Walkerton Independent, Volume 51, Number 24, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 12 November 1925 — Page 3

1 ee—— ‘\ in d y — : .1\ D S P VARSI GSS I =the same dependable remedy N that over a period of more than N fifty years has been found so N reliable in the treatment of R R S—— catarrh and diseases of catarrhal PRI O—— nature. AN The outside of the package e B A only has been altered. To facil--27 S o oSO itate packing and reduce breakLWS age in shipping, the paper wrape %er which has identified the e N = e e-ru-na bottle for many years /fl D AV has been displaced by a substan--8 patd FR S ———— tial pasteboard carton. L 9 m s =Y — Pe-ru-na cannot be made any S . B ¥ better. Three generations of 4 j g users testify that Pe-ru-na is the > g best remedy in the world for — F—————— catarrh and diseases of catarrhal b’.'\i‘v/' — orzF:n, ' N he remedy our fathers and , N ———— grandfathers used with so much | — satisfaction is still the standby } 1 for the ills of everyday in | % thousands of American homes. | —— | —_— | = PE-RU-NA A-EPEHHRR e The Original and Rellable Remedy | — 4 for Catarrh | The ackaca Sold Everywhereo | . w® ge Tablets or Liquid : h Send 4 Cents for w‘, ‘t‘: the

= 3 PARKER’S s HAIR BALSAM | Removes Dandruff-Stops Hair Falling A Restores Color and T é Beauty to Gray and Faded Hair LY -60 c and SI.OO at Druggista. BN R /7 Hiscox Chem Wks Patc%o ge, N.Y uINDERCORNS Removes OCorns, Calet Sies waling Saer.” Ihe vy metl ot 3 Drees gista. Hheoxche:flu.l W.orn.Ps&choguc.N. X 1 & 7 Green’s X; 6% \ Rugust Flower R /';,, Q] for Constipation, | o & Indigestion and Torpid Liver Relieves that feeling of haw ing eaten unwisely. 30c¢ & Joc bottles. Audmg 4 7 ' Joeanes n ONZh 2. NOISE ANy E Price’loo nont..» At All Druggists is - = 00 T 8 rusen asout DEVNESS ™ON REQUEST. / A O.LEONARD. INC. TO-STAVE., NEW YORK R e i Brevity is the soul of wit, but it isn't wit. A “youthful prodigy” is easier to endure than one who thinks he is.

e e S T e e R fi{] FOR i { g * | A-- A ! | W % WO N ; g | ‘ Fe ” 7 ’ N A i - @ P« h \ - BAYE, * o ) | 74 R 3 | ' - ; | Proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for | Rheumatism Colds Neuritis Neuralgia | Headache Pain Toothache Lumbago | DOES NOT AFFECT THE HEART | Accept only “Bayer” package ‘ V which contains proven directions. | Handy “Bayer” boxes of 12 tablets | Also bottles of 24 and 100—Druggists. Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monosaceticacidester of Sallcylicacid j A milliner must also be paild for | \\V'ei & sé»li(];;r;l‘;-;1iiécri;:e_irlnxe——e;trava- | what she knows—not put a yellow | gance of others when we are invited te * ribbon on a green hat. the party. ! A man will be forgiven for not If our n;{;lnv)()rs would do things as I being pretty if he will only strive te we think they should, it would be ; be clean—and succeed. | much easier to love them. j LDREN i £ CRY 294 O | i el -7 S % = ' N g\;‘{é P~ R A ‘ ';/ | V2l " o i PETESAVE A ST~ B Z &0 ’-fii @‘ ) i ¢ 1h) | ‘ » ey B Wl | g B ! :Q 2N \«') 3AY 1 B e 2§l A 7 : { { 77 MOTHER :— Fletcher’s Cas- - toria is a pleasant, harmless | Substitute for Castor Oil, Pare- | goric, Teething Drops and Soothing Syrups, especially prepared , for Infants in arms and Children all ages, | To avoid imitations, always look for the signature of W | &o_ve_n directions on each package. Physicians everywhere recommend (& |

