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Waterloo Chronicle (Waterloo, On1868), 15 Oct 1925, p. 2

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_ _ The nomination of candidates by both the _ "Independent Liberal and Liberalâ€"Conservative . conventions has‘ended the uncertainty ag to : whether there would be a contest in North t Waterloo and active campaigning has now beâ€" * gun with meetings at various pointsâ€" throughâ€" out the riding. J i % On ‘&ppiication. Advertising copy must reach the ___ As was generally anticipated W. D. Euler, who has been the representative of North Waterloo for eight years, is again seeking reâ€" election, having been nominated by the Indeâ€" pendent Liberal convention as a candidate for a third time. ~ The Conservative standerd bearer is E. H. Scully, for many years identified with manuâ€" facturing interests in the City of Kitchener. He is the nominee of the Cor‘_servqtive convenâ€" tion held a few days ago. &Â¥ * Carried out to its logical conclusion the formula of our contemporary would certainly greatly simplify a Canadian general election. All that would be necessary would be for a candidate to declare his independence and he would be returned by acclamation. The neâ€" cessity for a general election would then vanâ€" ish. The position is not one thatis in accord with the Independent Liberal candidate‘s cusâ€" tomary logie. That there are‘still cases where the useâ€" fulness of insurance is not appretiated is indiâ€" cated in the â€"{ailure to provide against possible loss. The other day neighbors in one of the communities of Ontario took up a collection to make good,the loss, sustaimed in a farm fire. This.showed a commendable spirit on the part of those who came to the assistance of the victim of the fire.but the providing of insurâ€" ance would have recompensed the ownet in sirability of insurance, both life and fire, is Mr. Euler is appealing~ to t?e electorate for reâ€"election on the s#me platform as four years ago, namely North Waterloo and Canada, hoiding himself free to support measures which he believes to be in the best interests of the countryâ€"without slavish obedience to party. He believes in a tariff that will adequately protect our industries and claims that a stable tariff can best be secured through the investiâ€" gations of a permanent tariff board of experts. Mr. Euler also favors an investigation with a view to the amalgamation of the C.N.R. and C.P.R.â€"under public ownership and recognizes the desirability of Senate Reform. Mr. Scully, the Conservative candidate, supports his leader, Mr. Meighen, in his adâ€" vocacy of a protéctive tariff, voicing the opinâ€" ion that most of the country‘s troubles are due to the tariff. A protective tariff, in his view, would bring increased prosperity to Canâ€" ada and solve the financial, immigration and transportation problems of the Dominion, in short, would provide the solution for the counâ€" try‘s difficulties. As the campaign progresses in North Waterloo the electors will have an opportunity of hearing the issues upon which the candiâ€" dates are seeking â€" election, discussed in more detail. Discussing editorially the acceptance by E. H. Scully of the Liberalâ€"Conservative noâ€" mination, our Kitchener contemporary pubâ€" lished by the company of which Mr. Euler is the president, takes the position that in comâ€" ing out against Mr. Euler the Conservative candidate has virtually put himself and his party on record as being opposed to the display of an independent spirit in our parliamentary representatives and to their receiving the united support of the people without regard to party allegiance. Our contemporary has missed the mark. The question is not whether Mr. Euler has been independent or subservient in â€"his party attitude. It is not whether Mr. Euler‘s services fto his constituency and to Canada during the parliamentary term have been good or otherwise. Thb question is whether the people are or are not to have the privilege of passing on Mr. Euler‘s record and that of the government. Whether they are to have the opporturity of exercising their franchise. While it is recognized that Mr. Euler has made a capable representative of this conâ€" stituency at Ottawa and should be given credit for his efforts in behalf of his constituents the fact that the opposing party has put a