ago. was stiU fresh and sweet. The; body was covered with a layer ofj fine dust, which the prospector re- cognized as borax. He saw the value of the discovery and sold it to a large packing firm In Chicago, who kept, the secret for a long time. To-day . the uses of borax are innumerable, and range from the preservation of food down to dressings for tried feet Stolen From Free Homes Myriads of slaves are languishing tinder the worst conditions in Abys- sinia, of whom man; are stolen by capture from their tree homes in Cen- tral Africa, Just as in the old days of the trafic in Black Ivory. And Abys- sinia, mark you. is a Christian coun- try! It owns the deep disgrace of being the last Christian country to tolerate this terrible evil. The cruel caravan still wends its weary way across torrid wastes, the weak and suffering leaving it at their peril to die of hi-nger and thirst by searcbe which the equalization o' slave-trading to piracy would entail. ,' As Lady Simon has said in her i- tie supreme : human rai-e." Even if there be such a thing as a happy slave which I doubt that would be the final and mo^t clinching argu- ment against slavery. No one ought to be happy in his own degr.vlation. The lard which gave lairna Charta to the thought of all the ages, and which has Just received the sacred soil of Rimnymede as a perpetual gift. , must still lead in the noblest of cam- paigns. From Laugton to Wilber- ' force, from Dr. Johnson to Josephine Butler, the message calls vibrantly as of yore: "Remember them that are iu bonds!" Milions of Slaves Still The shame of slavery 'still dis- tion and pear. Baby's Own Tablets are guaranteed to be free from Injurious dnigs such as opiates and narcotics and may be given to the newborn babe with per- fect safety .and beneScial results. They are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from the I)r. Williams' Medicine Co.. Brock- v X OT. President chosen b> and of Ministers mostly the United States." the wayside, the strong whipped on ! graces the world. by the cruel lash. Just as of yore. Vll- 1 A commission of the League of Na- tions reports that there are "no fewer than -1,000,000 slaves in the world to-day; probably the number Is nearer 6.000,000 people who are not persons, people who have not the right to own property, to e^erci-e their consciences, to direct their own affairs, or to retain wife and children. There are at least 2,000,000 in China. 500,000 to 700,000 in Arabia, a con- siderable number in the hinterland of Liberia, and a few thousand in go up in smoke, families are ' rent asunder, little maids are sold In- to concubinage, exactly as the Bible , depicts happening to the ancient Israelites when they were exiled into captivity. Raiding British Territory To quote from Lady Simon's recent authoritative book: "The completeness of destruction by Abyssinian slave raiders is the completeness of the locust, but more "Your tuenujmcicr is wholly in- correct. It registers 10 degrees less than the actual temperature." "That's why I like it. I dread these fearfuly candid friends." Minard's is Best for Grippe. Parliament has been suppressed, ant} in two weeks this easy way. Tlia-. is plain truth her husband says so! She weigbed nearly 200 ibs. a ; 1 to stay at home. Read this i>i" "My wife has been suffering w ith swelled legs and feet and wei. :;ed 196 Ibs. 4 oz. very seldom able t,; go out walking. After taking Kru< .'.\*n Salts for two weeks, her fla'.- ia has gone, legs and feet fee! ea Excess fa: is caused by the kidneys and bowel.-, the "scav. organs of the body failing to da work properly They do no', throw oft Check Falling Hair with Minard's. Freedom Wanted that waste :i:a- digestion. T.'U accumulates. :>'.