Charm of Brick House ! Europe has been a land of brick | houses for hundreds of years nnd(‘ America is rapidly emerging from the | | “Wooden Age.” Many a traveler has‘ . returned from abroad with tales of | , | the picturesque homes of England.i '| quite unaware that the underlying | | cause of their charm lies in the mate- ' rial—solid, dignified brick—the appeal l of which has only been enhanced by | years of sunshine and storm. { g M i e ' Why Suffer Pain from a cut or burn? Cole’s Carbolisalve stops pain Instantly and heals quickly ! without a scar. Keep it handy. All drug- l gists, 30c and 60c, or J. W. Cole Co., Rock- | ford, Ill.—Advertisement. l | World’s Gold and Silver The value of the gold and silver taken from the earth up to 1920, from | the time records were first kept, ls’ estimated approximately at $35,000,- | Did you ever have a pair of soles outlast the ug})era? If not, you have never worn SEIDE Soles. People’ write that they can’'t wear USKIDE | out. It i{s the Wonder Sole for Wear! | Made by the world’'s largest rubber manufacturer, the United States Rub- | ber Company. Comfortable, healthful, | waterproof, good-looking. Tell your | repairman to put USKIDE Soles o,{:? Bour shoes. Buy new shoes with | SKIDE Soles. USKIDE will cut your | shoe bills down. Get genuine USKIDE, | The name is on the sole.—Adv. i Football makes demons of some | men and angels of others. i When a widower goes courting, | there is no trifling.

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War Between Bulgaria and Greece Is Prevented by the League’s Council. By EDWARD W. PICKARD ONCE more the League of Nations has justified its existence. Functioning promptly and firmly, the league council last week compelled Greece and Bulgaria to refrain from warfare, to withdraw the forces that had Invaded each other's territory and to leave to the league for settlement the frontier quarrel that had brought them to actual blows and threatened to start another serious Balltan war, When the council met in Paris with M. Briand as president no time was lost in informing the two small powers that they must submit to its dictation, and a short time limit was set for obeyance. The Greeks were sulky and inclined to quibble, seeking to present their case at once to the council and to Justify their attack on Petrich and other Bulgarian towns. But Briand and his colleagues silenced them and declared the council’'s ultimatum meant just what it said. There was the plain intimation that disobedience would be followed by a naval blockade of Greek ports. So the representatives from Athens were authorized by their government to promise full compliance with the orders. Bulgaria had given that pledge already. Investigators were sent at once by the council to the frontier to see that the promIses were kept, and an inquiry was begun into the causes of the quarrel by a mixed commission under the auspices of the league. TIIOUGH the French in Syria speedily suppressed the revolt in Damascus prometed by the Druses, as previously recounted, the circumstances of that suppression have brought. forth angry protests from other Christian nations and have aroused the Moslem world almost to the point of starting a general racial and religious war. General Sarrail’'s troops relentlessly shelled the ancient city, destroying the Mohammedan sections and much of the Jewish section that lay between them. Between two and three thousand persons were Kkilled, many of them being Christians and Jews, for according to the protests of the consulates no warning of the bombardment was given except to the French. One tank, it is said, traversed the Christian part of the famous Street Called Straight, killing and wounding many before the officer in charge found out that he was on the wrong thoroughfare. British and American claims against France will be heavy. In Paris there is strong pressure on the government to compel the recall of General Sarrail, who is high commissioner in Syria. For the present Damascus itself is cowed, but the Druse rebellion is strengthened by the accession of swarms of Mohammedans who fled from the city and by the continual raids by Bedouin bandits. It assumes importance as a part of the great PanIslam movement that is giving the Christian powers serious anxiety. COL. WILLIAM MITCHELL’S trial by court martial for his criticisms of the army and navy air services opened in Washington with all due ceremony, and the abandoned census bureau building in which the proceedings are being held was crowded with a fashionable throng that made the affair look like a society function. Congressman Reid of Illinois was Mitchell’s civilian counsel, and at the outset he sprung a surprise by challenging three members of the court on the ground that they were unfitted by “prejudice, hostility, bias and animosity to the accused” fairly and justly to try the colonel. Brig. Gen. A. J. Bowley and Maj. Gen. F. W. Sladen first were removed from the bhench, their brother officers sustaining the challenges. Then Mr. Reid demanded that Maj. Gen. C. P. Summerall, president of the court, should be withdrawn, Crystal Gazer Sees Much Trouble Coming Paris.—The year 1926 will be an eventful one, fraught with great world changes, if one can believe the annual forecast of Professor Raymond, widely known French crystal gazer, Raymond has many followers In Franmce, for It is claimed that he predicted the World war, America’s entry Into the war, the Lusitania disaster and the death of President Wilson. Among the professor’'s oredictions

