WHAT TO DO ABOUT 'Acid Indigestion' A WAY THAT RELIEVES THE CAUSE IN A FEW MINUTES Many people who think they have "weak stomachs" of "indigestion," doctors say, sulTer in reality from nothing more serious than acid s/oni- «c/i. And this common ailment can usually be relieved now, in minutes. Ail you do is take familiar Phillips' Milk of Magnesia after meals. This acts to almost immediately neutralize ibe stomach acidity that brings on your trouble. You feel like a new person! Try this just once. Take either the lamUiar liquid "PHILLIPS' ". or the nem Phillips' Milk of Magnesia Tablets. But watch out that you get the Genuine PHILLIPS' Milk of Magnesia. Made in Canada. ALSO /.\ TABLET FORM: Phillips' Milk of Magnesia Tab- lets are now on sale at all drug stores everywhere. Hach tiny tablet is the iquivalent of • teaspoonful of Genuine Phillips' Milk of Magnesia. Phillips Afi/A- c/yifaa/te^ia. TrafBc Makes Trsiffic From the St. Thoniaa Times-Journal The Duff scheme for co-operation between Canadian railways ia dead and tlie Financial Post, in a car- toon, depicts it in process of burial, with Fullerton and Beatty as chief mourners. Amalgamation and joint operation are also tieceasert. The King government's program, says the Post, involves three major point.s, namely : (1) Creating more traffic. (2) Operating the Canadian Na- tional economically. (3) Meeting competition by mod- ernized practice and lower rates. This policy is based upon pros- pective recovery which is expected to solve the tinancial problems of the country. The Post regards it as "disappointing" and says tlvat it ig- nores the seriou-sner^s of our rail- way losses a a factor in the heavy taxation on homes and factories in Canada. The Post admits that Hon. C. D. Howe, the new Minister of Railways and Marine, wiho advan- ces the above policy, is a business man and engineer accustomed to dealing with large problem.s, but be- lieves that more drastic steps will have to be taken if railway deficits continue. The government, by its election platform, is pledged to preserve the identity of the National Railway. Whether or not the people of Cana- da were fully alive to the serious- ness of the situation, there can be no doubt that the movement for amalgamation was not popular in the last election. The policy of the government, as outlined by the Financial Post under the above three heads, does not offer anything new 111 the way of a solution of the problem. The first, "Creating more traffic," and the third, "Meeting competition by modernized practice and lower rates," mean one and the same thing. The only new idea is tliat of lower- ing rates, and even that is not very new. Rates have been modified al- ready to some extent, but more drastic reductions will hove to be made. The railways of Great Britain and the United States have cut down the cost of railway tr.nvelling and found it profitable. The railways have it in their own power to solve the problem of commercial traffic on our highways. That traffic has thrived on the high charges for rail- way services. Most people would prefer to travel by train than by bus. with its obvious Inconveniences. When the cost of travel by rail is brought within tlie means of the av- erage citizen more people will go ajourneying. This is shown by the popularity of the cheap weekvend excursions. Cheap passenger and freight rates â€" particularly for householil furniture â€" would start the wheels turning and keep them turning. Traffic makes traffic, and travelling i.s good for trade. Peacemakers That Make War ^sks For More Humane Methods of Distributing Relief Public health, more humane meth- ode of distributing relief and an ef- fort to bring womanly sympathy and •nderstanddng to the problems of women, children and aged people, will be the aims of Mrs. Rosamond E. Wilkinson, only woman member of the 1936 Calgary City Council. She •was elected Social Credit candidate in the civic elections November 20. A trained nurse who operates a physio-therapy clinic, Mrs. Wilk- inson is a strong opponent of pres- «jt methods of relief. "I believe ev- •ry person is entitled to employ- ment," she said. "If that is not pos- fl3>l«, they should not be subjected to the humiliation they have to en- sure at present. "I shall make e\-ery effort to have freater dignity maintained in the administration of relief." Bom in Ireland, Mrs. Wilkinson has lived in Canada for 20 years. She is a grad- uate of St. George's hospital and •tudicd physio-therapy work under Sir Robert Jones, the famous bone •pecialist." Canada Does Better (National City Bank of Xew York) To the north, Cana<la has enjoy- ed further recovery during the year. Improvement in the mining and pulp and paper industries, and in agri- culture, has been the l>asis of Cana- dian gains. Compared witli the United States, industrial recovery not only has pro- ceeded more evenly in Canada, but It has gone farther. In the three months ended October