candidate in the field does not warrant the strictures referred to above. | AN ELECTION IN NORTH WATEI!DOU P ow kn mgerenmnmmminee m mmmmnenzmne $ | THE DESIRABILITY‘ OF INSURANCE I in Unitedâ€"States, per year ... .. AN UNTENABLE POSITION to be increasingly recognized. w n k n n dn n n t# m tw a n 8 a + ww o w in w in n method mentioned is the progressive eliminaâ€" ‘tion of the difficulties of international trade, a process which would unquestionably lead to a higher general level of employment and the ~consequent avoictl:we of much individual privation and distréss. some countriés unemployment decreased conâ€" siderably, in other i ty i Mthombl‘lnun â€"â€"~ Itis pointed out that there is no panacea for unemployment. : Its origins are many and it can be effectively checked only by a variety of methods. One of these, the survey says, is which may reasonably be expected to enter It is emphasized that the prevention of unemployment demands, in brief, a policy of international coâ€"operation to secure better orâ€" ganization of productionâ€"and exchange, such a policy involving as a primary step, that of seâ€" curing stability in the value of all media of exchange. The disposition of the little vilayet of Mosul in Asia Minor and the fixing of the boundary between the Arab kingdom of Irak and Turkish Territory has involved Great Britain in a dispute with Turkey which threatens to become serious. Owing to her mandate for, Irak, Britain regards herself as bound in honor to defend the territory of the Arab kingdom against the aggressions of other states, The matter was left to the council of the League of Nations to fix the frontier and for, a decision whether to give or to refuse Turkey the coveted territory. The Turks, howâ€" ever, say they will refuse to abide by the deâ€" cision of the Council and even threaten war over the issue. * â€" The use of the airplane for carrying the mails has been successfully demonstrated in the United States. ‘The 34 hour service estabâ€" lished between New York and San Francisco a year ago, according to the Postmaster Genâ€" eral of that country, is operating smoothly and pilots no longer fear to fly by night. It is preâ€" dicted that before many years all mail carryâ€" ing will be done in the air. Plans are"now being made in Great Britain for the inauguraâ€" tion of an air servite between England and Egypt and between Egypt and India. , The conquest of Mount Logan is an inâ€" stance of courage and resource which will further enhance the record of Canadian enterâ€" prise and endurance. The rapid development in the realms.of {uri:l_n;flg.flun indicates its vast possibiliâ€" ties. Predictions that a few years Ilo would have bea:loohd upon as dreams. impossible :‘.luliintiqn are bécoming realities and the ';“' bright promise for still greater â€"__ The Aact: that additiona! . accdmmodation will be required for the winter market in Wat: erloo is encourdging‘in that it indicates liberal patronage on the part of both farmers and While there is a strong party in great Britain in favor of the withdrawal of Britain from Irak altogether, there are many who hold the opinion that the British government should fulfill the obligation assumed and not yield to the Turk. Anxiety is felt in Britain over the fate of the Eastern Christians if left in the hands of the Turk, and it is also pointed out that rnot more than two per cent. of the popuâ€" lation in the disputed territory are Turks. It is also felt that it would be a calamity to hand over a strategical position in the east to a nation whose history has been a record of barâ€" barism and bloodshed. _ ‘ « For some years it has been the ambition of mountain climbers to reach the summit of Mount Logan, the highest peak of the Canaâ€" dian Rockies, the height of which is 19,850 feet. The feat of doing so was accomplished recently by a party of Canadian Alpine Club climbers, led by Albert H. McCarthy of Wilâ€" mer, British Columbia, the undertaking occuâ€" pying twentyâ€"three days. It was accomplished without casualty with the exceptidn of frost bites, although the task was full of danger and hardship,. C tain ranks next in elevation to Mount McKinâ€" ley, in Alaska, which rises to a height of 20,310 feet. Mount Logan is in the Yukon, twentyâ€"one miles east of the International boundary, and was named after Sir William Logan, the founder and for many