G : ’ ~ Salada— the byw for tea in Canada “SALADAY TEA Se eae * RE ee. ee: tah: Bats = ject To Establish International ae AS SLIM AS A Oh, fe yortolie=V DB Av! = land, Ni | Siew Is Suggested To Right World- in LOO 2 Through erosions in some quarters | | Still Fit and Active at 55. Wide Uneasiness é th i I rea § . - A project to establish an interna-| ‘I have been taking the small dose /and accretions in others, the Great mF ay eee tional currency to fight world-wide! of Kruschen Salts every moroing for | Britain which King George V. rules eae ; | the Inst three years. I wouldn't be | over today, has assumed a shape Q Q 0 E uneasiness has been disclosed in the) without them in the house. I used to | a eet Swiss press. | guffer with constipation and piles, but | Quite different to what it had in the) -s a am neyer troubled in that way Tam 55 years, and as slim as when I rd, as T The creation of such a currency would be based on a deposit of $1,- | 000,000,000 in the world bank by the central banks of the various countries, France would deposit one-third of the Amount and the United States the bal- ance, under the plan. Certificates} | days when some of his illustrious pre-) decessors were on the throne. | In fact, these islands have been} shrinking, and continue to do so at Reason Smashing Blow the rate, it is estimated, of one! . square mile a year. Atmospheric) Was Never Delivered conditions as well as inroads of the The Truth About Russia — | Conditions Are Deplorable Opinion ot People Who Know Kruschen that keeps me fit.”—M. S. ‘There's nothing like hard work and keeping superflaous fat ‘The trouble with most folks is Germany's Plan At Outset Of War ‘Fresh from the gardens’ | would be issued by the world bank| finding the necessary energy. ‘That is |sea have caused many falls of soft} Niinedn Bed Those pink and parlor Bolshevists 4 ae = = — and distributed among the depositors, SS ae ee uneo call aatcn a eee | Nipped In Bue liniong us who ‘like to) Heakrthents 3 E [covered either by 80 per cent. or! o¢ Kruchen every morning ae Th: ee belt of coast hia sis Why, rae smashing blow hae} never | selyes say that Russia may well show 5 rd Time For Self Control 50 percent. of their gold deposit.) couple of weeks yc get what is |England stretches from Whitby Injdelivered, which Germany hai Plan- | the whole world the way out of its & | They would also draw coverage from| known the world over as “That | Yorkshire, to Lyne Regis in Dorset, ned against British sea-borne trade) troubles, might read and ponder a _ Kruschen Fecling.” The urge for activity will ill your 3 being—you'll not be content to the old arm chair after your day's work is done. You'll feel the spirit of youth within jend the districts where the sea is|on the outbreak of war in August, |claiming most land are Cromer and) 1914, is told for the first time by Hec- | the North and South Forelands. But tor C. Bywater, in the London Daily another serious area is North Wales. | Telegraph. you--whnt a joyous feeling—you'll | A small Norfolk village which once} Before the war Germany owned @ Want to take long walks, play games | overlooked the cliffs near Cromer, has| merchant fleet second only to that of and your work will cease to be a hard- | for many years, been under the sea, | Great Britain. It included some of ship—it will become a ple=sure, jor approximately five miles out from| the largest and fastest liners afloat. |the high-tide mark of today. On the| Ths potential value of these ships in other hand the village of Steying, in) war time had long been realized by Sussex, now five miles inland, was, the German Admiralty, and ‘Admiral | t preniler Hennetel Gage wey Ghinee Talore ees mene noes which | Von Tirpitz, on y | Geant sf se TS) was still used as a port in the days|of the Navy, decided to utilize them statement that has just appeared in ‘ | the New York Times, thus: “Albany.—Dr. A. R. Brubacher, president of the New York State Col- lege for Teachers, who has just re- turned from Russia, declared today that while the Soviet State is a ‘going concern,’ it would be futile to pro- phesy its future, “No final judgment can be render- ed on it,” he said. ‘Conditions are , vast 18 are in- complete; the great social and politic- al experiment fs still in its early stages. I can only make tentative observations. “The standard of living in Russia is below the lowest in America. Hous- | money Circulating in the various coun- | As Shakespeare once put it, “the times are out of joint.” These are tries. | troublous days, and days of trouble. Men’s nerves are on edge, and little} World bank quarters were confi-| things that would be passed over lightly in good times are every day becom-) dent the plan would assume concrete} ing the cause of quarrels. Because nerves are on edge, tempers are n0t)form in the