last, the Cana- dian index of industrial output over- aged 84 per cent, of the 1929 level, compared with 7t) per cent, recorded by the Federal Reserve index for this country; also, the percentage Increase from the extreme low has been greater in Canada, amounting to 76 per cent., again.st ijl j)er cent. for the United States. Speaking on Cats (New York HentUl Tribune) The cat is the animal that is al- ways in the news. If someone who loves dogs and someone who dotes on cats should subscribe in friendly rivalry for their pets to a clipping bureau it would be found that the cat has much the better press, not tho slightest doubt. The cat is ever on a telegraph pole, being extricated from between walls anil floors, extracted from chimneys or from under the hood of a parked car. In and out of the silly season she is born with more than a fair allowance of toes or pictured mothering day-old chicks, puppies, what-not enemy young. She i-uns up a big annual score of column inches in the news and is never long absent from the columnisfs comment and anthology. Editorial page corresgond- ence can get hot over the seemingly simple question â€" what is a tabby cat? j But it is at the time of the cat I showsâ€" such as the 34th annual ' championship show of the Atlantic Cat Clubâ€" that puss gets her big- gest spread in the papers; and this is about tjle only time that she mak- es the news columns for anything except being in a tight place or hav- ing got above herself. Esteem of the alley cat (liis country cousin is the barn cat) seems to be growing at the shows. Entries of short-haired cats, "breed- ing unknown," have nearly doubled. The fanciers know how to prefer their Persians, Siamese, .\iigoras, but the genera! public that is at all susceptible to cats is still somewhat t resistant to these distinguisheil for- eigners. The coiiinioM cat, with a busy career in a butcher store, a saloon, I a ship, a hayloft, the necessary I mouser or the lighting torn with I distended cheeks and ragge<l ears, ] curtailed whiskers, or the plain, honie-liiviiig female, breeding un- known, that sits on a windowsill in the sun or by the lire (or radiator), seemingly in a depth of content th^t humankind can never know â€" those of the general public who not not cordially hate cats incline to these types and are pleased when they holil their own with the gorgeous ex- otics that devoted cat breeders and fanciers apotheosize in the shows. L HAVE ^ ''°" "r^ heARD A man isn't licked until he begins to blame his parents, hi.s community or his family. Frank H. Slmonda In Current History Not long ago I was asked by a friend of mine, hlgfa In the official circles of one of the best luio-.vn ot American peace societies for a crit. iclsm of the activities ot her associa- tion. In brief, my response must be that not alone her association but also the domestic peace movement as a whole ha.s become the gravest Dt-ril to peace the United States has to deal with in the present hour cf the world crisis. In ,1 word. If there is danger that we shall become Involved in war, be it In Asia. Africa or Europe â€" and In my judgment the danger exists â€" uie reason is to be discovered not In the machinations of the miiitarists but In the performances of tihe pacitlats. Ir is not the munition makers, the inter, national bankers or the war monger. Ing admirals and generals who are today pushing towai-ds participation in otiier people's wars, but those peacemakers whose aim It Is to prev- ent war. The explanation of this paradox, discoverable in Great Britain as well as In the United Slates, is very simple as the professional peacemakers lu both countries still remain convinced that tliere is some peaceful way to prevent war even in t<he present hour when the ruiers of at least three great powers have adopted war not merely as the chief instrument of na. ti«nal policy, but also as (he sole means of assuring personal and nat- ional survival. Alike in the Japanese action In Mancihuria.. the German in Austria and the Italian in Ethiopia, ir Is pos- sible to discover precisely the same resolution dictated by exactly the same considerations. Japan has. more over already taken Manchuria; Ger- Harper â€" Do you see that man tlirough the window? He hasn't moved for 24 hours. He can't be asleep; he must be dead. I am go- ing to call the police. Kenneth â€" Oh, it's all right. There's a chess tournament going on in there. A FARMER BOY QNE of the best known medical men in the United States was Dr. R. V. Pierce of Buf- falo, New York, who was Ijoni on a farm in Pa. He noted daily in his nicdic.il career tlial many of liisprrstiipiinnspici'atr'lfioinioots. bar1<s, .iiid hcil)s, sikIi as "Cioldcil Medical Di-Hcovciv.' produced a^toni-sliinij it-siill-s. He early foumlcil a Clinic and HospiLil ill Buffalo. N, Y. Adviirc liy Idler in free. Dr. Picrcc'-i liiiiden Medical Discovery ia an herbal extract which eliminalc-* poisons from the intestines and tones up the digeslivc system. Pimples and blotches caused by fatilty elimination disat>pear and you feel the tonic and strcngtlieninn effect of tliis well tried medicine. .