-- , , before you realize it you are growing Araos Ask Repeal or Mandate hideously fat. Th e "little daily Aid to British As to Friendship HUMAN HAPPINESS Well-being and happiness are not an mneritance of, which we take pos-i session from the hour of our birth, and which we are destined to enjoy at our ease: they are to be searched after with unwearied assiduity. We enter into life destitute of everything tnd lotions for inflamed eye'. Riches In the Desert ' cruel. It is known that many of these 1 otner different parts of the world" but simple existence. Al that we Everyone has heard of Carrara raids have ravaged beyond the Keti-T Ami> a cc r( l in K t To* Christian Cen- Joy in our passage through life are marble. In 1925 a party of English '. ya-Abyssinia and the Sudan-Abyssinia tur ^ ( Undenominational > from which acquisitions: they are the result and tourists exploring the mountains of border. The ravages of the slave ' we I" 019 those figures, "conditions of ; the rewards of our own dilligence and Carrara found a dirty block of marble | traders on both s'des of these borders slaver y vary from the open and tor- i care, or communicated by the dili- whk-h had evidently fallen from a ! are well known to British officials turin s slavery of Abg^inia to the ; gence and care of o'hors. Cogan. cliff overhead. One of the visitors. Major Darley tells us of the following i disguised system In China, wh.-it" > who had some knowlejga of geology,: incident connected with one slave girls wu , are really household slaves ' The usual gloomy crowd wai sitting noticed that this stone had a pink 1 raid. On the trail, he said, he count- j ar9 trea 'ed, according to a lesal flc- [ round a den;ist's room tbe othc-r day. tint which was unusual. The sam- e d the dead and dying bodies of morel tion> as adopted family members.J.~n- . when one old boy looked up from the pie was taken to England, where it' than fifty captives who had dropped der >he impetus provided by the paper he had found on the table and was found to be a new variety. A| by the roaside. For on such Journeys' Lea 5 ue . 1S3.000 slaves have recently ! said cheerfully, "I see there's been a large quarry has already been opened there is no commissariat department. been set free in Tanganyika ; 213.000 big battle off ths coast of Jutland." Jerusalem "We do not hate Eng- land, but we do not love the man- date." argued the Arab paper "Jamel El Arabia" the Mufti's organ. In the last issue before it was suppressed indefinitely for publishing the story about the alleged Jewish conspiracy against the Mufti's life. In answer to the Fe'.cstin's contention tbat tbe Arabs see kthe repeal of the Balfour declaration and not of the mandate.' "Why concentrate our war against the Balfonr declaration when the mandate is more dangerous to the Pan-Arab Union than Zionism?" atks "El Arabia." "Arab hostility to the trusteeship means & struggle for complete independence and not toler- at'ng foreign rule of any shade. The repeal of the mandate will strength- en Anglo-Arab friendship. Britain does not regard as enemies the Egyp- tians who are fighting for independ- ence." Thus the leading Moslem organ would seem to confirm Harry Sacher's evidence before the Inquiry Commis- sion that the Arabs are using Zionism as a lightning conductor, while thy are really fighting the mandate. of Kruschen Salts Mn>>>i up . atinjj organs to perform their work properly. S!ow:y jut sure'y the un- gainly masses of fat di-.nppear and what you lose in weight you | unbounded health and vitality. The years drop off as the fat melts av.ajr leavlMj V'-"j PT-. -- v v;-!if-: .ir.'l vigorous. > i '.2 Mjck LattcrU write* aixv.t !roo- Ued YeL Thousands cay a^ds S to 15 Ib*. ia j weeks. Camflrtioa clears like ouc't. N erres, .-:,*- tiou ramaij oTernight. Get Iruu>:e4 Yeast cablets from uro(jist tcxtay. ness HEAD NOISES Teonam Jt^ FAR O1X. j: 25 >ll i)n :> tt.tr >( ':i> ia : i A O. LEONARD, lne 7*1 Fifth \* N * \rtrk' C\t? av m MCM ! ?! IN NOSTRIU Grippe ChildrenGy for * CASTOR!A A BABY REMEDY APPROVED BY DOCTOR* <C CCUC CONSTKWTION.CIAflRME.* .' ;< It in the bud with Minarci's. Rub on throat and ch^t. I!;-. 