asserting that he was prejudiced because Mitchell in 1923 in an official report had severely criticized his (Summerall’s) handling of affairs in the Hawaiian department. General Summerall, flushed with anger, said: “In view of the bitter personal hestility of Colonel Mitehell toward me which I here have learned of for the first time, I cannot consent to sit on this court.” The court sustained this challenge, as It had the others, and Maj. Gen. R. L. Howze succeeded to the presidency. Mr. Reid then, contesting the court's Jurisdiction and protesting that Mitchell should not be tried on the charges brought, disclosed that the defense would be based on the claim that the colonel in making his criticisms had committed no offense against army and navy discipline; that he incited no soldier to mutiny, slandered no individual and named no individuals in his charges, and that he had a perfect right to talk as he did. The lawyer then quoted this from President Coolidge's address to the cadets at Annapolis last June: “The officers of the navy are given the fullest latitude in expressing their views before their fellow citizens, subJjeet, of course, to the requirements of not betrayving those contidential affairs which would be detrimental to the service. It seems to me perfectly proper for anyvone, on any suitable occasion, to advocate the maintenance of a navy in keeping with the greatl ness and dignity of our country.” Reed's contention was not sustained and the trial continued. Lll~1("l‘. JAMES H. DOOLITTLE, with a little black Curtiss racer, won new honors for the navy and the country in the air races at DBaltimore. First he succeeded in keeping the Jacques Schneider seaplane trophy In the United States, making the 100 kilometers in the new speed record Yor the contest of 234.772 miles an hour. A British entry was second and one from Italy third. Doolittle’s plane was the same one which, as a land plane, won the Pulitzer trophy when piloted by Lieutenant Bettis. Next day Lieutenant Doolittle took the air again in the same ship and drove it over a three kilometer course in the fastest time ever made by a seaplane—243.7l3 miles an hour——though the conditions were unfavorable. OSEPH CAILLAUX'S financial proJ gram for France was so bitterly opposed that the cabinet declined to accept it and he was urged to give up his portfolio as minister of finance. This he refused to do, whereupon Premier Painleve and the entire cabinet resigned. The main reason for rejection of Caillaux’s program was his opposition to a capital levy. President | Doumergue asked Painleve to form | another ministry, which he did Thursday. He continues as premier and . also takes the finance portfolio. Briand remains as minister of foreign affairs | and Georges Bonnot is given a new | portfolio, that of minister of budget. | This new cabinet tends more to the left than the former ininistry. The | premier tried to induce M. Herriot, his : predecessor, to form the cabinet or at | least to take a place in it, but the [ Socialist leader declined. ‘ CONSEI{VATI\'ES regained control ' of the government of Nicaragua | last week when Gen. Emiliano Chamar- | ro, former president, seized the fortress L.a Loma, commanding Managua, without opposition, being joined by the | garrison. He and his associates in the | coup then sent to President Solorzano | a demand that he dismiss the liberal | members of his cabinet and restore the | liberal party to power. At first the | liberals were disposed to resist and there was some street fighting, but e’Solorzano soon Yyielded in order to | avoid further bloodshed. He himself | was protected by constabulary com- | manded by Major Carter of the Ameri- | can marines. The conservatives claim | they lost the presidential election in | October, 1924, by fraud. ' OVERNORS of a number of states G appeared before the house ways and means committee in behalf of the repeal of the federal estate tax. This, | said a White House spokesman, was especially pleasing to the President, who believes that by withdrawing from the field of inheritance taxation, the for 1926 are these: A terrible catastrophe to a transatiantic liner on the " | high seas bound for the United States. x The death of an American financier. l Greater American interest in KEuro- | pean affairs, because of the personal | sympathy of President Coolidge, and bankers in Southern and Eastern | | states. : Steadying of international exchange, | France, the United States, Great Brit- | ain and Germany coming to an agreel ment which will stabilize the franc. ) The v fessor’s crvstal also predicts

