About Americus times-recorder. (Americus, Ga.) 1891-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 20, 1925)
PAGE EIGHT U. S. Blamed lor Election Issue I TORONTO, Oct. 20.—Canada, on j the eve of a federal election contest avowedly fought to determine wheth-1 er the dominion will erect a “prohib-! itive tariff” wall against the United ; States, goes to the polls on Thurs- I day, Oct. 29, in uncertainty. There is no other real issue facin'; i the electorate than that involved in the alleged depopulation of the Do- REPAHPTHIS MAN A DOZEN TIMES “I have been repaid a dozen times over in improved health for every dollar I spent for Taniac, and the medicine is still building me up ev ery day,” is the striking statement of Joseph DeSarne. “Taniac has driven pains from ■ my body that had troubled me for ten years. Besides backache, which almost killed me at times, I had rheumatic pain and swelling in my hands and legs, my circulation was poor, feet always cold, nerves un done, my stomach didn’t feel right, I had regular headaches and I was a discouraged man. “I have never seen the equal of Taniac in my life. It has more than doubled my appetite, my stom ach feels great and my general health is so improved that I can not praise Taniac enough for what it has done and is still doing for me.” What Taniac has done for others, it can do for you. Taniac is for sale by all good druggists. Accept no substitute. Over 40 millions of bottles sold. Take Taniac Vegetable Pills for constipation; made and recommend ed by the manufacturers of Taniac. 1 TAN LAC FOR YOUR HEALTH If You appreciate jj>lW style iWjX’X WARMTH may be the Kt 1 V w * fix first consideration. Griffon - B %. Overcoats are warm and s /' iH Aj a wooly. In fact, Griffon w ' yJr JOI Overcoats are all wool. flj| jr/ i\. 9S £ ut y° u do not want to la AV AL** ” '° as ®9f B rW bundled up in a blanket. You want t 0 i°°k your | \ best That’s why Griffon fi* ■Ks "»•' \ style is so important. ■■dUßk-X' ill Griffon Overcoats hang ■mK«B \ smartly from the shoul w 0 A \ ders in long graeefui lines. - ■ .? \ Griffon Overcorts button \ up warmly. Griffon Over- * coats are snu £ ai, d roon,y mI wM«a -Get vourself a Griffon •■jgwS wK I rs# V, i I * » ffißa o vercoa t- Yov’ll never ! Mra be satisfied uutil you do. Churchwell’s Lamar St. Americus, Ga. .i.i'i wi a jJ I sp* tari ff A f ' . u 4 < ■ -■'7 > |ar vwW Jff I I . j " B | ZT #r & | V Ftex ft ./ Ms HOB 5 ff ' '' A w wl H!m! -J ®- author meigmeh "** . minion through migration across the international boundary. Conservatives charge the exodus is due to Premier W. L. Mackenzie i King’s low tariff policy. This, they' declare, has resulted in the whole- ’ sale closing of Canadian factories | and the exodus southward of hun-: dreds of thousands of the Dornin-1 ion’s citizens because of inability to' obtain a livelihood in their own l land. MEIGHEN LEADS OPPOSITION .The night of Oct. 29 will yield up a government out of the political vortex. But whether it will be the old one of Premier King or a new one headed by Rt. Hon.. Arthur I Meighen, who was premier in the coalitionist war administration, none will predict. A tariff wall “as high as Haman’s : gallows,” so high that “Uncie Sam i will wear out his goatee trying to ; chin over it,” is the demand of the Meighen conservatives. The prime minister, while contending that oth er issues also are before the elec torate-such as the Canadian Na tional Railways, immigration, and ' the reform of the Senate—tacitly , AMERICUS 11MES-RECORDER I concedes that the tariff is the para- 1 mount question. This means that the election— characterized generally as one of the most important in this country since Confederation-—will be fought out on traditional liberal as against tra ditional conservative principles, or. the age-old question of production, or free trade. It is nothing unusual that rela- I tions with the United States consti-l I tute the focus of a Canadian eiec f tion fight. Canada, though an in | tegral part of the Britannic com- I monwealth, is geographically a part | ot North America, and her politico- I economic destinies are inseparably bound up with those of the United States. In the election of 1911, a liberal administration under Sir Willifred Laurier went down to defeat on the j reciprocity issue. The crop of “an- I nexation” was raised then. The cry lof “economic annexation” is being I raised today. And the con j servative party which had but 50 I seats out of the 235 at the last Par liament, is going into battle shout ing it. The liberals claim that th e so-call ed stampede to the United States is simply the movement across the border that has always gone on, “the gieater attracting the less,” and that! it is grossly exaggerated for politi cal purposes in the present campaign, i i rther, they say there is a strong ■ current backward from the United I States to this country. Hon.. Herbert Marler, minister | without portfolio in the King ca’binet says the migration southward during 1924 was the result not pf Canada’s I NOTICE i | I pay highest cash price for Iron and Steel | Scrap, Junk Autos, Old Tires and Tubes, | Metals and Rags. I I T. L. DURHAM tariff policy but of the extraordinary boom conditons in the United States. Canadians took advantage of these conditions by going across to earn the high wages, and are now return ing to their own country, he argues. In Canada’s next parliament, the fifteenth, there will be 245 seats, 10 more than in the fourteenth. A de cennial re distribution act provides for this. PROGRESSIVES A FACTOR. One thing only is fairly certain with regard to the impending elec tion; that whether the liberals or the conservatives happen to gain the ascendancy and entitle them selves to being syled the party in power, they will need the votes of the third party or progressive mem bers to initiate any legislation. Indeed, they may be dependent on those votes for the very life of the government. The progressive—the agrarian party from the west—actually won a large number of seats in the 1921 election than did the conservatives. But the conservatives nominally were the “opposition” to the party in power nevertheless, ehlweat oinetao * ALL ABOARD! Here’s Your Chance to Go to ‘MIAMI” With Betty Compson And See How the Smart Set Lives Wednesday and Thursday DUDLEY’S hang shoul- TUESDAY AFTERNOON, OCTOBER 20, 192 AMERICAN LEGION TO MEET TONIGHT With an important business sche dule, the John D. Mathis post of the American Legion will meet in its club rooms tonight at 7.30. All members are urged by the commander to be there. .Mw ** Mui 'WHAj <- > HKHk Don’t Let Baby Suffer Needless Pain In Summer Hot,weather is the time when Baby most frequently becomes sibk. Yet millions of modern mothers now know through personal experience that much of this suffering is need less. They know that Teethina—the prescription of a baby doctor—helps correct and prevent these midsum mer ills. Mother, don’t experiment when Baby has Colic, Diarrhoea. Acid. Sour, Gassy Stomach, Constipation, Cholera Morbus and such ills. Use Teethina for quick relief! It helps regulate the little liver and bowels corrects acid conditions, aids diges tion and helps send purer, healthier blood coursing through rosy cheeks. The price is only 30c. yet you realize the priceless value when Baby is well and playful again. PR PR ! SEND FOR USEFUL A Booklet About Babies C. J. MOFFETT CO., COLUMBUS, GA. TEETHINA ByJfcte Better Babies A tire that keeps its good looks to the very end of its long service life SOME tires that look well on the show room floor begin to look shabby , after a few miles of service. The U. S. Royal Balloon not only com pares favorably in appearance with any tire when new. The important thing to note is that it holds its good looks. Finger marks, grease and mud stains do not show on its handsome all black body. And the flat “Low-Pressure Tread” wears slowly and evenly. Because the weight is properly dis tributed over the entire tread surface, the uneven, disfiguring wear that soon gives a ragged appearance to round treaded balloon tires does not occur. This and the patented Latex-treated Web Cord construction of the carcass permit the U. S. Royal Balloon to be run at proper cushioning pressure. There is no need to over-inflate to save the tires. Thus, appearance, long mileage, comfort and car protection are all provided for. The man who is riding on U. S. Royal Balloons is enjoying the advantages cf “the balloon tire principle at its best.” United States Rubber Company U. S. Royal Pressure Balloons with the New Flat “Low-Pressure Tread" and built Stf *■ of Latex-treated \ Web Cord fcU ' k l»‘ United States Unas JI IHI W 1 arg Good Tires hr• n H' 4 If 11 f yv,VMJb -. i I tt! For sale by: C. B. HUDSON Six Months Ago ■ * ■ J.H. GASSETT Macon. Ga.—“l feel like an en tirely different man from what I did six months ago, and the credit be longs to Dr. Pierce's Golden Medi cal Discovery. I felt sick and mean all over, every bone in me ached. I had a constant sharp pain in my right side, my food soured on my stomach and caused an unpleasant coating on mv tongue, a sick-head ache and occasional giddy spells. I had tried my best to get right but failed, so felt quite discouraged when I first began to take the ‘Discovery’ six months ago. I feel so confident that nothing could have changed a man in my sickly condition to a com paratively well man, but the ‘Golden Medical Discovery.’ I am still tak ing it —more as a tonic now and to cleanse mv system of every particle of poison.”—J. H. Gassett, 749 Haw thorne St. Tablets or liquid. Send 10c. for trial pkg. to Dr. Pierce, Invalids’ Hotel, Buffalo, N. Y.