'ie the feet In Minarrt'j and hot water. A proven preven'.ative. and Is proving very profitable. am i tnose wuo carry no supp ij e3 can Two women. Mrs. Wilson and Miss hope only for a merci f u i spear , S i nce the Mojave Spencer, were crossing Desert, in Southern California, look- Ing for gold. They were not success- ful, and one nignt. feeling very dis- couraged, camped on the bank of a small creek and lit a fire to cook their supper. The fire began to throw out dark, ill-smelling smoke, so that It was impossible to go near It the alternative Is death by thirst or In Sierra Leone; 7.300 in Burma. Surely," continues The Christian Cen- j tury, "with the facts thus known, the by the teeth and talons of wild beasts. ' P ublic opinion of the world will sup- j "Hundreds of square miles of terri- '' port the League la whatever efforts j tory are utterly depopulated by Abys- sinian raids. Most of tbis territory is within the coi.flnes of the Abys- sinian Empire, but part of it is with- in the British Empire. "Abyssinian raids into the country or cook on it. and the poor, -tired wo-: th , he B , , men were forced to collect more fuel; and light a fresh fire. it may inaugurate to wipe out the last vestiges of human bondage." BELIEFS We ought not to Judge people by i their beliefs, because we do not know i how they have been brought about: ' In the middle' Brittsn Sudan are constant, and with-| but w 8 may Justly apply the crucial in the last six months there have been several raids into the Kenya Colony of the night Mrs. Wilson sprang up """I know what It is." she cried. i The deoopulation of the border and "What on earth are you talking 1 tne absence of adequate police forces tbout?" demanded the other woman. tem P t the Abyssinians to advance "Asphalt." was the answer: she was right. test to our own views, and honor or dishonor them accordingly. Our SUPERFLUITIES superfluities should be given and! ' art her and farther; and on one oc- ___ That flnd proved caslon at least they have penetrated much "more "valuable than a gold mine, j no less than 120 miles into British for R thick deposit of asphalt cover- territory." ed many acres and made the fortunes ' Slave-owning Is itill legal In the of many others besides Us dlscov- Arabian Peninsula, where markets erers. are P nI y held for the sale of slaves <> i and the Government receives dues on Neighbor (looking over garden j the individual sales. The King of fence) : "Have your bees dona well ! Hejaz and Nejd has agreed to co- thts year. Brown?" Brown: "Well, operate with the Gritlsh Government they haven't given much boney, but to suppress the slave trade, but so they've itung my mother-in-law long as slave-owning is permitted, the up for the convenience of others; our ! conveniences should give place to the j necessities of others; and oven our necessities give way to the extremi- ties of the poor. John Howard. A Friend to Women What most people call indigestion j One tasteless spoonful in water neu- tin 1 1 van ni-iMV * > rM .5 J (f O VrtTn ma* 1 M twice." trade never really Is suppressed. It YOUR HAIR NEEDS LUXO TO GIVE IT HEALTH AND LLSTRE ASK YOVR BARBER is usually excess acid in the stomach. Ths food has soured. The Instant remedy la an alkali which neutraliies acids. But don't use crude helps. Use What your doctor would advise. Tbe best help Is Phillips' Milk of Magnesia. K/r the 5(f years since its invention it has remained standard with physi. :.:,- 1. You will flnd noth- ing else s<> iii.'k in its effect, so harmless, so '.Relent. tralizes many times its volume in j acid. The results are immediate, j with no bad after effects. Once you i learn this fact, you will never deal with excess arid in the crude ways.' ; Go learn now why this method 1? supreme. Be sure to get i!u> g^nina Phillips' Milk of Magni^ia pp -ri:!n>d by physi- cians for 1 BO years in correcting BN- ' ' cess acids. K;u-h bottle contui -s f^ll | directions any drugstore. Lydia E. Pinkliani's Vegetable Compound LYDIA E. PINKHAM MEDICINE CO. Lynn. Maas.. U.S.A. sad labour^, Oct.. Cmnmda. ISSUE No. 530

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