near future. This was ‘under control even to the extent they usually are, and in the case of most} based on a belief that France and people tempers are never controlled as they should be. United States would call an interna- Today people will argue and dispute about almost anything, and lose/tionat currency conference after their tempers over the most trivial matters which are of no importance) premier Layal's visit to Washington. whatever. The great Bard of Avon wrote: “Beware of entrance to a aie Ce eee quarrel; but, being in, bear it that the opposed may beware of thee.” | Abraham Lincoln, however, said that while this advice was good, it was not | FASHION HINT | of Edward the Confessor. |as an auxiliary arm of the fighting the best, and he substituted: “Quarrel not at all. No man, resolved to make the most of himself, can spare time for personal contention. Still less can | ne afford to take the consequences, including the vitiation of his temper)..7... 4 make my old short skirts! Canada retains the gold standard,| 4 ppledore, another place, now eight |fleet. By July, 1914, he had thus and the loss of self-control. Yield larger things to which you show no more! gonform to the ents length was a| ond it is not proposed to abandon It.| miles from the coast line, was the | listed well over 100 armed vessels, as problem to me until I hit on this, This, in effect, is the statement of landing place of the invading Danes | many as possible of which he intend- ed to use when war broke out for a than equal right; and yield lesser ones through clearly your own. Better give your path to a dog than be bitten by him in contesting for the right.) lan. I dropped the hems; and as the|Premier R. B. Bennett. Persistent}; g93 On the north shore of the Canada rene Gold Standard Even killing the dog would not cure the bite.” (pare that had been turned under| rumour that the Dominion proposed) p.i¢to1 Ch: 1 h th .|simultaneous raid 01 British com- Fi ° ; darker t! th 3 ed th ay hd 1 lannel, .where the sea con ing is disgraceful, food inadequate — ez This is not to say that a man should sacrifice so much as one important | Pntire a esinog i Retreat |to abandon the gold standard was|tinjes to make inroads, there was| munications throughout the seven! and of very poor quality, and ake ction, or yield his principles for the sake of peace or profit. There are/the goods, following directions in|4t@wn to the attention of the Prime) once a great forest, long since en-| Seas. es when a man should get mad, when we could feel nothing but contempt the Diamond Dyes package. * |Minister. His answer was emphatic. | pjfeq. The arming of the ships offered the for him if he did not. But such occasions are few and far between. “I used Diamond Dyes for the) The Government had not changed the) 4+ jeast thirteen townships on the Chief difficulty. Prior to the war Bri- Th 7 redyeing, of course. I have dyed| i 7 | eo mau thing should never be the cause of disputation or) many things with these wonderful |position taken when news of Great) ...+ coast have been swallowed up seen on the street is universally shab- - A ae “There is no freedom in Russi tain strongly suspected that certain Persons are not free to come and 7, German liners carried guns and’ as they will, and it {s especially dif- — According to local authorities state| mountings in their holds, and that/cult for a” Russlan to leave his coun- | guns for liners were stored, in camou- try.” ait flaged form, at German shipping jeolors. They have saved me many|ritain's departure from the gold|),., the sea in past centuries. We are reminded of the three-word Latin motto above the doorway|dollars and have never failed to give|Standard was flashed across the) of the ancient chamber in the Guildhall in which the aldermen of London| Perfect results—smooth, even colors) ocean. | \—fast to wear and washing. Friends | | | | assistan vill b if an, hold their court and which no one of them can fail to see: “Audi alteram | tyiny. my things are new when 1| RRR Sat Sie saree y + a (OUMEN EN WES Ble Machol dios iis |comprehensive scheme to prevent eete tage bec on uo orer Sine: redye or tint them with Diamond|tion taken when the announcement| —- ion is to be carried out. In the| depots in the United States, Balt VPkgl ren paar ed ea ee! oa ‘And in old England, with its long years of experience in handling|Dyes. They do give the most gor- Was made that England had depart-| | sso, of some engineer: the land) America and the Far East. It was/Jt is 1 a ae f Be human beings of all classes and degrees in all parts of the world, how much |&®0us colors!” |ed from the gold standard, nor do} veges aie dae a |due, however, in part, Mr. Bywater sreely fromm ale, class tat yn wiser than other nations is she in dealing with agitators. The Old Land) Mrs. G.C., Lewis, Quebec.) we