federal government will help make It ! possible for the states to have their ; own sources of revenue. Mr. Coolidge | thinks there has been too much centralization of authority in Washington | and cites as an instance the matter of federal aid for road construction. He | would not cut off this aid entirely, but | have it limited as nearly as possible I to the building of main highways. | Several witnesses representing great; interests sought the repeal of the cap- | ital stock tax. This was opposed by | Undersecretary of the Treasury Wins- ‘ ton. Indeed, repeal of nearly every’ tax in the present law is asked byi someone, so {t is plain that the com- | mittee cannot please all. ’ T IS no surprise to find that all those f [ predictions of huge grain exports from Russia due to immense crops had l no foundation save the wild talk of: Soviet officials, and instead of sending | grain to other countries, Russia is | practically sure to go hungry agalni this winter. The Soviet government | committee to prevent famine is busyf in Moscow and has decided to lend | seed, grain and flour to eight districts which report crop failure. | The Moscow Economic Life—the offi- ’ cial Soviet economiecs journal-—reports | the complete collapse of the selling or- | ganization of the Soviet government, formed last summer to buy grain from the peasants. In the Odessa, Ekaterinoslav and Nicholaiev distriets, where 1 seven organizations purchased grain, before the war, Economic Life reports, ! today there are 170 government agen- ] cies competing on the local markets, forcing prices up. Today, nccurdingf to the paper, the peasants are demanding prices only $2 a ton below the Chicago grain exchange. In connection with the grain purchasing campaign, scores of ‘“reliable communists” have been arrested, the paper continues, reporting that grain bribery is rampant and the government is losing huge sums through the poorly organized and ineflicient grain purchasing department. TALY'S mission is now in Washing- [ ton for the purpose of funding the Italian war debt to the United States, which amounts to £2,000,000,000. Secretary of the Treasury Mellon and the other members of the American debt commission have made a careful study of Italy’s financial and economie condition to help in reaching a conclusion a4s to her capacity to pay. Concerning the French debt, Chairman Borah of the senate foreign relations commniittee writes to the president of the Illinois Manufacturers’ association saying that without specific authorization from the American people, congress has no right to “unload” the foreign war debts on the taxpayers |nt' the United States. He says the money loaned to France was obtained from the American people under a very specific pledge that the loans would be *“repaid with reasonable interest.” CIIAI{LES P. TAFT II of Cincinnati, son of the former President and present chief justice of the United States, was elected permanent chairman of the International Young Men’s Christian association convention in Washington. He is a lawyer and only twenty-eight years old, the youngest man ever chosen for the position. President Coolidge opened the convention with an address, and Herbert Hoover and other notables were among the speakers it heard. The secretary of commerce struck a rather doleful note in asserting that by-products of the war and results of our great prosperity are “a weakening of moral fibre, loosening of family and home ties, { youthful criminality, the easy breaking of law by adults, the growing intolerance, a leaning upon the state without a corresponding willingness to bear its burdens, waste, and extravagance.” WHEN the international court of justice at The Hague took up the dispute between Great Britain and Turkey over Mosul, the Turkish government sent a telegram declining to present its case because it would not | submit to arbitration of the matter by | the League of Nations council if the court should so direct. The Turks insist the question is political and so not { properly before the court. The case for Great Britain was presented by Attorney General Sir Douglas Hogg and other lawyers. -lthat sugar, copper, platinum and steel + will have a bull year. | England has a melancholy 12 meonths | before her, says the professor, for rev- | olution will break out in three of her dominions, and the armies will have to | be mobilized to quell them. A great | English author will be kflled in a rallroad accident. ‘ The professor further foresees earth- | quakes in Italy and China, railroad | accidents in France and the United States, a Bolshevik outbreak In the | Balkans, and numberless dire events.