\--k your Dnig-ji^t nou'l Tablet-^ 50 ccnLs, liiiidd'Sl.OO and $1..\\ : If Your Ears Ring With Head Noises Jf you have catarrlial deafness or head noises go to your druggist and ffit 1 oz. of Paramint (double fli;»U4;,th ) , and add to it U pint of 4ot water iit,a * Ji'.tle fJ^ar. Tak^ 9^ /•bleiijpoouful ff.av tir.if.^ a day. ' This '^111 often bring (|uick relief from the distressing head noises. Clogged nostrils should open, breath- tog become easy and th^ mucous •top dropping inty tirt fhroat. It is •a^ ttt -pvepflWi cost.s little, and is â- >r«a'sftnt to take. .â- Anyone who has catarrhal deafness or head noi.ses •hould give thla prescription a trial Scotland Yard Scotland Y'ard is teaching the world how to go about its police work. There are few" countries that have not sent representatives to learn from the Metropolitan Police. Among the next batch of ''pupils" will be detectives from New Zealant. Police officers have come from New- foundland, Hong-Kong. Singapore, Canada. .-Vustralia, France, Spain, Germany and other Continental coun- tries to glean much from our meth- ods. Superintendent Batley, chief of the Fingerprint Departnienl. is goin.q: to lecture to "pupils'" on his subject. Chief Inspector Rowe will iTemon- strate the Criminal Records Office. The wireless cars and broadcastin,? methods of the "Yard" will be ex- plained by the Radio Chief, Chief Constable Best. Sir Bernard Spils- bury will give lectures on poisons. Dr. Roche I.ynoh, the Home Office analyst, will teach his own subject. The value of scientific researchâ€" the examination of bullets, cartridg- es, and clothing â€" will be shown by Dr. Dayidsouj chief of the Crime Ls' ooratory at ifemlvll. Finally, there will be special lectures on crime de- tection by Chief Constable Horwell ami Superintendent Hiimbrook of the C.I P. PETTY THOUGHTS Memories are nice, but anticipa- tion gets a bigger play. ... In these modern times a love affair seldom outlasts one application of lipstick. . . . A professional man is one who would be out of a job if he always succeeded. . . . Why not let the wo- men who insist on wearing pants assume tlie family obligations? . . . If other people weren't bad, how would we know how to be gooii? . . . Mother's vacation begins when she can say: "Now run along to school, darlings.'' . . . The reason there are so many cross words in some fam- ilies is a puzzle. . . . Puppy love never turns out to be as serious as the symptoms indicate. . . , Rain on the roof is rwell music provided there are no leaks. . . . You will find it is always safe to ti'ust the man with baby fingerprints on his collar. . . . Life is one bundle of cancelled checks after another. . . . Romantic love is a dangerous fever too often fatal. . . . .A.11 the world loves a lov- er except the electric light com- panies, . . . There was a time when charity began at home, but nowa- days no one slays at home,, long enough to start it. . . . Political egg^ are hatched or thi'own as the occa.s- ion may require. ... Be critical- â€" of yourself. . . . X self-serve cafe- teria is a good place to practice self- resistance. . . . Law of improvement â€" Your "best today,'' isn't good enough tomorrow. . . . You can tell an honest man. He thinks all crook- edness is illegal. ... He who laughs last certainly is a nit wit. . . . The know-it-all never has any secrets. . , . A mouth full of clothes pin.< is the best cure for the ci.trarette habit. Purchaser â€" Will the color in these stoikings run? Sellerâ€" Oh, no! Purchaser â€" Then it is fast? Seller â€" Certainly 1 Purcha.ser--Well, how can any- thing be fast that can't run? There are showers for the bride . . . hut it is the bridegroom that catches thunder. "In our habits and mentality we are rtot very different from mir ancestors." â€" Guglielmo Marconi. White Friend â€" So you're a sales- man, now, eh, Sambo? Do you stand behind the product you sell? Sambo â€" No, sah! Ah gho' don't. White Friend â€" Why, Sambo, I'm surprised at you. You should al- ways stand behind your product. What arc you selling? Sambo â€" Mules. Women dress for men to look at ami other women to talk about. Hattie, ti«e colored nuiid, was deeply Interested in the efforts of one of the neighbors to prepare a pedigreed dog for the dog show. After much combing, brushing and other careful grooming, the dog was duly entered in the canine show, and received the first award in his class DIXIE givts you a long cool smoke. . . . And It'i always FRESH In the plug. many has trle<l once to get Austria, and is visibly preparing to try again. As to the Italian determination in the matter of Ethiopia, patently thai needs no elaboration here. 'Tis a base abandonment of reason to resign our right of thought." â€" Byron. SCOUTING Here ' There Everywhere A brother to every other Scout, mthout regard to race or creed ( ( ( .