contemplate so doing,” the Prime | 10st infonck ace mained mmapnorner: sa’ 5 to the yates ot he on ae ae im tea a) Ons < long ago learned that talk, like any other gas, is dangerous only when | ND ran Ee Mintstepedeclaved: ioradiace ap-| And oe are ages no sarey | avait ates La Gat erates ce eee ‘planned economics.” & compressed. Younger countries, Canada included, has yet to learn that) Thirty-Five Years Enough * peated and not in vain, to Canadians | Or" ne Ron as an See 4 i hours before the outbreak, when barca ey meter Me) lesson. So we find in London, instead Park orators, the British authorities supply police protection for them, let| Missionary To Yukon Hands Over of attempting to suppress the- Hyde} them say their say, and do not quarrel with them. And what is the cause of most misunderstandings, leading to loss of} Work To Younger Men Duties as a missionary in the froz- to conserve our gold supply to meet whatever strain may be placed upon our resources by reason of our foreign commitments, which are payable in temper and open quarrels? Is it not that in our self-opinionated state we| en Yukon for 35 years have ended for gold and will be honoured according- are wasting our energies and increasing our blood pressure trying, over| Rey. W. D. Young. | trivial things, to.set somebody else right? Instead of accepting people for what they are, we are forever trying to mold their lives to our preconceived| utes in Calgary, but it was long model, endeavouring to organize them. How many married couples live in a| enough for him to say that he had state of tension because one or both seek to make the other over, If once the| left the Yukon for ever. idea could get abroad that the real appeal of the sexes is the fact that they| years old, he handed to younger men| are not alike, what a great gain that would be. And what applies to the| the work of spreading the gospel in| sexes applies equally to races, creeds, and other established facts of life. Let us stop trying to organize the lives of other people, and attend strictly to the task of organizing our own. Let us master the lesson | Klondyke gold rush of 1898 that Mr. | that, after all, there are comparativi of conviction. ely few issues in this world worth disputing over. It would, of course, be a sad day for the world if righteous| old, indignation vanished from it, if men became so immersed in the scramble} does not know, but it is likely he will for profit and place of power that they could no longer get mad over| go to Toronto after his stay in Win- palpable wrongs and gross injustices. But the point is that too much of) nipeg. the world’s anger is poured out in defence of pride or prejudice instead | ization during the northern stay, Mr. Young only spent a few min-| Now 73] the distant north. It was two_years before the great | |Young went north, then 38 years Just what he will do now, he He made two trips to civil- which included 25 years at Herschel ly. Lower Prices For Honey indentations or cliffs in the future. | gee eee /Canada Has Thousands | Of Level Crossings Frank Oliver | aS. | Remoyal Of All Impossible Says Hon. | | The Dominion at present has some nearly 30 German agents were appre- hended by the British Secret Service, that the grandiose plan for paralyz- jing British ocean trade failed. This left tne German naval staff absolute- ly in the dark as to the movements of the British fleet. “The evidence which has since come to light,” Mr. Bywater says, Honey Prices In Ontario Lowest In} 28,000 level crossings scattered along | “leaves no doubt as to the gravity of 25 Years |railways from coast to coast despite |the peril which confronted our Honey values in Ontario have/ expenditure of $15,189,000 over the|ocean trade in 1914.” Had the Ger- reached the lowest point in 25 years, past 21 years towards elimination and | man plans reached full maturity according to officials of the Ontario | amelioration of this menace to traffic,| British shipping might have been Honey Producers’ Association, and| according to Hon. Frank Oliver, ad-|Truined within the first three months while that is true, the flavour of this | visory officer to the Board of Rail-| of the war and the country faced year’s product is rated much better) way Commissioners for Canada, in a| with a food crisis of extreme severity. than the average year. Last year's crop in round figures in Ontario was about 13,000,000 pounds and this year there is a 60 per cent. crop, or about 7,500,000 pounds. | paper before the recent convention of | the Canadian Good Roads Association |at Lucerne-in-Quebec. In 1930, a total of 341 railway | Would Take Risk Again | | « ‘autilus” Crew Think Better Sub- Russia and observed what is taking place there hold vastly different ideas. —Ottawa Journal. No Longer a Bugbear Britain's Departure