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y CANADA is the Land e of Promise to-day. ‘ ‘ Canada promises prosperS ity, health and happiness B to those who come prepared B and determined to work. * And, on her promises, Can- ) ada makesgood. Ifyouare j strong and willing, you can 3 make yourself independent in Canada, no matter if i your cash capital is small. & |23 Take the Case of % B C. A. Dunning : C. A. Dunning came to the 18 Province of Saskatchewan in | B 1903. He was an immigrant boy B from England, only seventeen i,J yecars old, not over strong, no ! money, no knowledge of agri- ‘ f’i culture. But he wanted to work 'k; and he was looking for a job | i in Saskatchewan, as a start. He ;3 was determined to make good. & He got the job. It was on a new | & farm in Saskatchewan, thirty & miles from the end of the rail- : way. His pay was SIO.OO per : month and board. He lived in a : sod shack and slept on the floor. ™ To-day, Charles A Dunning is 5 Premier of Saskatchewan, Chief | Executive and Leader of the % Provincial Government, and one ot of the most successful farmers .-‘: in Canada. A Great Country 3, Canada is a great, rich, varied ‘ country with the glorious power

/'/, : . e/ | [ D flgger Department of Immigration and Colonization %‘&. .o" Room A-320 Ottawa, Canada i ; Please send me your free book on Fam £ % Opportunities in Canada, £sd RSO NaC et ereersseeseeensssrcesssesssmcssnsessssssssssrsocssssssstossrosssccceses | IS B XIS t i _;_ I DRI it ks it TR ,’.r,p. . ; REEE ) ‘ U Town.oooeee o State . [FEEREECY i % __‘wz‘.,,,;;;:r.:sj_" (Write name and address plainly® W] . T ? ¢

The Real Question ’ I *“Just this way, sir,” said the cour- | teous clerk in the railway ticket office. | “Let me show vou some summer guides | entitled, “Where to Go' and ‘“When to oo’ " i The man with the modest income | | shook his head. | “They don’t interest me,” he sighed. | *What I want to know is ‘How to Go.”” | A man worries over his digestionl ' and a woman over her complexion. : Study will really swell the head—especially over the eyes. ~ Is It Your Stomach? | | Toledo, Ohio.—"Tt is just wonderful : what Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Dis- |

covery will do for | any one who suffers | with stomach and! bowel trouble. I had typhoid fever and 1t ieft me in a | very bad physical state of health, my bowels would not act, my food would set heavy on my stomach and did not digest properly.

‘ B Gas would form and cause me great distress. I was weak, | nervous, and in a rundown condition. I | took Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Dis- | covery and it cured me of my stomach { and bowel trouble and built me up in | good health.”—Mrs. Laura Hager, 630 { Vinton St. All dealers. Tablets or | liquid. | Near the geysers and hot springs of ! Yellowstone park there are plants that | remain green throughout the rigors of | a mountain winter.

Retom <. =o\ B T £ 'TE‘ P e T —_ 705~ i N SRR LGS - “%:-L.{. e- - Extra HighB X e All Rubber Overshoe PN T 1%1 JUST the shoe you have been looking for & \ ,'1: = — the five-buckle height is added waterRN s)\ proof protection in mud and snowdrifts. | ',zt 5 i B\ There’s cozy warmth in the thick, fleece ] G BRBOT LT lining. No need to scrape and in- ' i&%‘%\jé' J N ";“;fl_,‘ jure the uppers—they’re cleaned R, Ay WE\ in a jiffy under hose or pump. 5 o . E,?, T 5 e asw- 951 o - Z o ;;;3 No odors or soil are brought into ¢ s 39 the house. <RS > ‘Nebraska’ is the same shoe in a y four buckle height. ‘Caboose’—called the “World’s Best Work Rubber” because it actually outwears two and three pairs of ordinary rubbers. The biggest rubber value on the market—built like all Converse Shoes for extra wezr. Look for the ‘Big C’ on the sole—it will mean a real saving this winter. 5, Ask your local dealer ! [ CONVERSE RUBBER SHOE CO., 6iß W. Jackson Blvd., Chicego, Il o Factory: Malden, Mass. e < 7\ 9 B AT & 7 = See the (? € EXN % CONVERSE /ik ‘\' ’ RN s = i | )\ BIG . LINE 5 ! > O/r \ Rubber \\' Footwear &60 5 F POR — 1096P‘ i 2 '3 | S ST e |