years the director of the Geological Survey of Canada. The mounâ€" ! _ _REACH SUMMIT OF MT. LOGAN THE DISPOSITION OF MOSUL CARRY MAILS BY AIRPLANE WOMAN WINS DIVORCE ‘ EOR WHIGH 8E SPENT + TEN YEARS OF PENURY WHALE DRAGS BOAT * FOR SEVENTY MiLEs Being towed seventy miles through rockâ€"strewn waters at night by a bharpooned whale was the experiâ€" ence related by Capt. Louis Lane of the whaler Gunnar, who arrived at Cordova, Alaska., Oct. 6, on Ris way south. â€" value the life of oxur‘lml’ ones give him Baby‘s Tabjets when he is ill or, better still, give him an occasidhal dose of the Tablets to ward off iMmess. The Tablets -re:: by medicine dealers or’;v:‘n At 25 cents a bok by ‘nddressing The Dr. Willams‘ Medicine Co., from Rer . husband,. Mrs. . Minnic Jackson, mother of six children, of Bridgeport, Conn‘, began saving her never been accustomed. to buying! ABDâ€"ELâ€"KRIM BLOWS TRAITOR wboat Povenpinl colil Redaingsint valh BM\ 0 2t ce â€"GHRE: D Lelini en Hncent n consmeat vasunr t re Pria iss curities â€" and pay »tor "them : over" a| C ~were‘ réady to join peried of one.year. ‘The.object.is} with others in a concerted action to cultivate the yhabit.; of saying} for further redu * ofâ€"armaments. secure a divorce. She was granted herâ€" freedom last. weeks + Such a remedy is found in Baby‘s Own Tablets. Thousands of mothâ€" ers throughout the country always keep a box of the Tablets on hand ‘and they proclaim them to be withâ€" out an equal for sweetening baby‘s stomach; regulating his bowels, and thus driving out constipation And indigestion, colds and simple fevers, and making the dreaded tecthing period easy. *5 The mammal was harpooned in Prinée William Sound, north of Corâ€" dova, and towed ihe ~Gunnar, which is operated by three men, and is said to be the smallest indepenâ€" dent unit whaler in the world, 2014 hours before tiring out. Baby‘s Own Tablets are an abâ€" solute safe remedy, They * art guaranteed to be free from opiates or any other narsotic drag which are so harmfalâ€"to the futire wel fare of the baby. Mothers, if you value the life of »your Eittle ‘:- MIDâ€"WESTERN PROVINCES .â€" . . WERE IN GRIP OF . WINTER LAST WEEK Winter laid its first grip on the midâ€"western provinces‘ last week and rain were gepneral. * Snow began falling early in (hei evening, Sep. 29, in Winnipeg and conditions were typical of tbq\se prevailing in other sectiQns of the province. The temnerat:hfinovered around the freezing point. # The young mother has a constant care in looking after the welfare of her little ones. Childhood ailâ€" ments confe on so suddenlyâ€"someâ€" times without a minute‘s warning â€"the mother may have a very sick baby on her hands before help can be obtained. That is unless she has a remedy. in the house which she can safely give the baby for any of the minor ailments of babyhood and childhood. â€" Winter â€" conditions= were fairly gemeral in Saskatchewan. Saskatooh and Regina reported ‘snow general in those districts. Prince Akbert and North Battieford réported cliéar weather. In the Maple Creek disâ€" trict ten inches of snow had fallen. Threshing operations in Maniâ€" toba and Saskatchewan were genâ€" erally suspended. P In the seven months this year ending with July, according to the Dairy and Cold Storage, Branch News Letter, Canada supplied the United Kingdom | with 4,927,266 pounds of butter compared with 154,224 pounds in the same perfod last year and 40,458,544 pounds of cheese compared with 20,153,504 pounds in 1924. In the twelve months ending with July our total exports of butter were 28,869,307 lbs.* valued at $10,317.819 compared with 14,474,241 lb«., worth $5,273,478 in the previous year and 140,149,300 lbs. of cheese $27,894,665 in value compared with 119,235,800 ibs. valuâ€" ed at $23,702,976, This shows an inâ€" crease in favour of 192425 of 14. 