From Gold Standard Not Likely To Harm Anybody The United States owns nearly half the gold supply of the world. At the beginning of the present month, United States-owned gold amounted to $4,983,000,000, a new high record. Yet in the Republic at this very mo- ment, some millions of men, women and children are fearfully wondering how they are going to keep warm and fed this coming winter. Perhaps the position of the United — States has little real relation to the gold standard in Britain, or its de- |erossing accidents in Canada took a} As one old Roman philosopher said: “Many have suffered for talking; iS; \Island. The first was in 1902 and; There has been a good demand | ¢o)) of 115 lives and 475 injured, Mr,| parture from it. Yet existing world mone ever suffered for keeping silent.” , marine Could Reach North Pole Fealltiea® have sicnocledilsa fiamnty ar cannot be wrong in leaving other people’s business alone.” And, on another occasion, “We the second in 1930. |from countries like Holland for buck- | Oliver stated. Through the efforts of | Eleven underseas sailors, back in His home, before he went north as wheat honey at four to six cents &/the Board of Railway Commissioners| New York from two-months of suf- Using Seed Cleaning Units Saskatchewan University | A Taking Advantage Of Outfits Supplied ma Several municipalities in Saskatch- ewan already have made applications to the Field Crop Branch of the De- partment of Agriculture for seed cleaning units as supplied by the Sas- in 1p tion with the Dominion Seed Branch. Under this scheme, the Governments furnish the machinery, the munici- pality being required to provide the motive power and the housing accom- modation. All the outfits supplied to date have been of an itinerant na- ture, and may be transported from farm to farm during the seed clean- Gov Is Shown For| the Current Term Former students returning to Sas-| Found Alive Ei katchewan University brought up the} enrolment in the regular, classes to, cor Pp courses has by 57 to 303, giving a net increase of ten students. The decline is mainly in the college of arts and sciences. Pharmacy shows reduced enrolment, Sheep Buried In Snow African Storm 1,043 47 Hundreds of South Africans saw a} 1043 or 47 less than last year, an-| fall of snow for the first time in their | the support nounces President W. C. Murray. To jiyes during a recent heavy storm on offset this the number enrolled in the | Table Mountain and other Cape rang- jes. While the present season is “win- | themselves and in such a way | ter” on this side of the equator, snow there can be no question of them. | has rarely been seen this far south. prices than those now prevailing, un- |der which they get only about 5 to |6 cents a pound. Last year’s prices were easily 2 cents a pound, on the ight Weeks After South average, above this year’s price. Hi If Miller's Worm Powders needed of testimonials they could be got from mothers who know the virtue of this excellent medi- cine. But the powders will speak for that | They act speedily and thoroughly, and |the child to whom they are adminis- From the interior comes a story of tered will show improvement from and engineering a considerable in-| ygoltenc district. crease. The other colleges have about | the same numbers as on the corres- | Although completely hemmed |they managed to keep alive The College of pow 18 sheep lived for eight weeks) the first dose. junder an avalanche of snow in the Cutworm Damage in, by Survey Will Be Made In Several Areas | way crossing conditions Mr. Oliv continued. Crossing accidents on provincial |highways formed less than one-third ies the total for 1930, the great ma- jority of crossing fatalities occuring |bn country roads. The annual government grant of | $200,000 to the Board for the railway ‘crossing fund was inadequate, the |e: said, and it would be impos- | sible to entirely remove all level cross- jings in the Dominion. J. P. Bickell, registrar of motor vehicles of Ontario, said the death jrate exceeded three persons a day on Canada's roads. The total of auto- | mobile fatalities in the year 1930 was er ja y, was in Bruce County, | pound and producers hope for better! much had been done to improve rail- fering and some “grumbling,” smiled Ontario, where he farmed. | bravely and chorused that if some one | would give them a better submarine | they would try again to reach the North Pole. | They were half of the crew of the jold “Nautilus,” once ,;2 navy sub- | mersible, now a battered wreck ready /to be sunk in the North Sea. Under |the command of Sir Hubert Wilkins, | who with other members of the crew will r€urn to this country later, they | drove their craft to within 350 miles of the pole. “There was some grumbling. We |had a lot to contend with,” said Chief | Engineer Ralph D. Shaw, | ‘The voyage eastward across the | Atlantic was the most harrowing ‘ordeal in’ Shaw’s career. A combin- cient and cherished theories into a cocked hat it will be surprising if what has been done in Britain visits much harm upon anybody. Currency changes, most certainly, long ago ceased to bea bugbear.