HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1921-6-23, Page 3WERJEES
AT B:TTOM QF
A despatch :from Sault Ste. Marie
says:—Death in one of its most ter-
rifying; -fottMS came to Paiatar S. od-
frey, a, diver in the employ of the
Great Lakes Towing & Wreckiiig Go.,
on Thursday, when the great coppee
helmet he wore as part of his diving
dress beanie loosened in some way
while he was down 25, feet 'on:the bot-
tom of1deorgian-B0, near tittle eirea
rent:, Ont.
Little by littqe.the- water began to
trickle7Thaidie,tly,e'ailver's rubber eoit-
as the heintat VOrked still looser,
Damon Fiiig.r,a1,16c1 frantically to his
mate,s, en the lighter :above to be
hauled up, Istit in some way, itsis
said his jerks at the lifeline were not
properly tinalereteed owing to the
lines beceming tangled,„-ena the mem
at the air 'pump coatirmed to send
down fresh 'air. • -
Finally, when no 'further siene?--
•
were received the helpers becaMe
alarmed, each hetai1e the divee up.
When, Ibo holnt E .w.s un-,esewel
Gcdfrey'S 'head toppled over to ens
side. He had been t(.11
'flrirrutes. • "
Godfrey hod beet in the employ el
the Great Lakes . Company for 15
years; 'andwas -eonsidered oaeoif the:
most expert deeP-watee- divers' en the1
Great Lakes. He was 55 yeses old
and lived at the Canadian Soo.
wife, three daughters and four soas
survive.
TAKESINN FE1NERS
IN LARGE NUMBERS
CrOW11 Forces IV,Iake Sweeping
Rounciup ofMurderers.
A diespateh from Dublin says:—
The Go.verienont forcehave been
reeking a sweeping round up of cat-
. tain areas in the last few days, with
the apparent idea of making large
capturee and sifting them for men
who are "wanted.' The operetions
have been in peogress in Monaghan
county air this week. •Hundreds of
arrests were made, but oil, Tuesday
all were released with the exception
of about a dozen peisons.
Five cavalry regiments invested
" Carrickinacress, Monaghan, early on
1.1mrsclay morning and coMmandeered
several private houses. They MEI tie
several arrests, includine'' a despatch
carrier of the "IrishRepublican
Army." Similar raids occurred at
Wexford and Athlone.
Severe engagements between
Crown forces and Sinn Feiners oc-
curred in Dublin on Wednesday night
and early Thursd,ay morning, the fir-
ing being. the 'heaviest which has been
heard in the city •since the rebellion
five years ago. Ge.nerel military head-
quarters declines to issue a report.
There are various rumors as to
the cause of the outbursts, which took
place about 11 o'clock. Officially, the
oly reason assigned is that a number
of civilians fired on sentries outside
the ruins of the Customs House, but
the most intense fire occurred in the
centre of the city. About midnight
it is reported:, a party of the CrOwn
forces were sniped as they crossed
O'Connell bridge by men on the roofs
of buildings and from concealed po-
sitions.
A machine gun was brought into as -
tion and Westmoreland. street and
Sackville street were sWept with bul-
lets. Searchlights lit up the city. Par-
ticular attention being paid te the
roots of houses and offices,
Lord Byrng to he
Installed at Quebec
•
A desipatch from Ottawa says:—
It is presumed that the installation of
Lord Byng as Governor-General of
Canada will take place, at Quebec, in-
asmuch as. it- is anticipated that he
will arrive in Canada while naviga-
tion on the St. Lawrence River is still
open. The Department of the Secre-
tary of State, liewever, has not yet
aeeerbained the exact date- of his com-
ing.
It has been the 'custom for the Goy-
a
arnor-Gerieral to be installed at his
port of debarkation.
:
Hon. Arthur Nfeighen has arrived
in London to attend the conference of
the Prime Ministers of •the Empire. rule.