294,916 Tbs. in butter and 20,913,500 Ibs. in cheese and a combined inâ€" crease in money of $9,236,029, by which amount/the country has been enriched. m FIGHTING FOR Is the Constant Care of Every INCREASE OF DAIRY EXPORTS Young Mother. BABY‘S HEALTH â€" . | ~~~gikom moutn or cannon t Advicesi,received from the . fight: ing zofie report that 8} Mobaimmed COZ8 . aNG_â€" DenI UTMIAGUCL _ UMDES M ___Souaags es a ‘" omrsnloumtea cuBepiaute on. ok. have ane beex ewcsct . | DE ropbnny arer 26e|LBeie MARBALANE . BBe $ ,) Mfrintetmerm } . ‘ BANK OF ENGLAND PEP BRAN _ 2 for 25c|CHICKENHADDIE â€" 25¢ sELLS Bar coro to _ © IBAYSIDE CHERRIES *8 l emlow pove STORES | 186 0z. TOY PAIL Hrmx The first substantial export moveâ€" DOMINION 10e â€" Tom‘ro ment of gold from London to New T E A PEANUT mHUP to the sod suntaro iea. spng, ) "| For quaury | BUTTER | ;2%. sorris now under way. ‘Engagements for DSL 59c 23c 30c approximately $4,000,000 of British . | _ BULK °+ > » gold were announced last week by ’.fiy“‘s. AN three New York banks, which found CHl AND c D c ‘ it profitable to buy the metal STRENGTH through thlalr London â€" cotresponâ€" VICK, 2 M ~ uy dents in foreign exchange !ransaet on mm meme e mmmeemiens e omtenmnemmmmemrensmoom mmns omm mmmermn ns soo.soon.., L. J. BALL _ NEW MANAGER Zeziane, + Foreign ister "in â€" Abd: ebKrinr‘s Gonn.r was ‘bound to the .muszle of a cannon recéntly and blown to<pieces. He wag acâ€" cused: of betraying the â€" Riffian Several of thet leaders#‘ of the Boâ€" €oya . and ~Beni Urriaguel tribes have also been executed: tions. Appointed by Can. Weekly Mr. L. J. Ball, who has béen as sociated with thie Vernon . News, B.C., for the past 25 years, has been appointed Manager of the Canadiar Weekly Newspapers‘ Aassociation, in succession to Mr. E. Roy Sayles, who recently became the owner of the Renfrew Mercury. Mr. Ball is a native 6f Ontario, serving his apprenticeship in the office of the Waterloo Chronicle. He subsequently served for short periods in the offices of the Belleâ€" ville Sun, St. Catharines Standard, Brantford Expositor, and some of the larger job printing concerns in ceed E. Roy Sayles, Who Buys Newspaper. groups declared their ‘ Ass‘n To Sucâ€" Excertionat Rinine Comeort If the seats are deep enough and the proper distance from the floor; if the seat backs are correctly pitched for relaxation; if the upâ€" holstery is sufficiently stuffed and there is plenty of leg room; above all, if the springs are rightly designed and of proper length, you will have exceptional riding comfort. Otherwise, you will not. § Dodge Brothers, with characteristic thoroughâ€" ness, studied and experimented witH these details for years. Their findings were ultimately incorporated in the design of Dodge Brothers Motor Carâ€"without quéstion now a vehicle that ranks with the first in this vitally imâ€" portant feature. The riding comfort of a motor car is not deâ€" pendent upon its length, weight or cost, any more than the comfort of a home depends upon for locating in British Columbia. He was the first organiter of thy Okanagan ‘Press Guild and was president for several terms of the British Columbia and Yukon Press Associations. Mr. Ball was filling the presidential chair of the Weekâ€" ly Nowspapers‘ Association when he was asked to assume the duties of Manager of the Association followâ€" rg the resignation of Mr. Sayles. Mr, â€"Ball Â¥s therefore well equipped to assume the responsibilities of his ‘ new position. Toronto, after which he went west, _ ‘The Renffew Mercury, which Mr The retiring manager of the Canadian Weekly Newspapers‘ Asâ€" sociation, Mr. E. Roy Sayles, had filled that position, since its incepâ€" tion six years ago. The task of organizing the weekly newspapers in,Canada into a separate and disâ€" tinct press association was carried through by Mr. Sayles with comâ€" mendable efficiency and auspicious sirecess. . Toâ€"day the Association eoml;rlses 500 _ weekly newspaper publishers, representing _ every province in the Dominion. DIETRICH‘S GARAGE Waterloo, Oht. â€" | If your nostrils are clogged, your throat distressed, or your head is ;ntufled by nasty catarrh or a cold, apply a liltle pure, antiseptic, germ | destroying cream into your nostrils. It penetrates through every air ‘passage, soothing inflamed, swollen ‘ membranes and you get instant reâ€" How go06 it feels‘ Your nostrils are open. Your head is clear. No more hawking, snuffling, dryness or struggling for breath. Get a small bottle of Ely‘s Cream Balm frim any druggist. Colds and catarth yield !ke maglc. Don‘t stay stulfâ€" ed up. Reliof is gure. Head Stufled by Catarrh or Cold ©OO0 ARCRTWWT MRRICUIP, TTTUN . s‘yles has purchased, is one of the foremost weekly newspapers of the Province, and under his guidance will undoubtedly continue to meet with a large measure of success. 30c _ f'.,23“<c:

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