—Ottawa Jour- nal. City Covers Big Acreage | Regina is one of the largest cities in Canada. It covers 8,408 acres, more than twice as big as many jeastern cities of similar or even larger population. Within the confines of Regina are more than 500 acres of civic parks, nearly 100 acres of ex- hibition grounds, besides a great deal ‘of vacant property. Regina could com- fortably accommodate twice its pres- ent population without extending the boundartes. ponding day lest year. ‘Taxes Are Prohibitive | Brook House, home of Lady Mount- ing period. Near Saskatoon | 1,289 and the injured were approxi- 2 ‘ation of bad air and sickening rojling | A survey of cutworm damage will | mately 40,000. | F motion made most of the men ill as breathing through the melting snow and eating the grass on the floor of Going Back To Primitive Hunters In B.C. Are Using Bow and 4 Arrow For Big Game Near Longworth, B.C., sixty miles east of Prince George, big game is being hunted with bow and arrow by F. Nagler, of Milwaukee, Wis. an archer of national repute. William W. Tefft, of Jackson, Mich, who has tracked animals in many countries of the world, is accompanying Mr. Nagler. The expedition, which comprises five members, left Longworth a short time ago. Other members of the novel hunt are Leslie Hale, Arthur Read, of Longworth, and R. A. McLeod, of Dome Creek. Similarity Of Names Postal officials direct attention to the similarity in post office names in| Canada and the United States and ask persons to be careful in address- | ing mail matter to such points, These | offices are Sunbridge, Ontario, which is sometimes confused with San- bridge, Manitoba, Oak Bluff, Mani-; toba, which is frequently confused with Oak Bluff, Mass., U.S.A. Cobwebs are useful in advertising | a store that doesn't advertise. | CHAPPED SKIN | | No Wonder He Died Shakespeare’s Death Caused By Com- plication Of Thirteen Ailments The death of William Shakespeare, 42, bard, was due to complication of} 13 diseases, according to an article in| Lancet, British medical organ, by| MacLeod Yearsley, consulting aural | surgeon to St. James Hospital. According to Yearsley, the play- wright’s death resulted from compli- cation of fever, typhus, typhoid para- lysis, epilepsy, apoplexy, arterio- sclerosis, oversmoking, chronic alco- holism, gluttony, angina pectoris, Bright’s disease, pulmonary conges- tion and locomotor ataxia, the aperture, as well as snow. When) be undertaken immediately by the found they were Quite a number of vibrating exer- cure accurate cisers are being sold to descendants | spect to the amount of damage done of folk who toned up the liver with! by cutworms. a springless farm wagon. little more skeletons. They are now recovering. than | Entomological Branch of the Domin- | ion Department of Agriculture. The object of this study is to se- information with re- For this purpose sey- eral areas in the vicinity of Saska- New Aeroplane Hangar and fifty men. Kind Words Cost Nothing There sometimes are excus who are stingy Kind words cost nothing at all; ye part with one of his cherished gold pieces. is the ostrich, a The largest bird | Canadian Airways, Limited, Increase | Flying Accommodation At Winnipeg Work has begun on the construction of a new aeroplane hangar for Cana- dian Airways, Limited, at Stevenson's Flying Field, Winnipeg. The hangar will have a frontage of 101 feet and a depth of 120 feet, in addition to a wing for housing a post office, stock room, customs, radio and meteoro- logical offices. The cost of the hangar is $30,000, and its construction will | toon, Saskatchewan, have been | chosen. | of this survey information which will show the relationship of farm prac- ‘worm damage will be obtained and | better methods of control may be de- veloped, Trade and Commerce Oregon has & buy-at-home cam- paign and s9 has the state of Wash- RESTFUL SLEEP for FRETFUL, ington. Each is cancelling contracts which have been made across the | border. Keep it up. Buy only in your | own state, buy only in your own home town, buy only on your own side of the street, buy only from a member of your own family and thus get rich. The whole idea of trade and commerce FEVERISH CHILD | must, it seems, be old-fashioned and —With Castoria‘s regulation When your child tosses and cries foolish.Toronto Star. out in his sleep, it means he is not clock you have in the hall. comfortable. being carried off as it —hbut effective. toria gives ailments. children’s It with appreciation. own—be interrupted. A prompt dose t of Castoria