( The 1st. S'ddbury Rover Scouts iiave assumed tbe secretarial duties of the Ontario Institute for the Blind of the district. They will Inform cen- tral lieadquarters of new cases, and will act as guides for blind persons when required. • • * The 9th. Niagara Falls Troop, Out., were the guests of Troop 22 ot New- fane, N.y , at a Sunday evening In- vestiture service at the Newfane Me. thodlst Church. * • • A tug of war. Scouts vs. Dads, fur. nisihed excitement at the Parents' Night of the liiih Toronto (St. MaU thew'8) Scout Troop. Skit.s were pre. seuted by each of the six patrols, and refreshments were served by the Ladies 'Auxiliary. « * « Fifteen Edmonton Scouts qualified tor tile Friend to Animals Proflcleu. cy Badge after taking a four weeks' course in the care of pets under City Humane Officer McDonald. • * » Small Christmas trees for the aged and shut-ins of the Island, each tree trimmed and hearing candy bags, were ilislributed by the 1st. Grand -Alanan (N'orth Bead) N.D.. Scout Troop. * • « The Town Council of Kindersley, Sask , following the example of a OTT.A.W.A. â€" An increase of mor* than $1,000,000 was shown in th« value of wiieat exported to the IJnifc- ed States during Noveinljer as ucm> pared with the con-esponding mooth last year, according to a report iai« j sued of statistics. Wheat exports to the United States were valued at S2,58'2,80a compared with $1,522, '.,'01 in NoY» 1 ember, 1934. E.xports of ail farm products to the United States during Novembeif toUlled $3,7.'30,23S against ?.'5.t»75,. 48'J in November, 1'.'34. Classified Advertising INVSMTOBS : number of other Saskatchewan com- munities, has Indicated Its readiness to provide a lot upon which the lo. cal Stout -issociatlou may erect a permanent Scout headquarters. * • » Ten selected Scout text books tor the use of leaders of Cub packs, Scout Troops and Rover crews have been installed by the Public Library ot WallBceburg, Ont. Books for Cubs and Scouts will be addi=d In the near future. « • « The fortunate Aylnier, Ont., Scouts have been provided by the .-Vylimer Inn Syndicate with a meeting place which comprise separate rooms for each patrol and a large main hall for assembly and games. The wiring and electric lights were put In by the Carnation Company. To raise funds for equipment the boys have been making and selling popcorn. * • * A message on bircli bark carried a ciiallenge to a hockey game from the 13th Satkatoon Scouts to the Sth Troop . * ♦ ♦ .V weekly luncheon of the Calgary Kiwanis Club was held at the Scout hall of the Stii Calgary Group, and resulted in a contribution of JiiO.OuO to the Troop funds. The boys put on a physical exercise display compris- ing tnthbling, pyramid work and box- ing. Bank Street, Ottawa, Canada. CraAMPIOIT SSBD QBJLDWSL fc-LINi: KA.N.Nl.Ni.; MILL TR^JvEO "^ Champion Seed Ortider. TeBt;mQiital»» 121 Empress Cres.. Turonto. at the show. Naturally, Hattie was told immediately. .Neighbor â€" Well, Hattie, my dog got the first prize! Hattieâ€" -No! Ain't dat nice! What was it? Neighbor â€" The blue ribbon. Hattie (thinking a moment) â€" How manv vards? TIP FOR LOVERS "Your modern girl has no time for empty coniplinieni. .-Vbove all she values frankness.'' Extract from mushy article. The love scene, of course, running something like this: "Do you really think I'm pretty, honey?" "No, Minnie, I don't! Your nose is cock-eyed for one thing, and your ears are too big.'' "Darling!" "Sweetheart!" "What you think of my face, Minnie?" "I try not to, darling. It reminds me of a blancmange." "My l(}ve!" "My own!" Charming, don't you think? "No education deserves the name, unless it developes it." â€" E. P. Whip- ple. iMue No. 6 â€" '36 Maple Syrup Evaporators FSICE LOW â€" QUALITY KIQK Makes re«I hlsh class s.viup ri>- lalnliig the maple flavin- yo'u liUe .so ijiucli. Evaporatiirs that will niako inoiltable >oiir niiipli. bu.sh for a souiU lnVf.stino?ii. Writ,, for oiit:i- loijMe ot eiiuU'ineiii. li Is ln;.>r>.8tliiK. W. GORDON STEEL WORKS LIMITED TWEED, OMTASIO STOPS ITCHING In One Minute For quick relief from llio ilrhiug uf pini|)- les, blotches, eczema, rashes aM<l other skin eruptions, apply Ur. Dennis' pure, ciniliiig, liquid, anti.scptic U. U. U. Prcscriptiun. Thirty years' world-widcsucce.ss. Itsgcnilc oils soothe the irritated and inllanicd skin, thus aiding nature itself to heal the disor- der. No fuss â€" no mu.^is. Clear, grca.seloss and slalidcss â€" dries up almost immwlinle- ly. Stops the most intense itching instantly. Try D. D. U. now. A 3Jc trial boltle, at drug stores, will prove it â€" or money back. D. D. D. Prescription is made by the own- era of Italian Halm. UVE STOCK MARKETING Shipping on the co-operatlvo plan has been productive of splendid result*. Selllnft on the open marFtet means real value for the owners. 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