and vitality of youth, She is ! already the greatest exporter of 3 wheat in the world, although § only about one-fifth of her good ¢ farm land has as yet been 2 brought under cultivation. ;’ Canada’s wheat crop in 1924 ;7. was 262,000,000 bushels; in 3 1925 it is officially estimated at ¥ 391,000,000 bushels—an increase & of 129,000,000 bushels. Other branches of farming—dairying, §+ stock-raising, etc.,—are increas- i ing proportionately. Caaada is &_ increasingly rich in beef and & dairy cattle, in horses and sheep, i and in pouitry. C. A. Dunning % has shared in this development 7 and prospered accordingly. g C. A. Dunning’s story of success 2 on the farm can be multiplied 4 thousands of times in the differ- §, ent Provinces of Canada. Do & YOU want to get ahead? Do ] YOU want to succeed and make a home for yourself on a low- p cost farm where you can prosper % and be independent? Come to = Canada, the land of bigger crops 3 and cheaper, richer land. Officers |, || of the Canadian Government , will help you, free of charge, to % get suitably located; if desired E ' they will supervise your start 3 ‘, and give you zil the help and j% l counsel you may ask. Good land # ; near the railroads sells at from g& ', $15.00 to $20.00 per acre. Free i " homesteads farther back. Full i particulars will be found in the 2 Canada Books issued by the 54 Government. Send for one to- 5 day. They’re free. Use this B | coupon. Opportunity is knock- £ p ing at your door. 7

~ Ne man after missing a target can heartily congratulate another who hits L% / ——————————————————————————————————————— t P.l D. l pp Peterson’s Olniment “Please let me tell you,” says Peterson, “that for instant relief from the 'misery of blind, bleeding or itching piles, there is nothing so good as Peterson’s Ointment, as thousands have testified.” Best for old sores and itching skin. All druggists, 60 cents. THE MICHIGAN STA_E DEPARTMENTI - OF AGRICULTU RE offers free heipful information on state certifled lands, markets, scils, crops, ' climate, accredited deslers. Write Director of fifn- | cultural Industry, 7 State Building, Lansing, Mich £ur dare—Files; tor mechanic or anyone who sharpens or repairs. Assortment of tean good files, $1.75 postpaid. Less than 13¢ each. You will be surprised. All different sizes and shapes. Send $§1.75 for 10. Money refunded {if not satisfied. Sample 20c. The I. R. K. Tool Co.. Grand Haven, Mich. GET IN BUSINESS FOR YOURSELF For one dollar we wili send formula for best compiexion cream cn the market. WALKER LAB., Box 138, LIVINGSTON, MONTANA. Wanted to Manufacture—Dies, tools, nosvelties, experimental and producticn work. Spl. machin’y designed, built for any purpose, Midwest Mfg. Co., 1427 Carroll Ave., Chicago. Men and Women—Sell Christmas gifts to your friends and neighbors. New and beautiful line of hoise furnishings, sell to everyone. Easy, profitable work. Write for free particulars today. Bradford Pacos, St. Joseph, Mich. ‘Kosemine—?.s-mfive unsightly wrinklies \vn; this dainty creme. Sopftens-bleaches, rejuvenates skins. §1 and $2 jars. E. C. Butler Co., 316 Woolworth Bidg., Houston, Texas. Ladies! Big Pay! Easy Work., S4O wk. sure. Miss K. made $322 Ist mo. Treat scalps—men, women-—grow hair. Free! SSO worth to start! Marie Andre, 5436 Winthrop, Chicago. ! Wanted—Local Agent for -biggest money 'maker on market. Sells on sight. Send 50 cents for sample and full particulars. E. J. i Lundin, §O7 Security Bldg., Chicago. IIL W. N. U.,, CHICAGO, NO. 45--1925,