will urge stubborn little Then relaxed comfort bowels to act. ORIA CAS Very often the trouble |give employment to between forty is that poisonous waste matter is not - should Bowels need help—mild, gentle help Just the’ kind Cas-| Castoria is a pure vege- s to be table preparation made specially for! S eo contains no |made for the men andwomen who are harsh, harmful drugs, no narcotics, laced straw, is being exhibited in the stingy with money, but not for those Don’t let your child's rest Host: Yes, we call it ‘The Guest.” Guest: Why fs that? Host: It won't go. be ning boards and fenders built and your Madeira Islands. | some of you are as reluctant to make anq restful sleep! Genuine Castoriajnew special stamps Issued by New| use of them as any old miser is to always has the name: | | Guinea to commemorate ten years of British occupation. | It is also expected that as a result | Boring Guest: That is a strange An automobile with a body, run- of A bird of paradise ornaments the | A machine that tests In 24 hours how much a sample of wall paper will ~~ ta in eat Meals For a Goat In Kinston, North Carolina, Wil- liam Alston's goat in seven days ate the following: an automobile seat, a hollyhock row, a pair of pyjamas, two | days" mail, a prayer book, three rows | of assorted flowers. On the eighth day William Alston slew his goat, and | gave it to a Negro family. The fam- \ily ate the goat. Exhausted From Asthma. Many | who read these words know the hor- | tices and farm management to cut-|rjple drain upon health and strength, | |which comes in the train of asthma- |tie troubles. Many do not realize, /however, that there is one true {remedy which will usually stop this drain, Dr. J. D. Kellogg's Asthma Remedy is a wonderful check to this enervating ailment. It has a count- less record of relief to its credit. It lis sold almost,everywhere. Mail Service Suspended During the season of closed naviga- tion on the Yukon River, which ex- tends approximately from October 1 to May 31, parcel post service in the Yukon will be suspended, except for the post offices of Champagne, Car- ‘cross and White Horse, according to post office bulletins. A mysterious submerged valley has been discovered in the North Sea be- | tween England and Europe. Praises Famous | Vegetable Pills For Indigestion “Having been troubled with Indigest- fon and Sick Headaches for several months, I was recommended to try our famous Pills, After the first dose } was made aware of their very real tonic yalue.""—Miss M. Gro ee Dr, Carter's Little Liver Pills are no ordinary laxative. They are all vege and have a very definite, valuable tonic action upon Be Hivenis AG Ee fu net to en ‘onsti On, » yo cod Constipation, Besiiny, SS EC ss | |the engines broke down. The men shivered inside as a quarter-inch of ice formed on the lining of the craft. | As a vermifuge an effective pre- ration is Mother Graves’ | Exterminator, and it can be given to the most delicate child without fear of injury to the constitution. Voluntary Pension Cuts Noble Descendants Of Britain’s His- toric Fighters Make Sascrifices Noble descendants of Britain's his- \torie fighters are joining the move- ment for reduction of salaries and | benefits. | Rt. Hon. Philip Snowden, Chancel- lor of the Exchequer, told the House | of Commons recently, that the present | Earl Nelson, descendant of the hero \of Trafalgar, had voluntarily contrib- juted $2,500 to the exchequer and pro- posed to do the same next year, while the third Baron Seaton, one of whose | predecessors played a distinguished part at Waterloo, had temporarily sacrificed 10 per cent. of his pension. Floating British Showroom | The Prince of Wales’ “salesman- ship” expedition to South America is jto be complemented by a tour of a |floating British showroom to Latin |ports. An ocean liner, the “British Exhibitor,” is to leave London, Eng- land, soon, bearing a display of Brit- |ish products. Calls are scheduled for at least 30 South American ports, jeach to be visited from a day to three weeks, according to their size. Steel owes much of its usefulness to the presence of carbon, thus in- | auirtnge hardness. The average family pays the doc- tor $75 a year. i —— a Worm | | batten, on London's Park Lane, has been announced for sale because of the burden of increased taxes. Lady Mountbatten was reputed to be one of the richest women in Great Britain when she vras married to Lord Louis Mountbatten, cousin of the — King. . Acip i ‘Excess acid is the common cause of indigestion. It results in pain and sourness about two hours after eal- ing. The quick corrective is an alkalt which neutralizes acid. The best corrective is Phillips’ Milk of Mae 4 nesia. It has remained standard with physicians in the 50 years since its invention. Gnas ps’ Milk of | nstantly many tl The dentifrice th.