Irrigation Peoject
Launched at Lethbridge
A despatch from Lethbridge
says :--Amid a downpour of ram
the first sod in the Lethbridge,
northern irrigation project was
turened on Thursday, with Lieu-
tenant -Governor Brett and Pre-
mier Stmfart officiating, and
other members of •the Govern-
ment and representatives of
Fedex-al ,and Provincial Parlia-
ments in attendance. • Active'
work has commenced on the big
.Project, and the Majority of the
earthwork will be completed this
season.
Fighting Forest Fires.
Over a considerable portion of the
prey:nee, particularly is the northern,
districts, foreSt fires continue to be
peoblem during periods of drought
and. while public agencies al e beieg
developed for effectually meeting
situations as they arise, the individ-
ual is not losing his interest in prac-
tical methods of conabatting flames
in wooded areas. In this week's mall
came sorne very practical suggestions
from a man who has had wide ex-
perience in protecting forests againat
damage by burning, an,d with the ap-
proach of: that season of the year
when dry spells are common, it would
see/in to be appropriate to give pub-
licity to the suggestions.
The best time to :attack a forest
fire, he states, is at the break of dawn.
At that time a half-dozen men will
accomplish more than fifty men can
expect to do 'at two o'clock in the
afternoon. Frei -a seventy-five to nine-
ty per cent. of the perimeter of a
surface fire actually goes out without
any human assistance whatever be-
fore sunrise, but if nothing is done
while thejlames are at low ebb, they
will, by the middle of the forenoon,
have Amin started sufficiently to pre-
sent an unibreken front.
A forest fire naturally proceeds in
the general direction of the wind,
burning an eliptical shaped area with
head, flanks and tall. The most ef-
fectual places to attack are at the
head and flanks. If one can have only
a single tool to fight the forest flames
he should hoose the shovel. With
this he can cut the edge of the surface
fire and throw it back. He ,c.en also
'throw dirt on burning embers, to re-
duce the temperature and to exclude
oxygen. The plow is likewise a good
tool, where it can be used, to limit
the eeea; of the fire by plowing a nar-
row strip across the path oe the
flames.. Where there is danger from
these fires the community should: be
organized to get out in force upon
a moment's notice.
Britain will give Mesopotamia Arab
SCIENCE VANQUISHES
FOOT AhD MOUTH -DISEASE
A despatch from Paris says —Tie
discovery of a serum rendering cattle
timinune to foot ,a,ncl meuth disease has
been made by Professors Vallee and.
Caere, of the Aliortville Agricultural
Research Laboratory. This a,nounce-
ment was made, on Thursday to the
Agricultural Commission of the Sen -
'ate by Senator Beaumont.
The discovery is the result of years
set experimetieg with bloorf elements
elesteeeeemeeeeseseeee,,,,,......e.ea
1,1
and microbes in order to mike eos-
table :the :a:teflon of the' bacillus of
twat and month disease which, is so
infinitesimal, that; it could not be re-
tained in the most minute filters.
Once this was accomplished, it wonld
be possible to, cultivate the germ
Fixation now has been accomplished.,
and the'serem has been made in small
quantibies through a phagoeytie pro -
bees.
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DRE1bEGREE
GNPRIC) I:AZ.1, ;3Y _ _
Ig11-1GI`EF..:D4TI-1
Thirty Days ,After Fr4:zc.,1**-
don in Canada Gazette.
,
A despatch from Ottawa says:—
Proclaimatlona to ,!giee effect to the
reselt of the plebiCite .helcl in On-
tario under the Canada Temperance
Act and to provide for two plebiscite,s
elsewhere was published in Sat-
urday's number Of the Canada
Gazette. The proclamation affect-
ing Ontario provides that thirty
days from its publication, that
is, on July 18, the Sections of the Can-
ada Tempeitance Act prohibiting im-
portation of intoxicating beverages
into the province shall become oper-
ative. That is to say, on and after
July 18, importation of such liquors,
exCePt for medicine, industrial and
sacramental purpoees, into Ontario
will be illegal. Another proclamation
calls for a vote in New Brunswick
on a date to be fixed by the chief
electoral officer, on the question
whether or not importation of liquors
into that province :should be prohibit-
ed. A third- proclamation provides
for a vote in Quebec City on the ques-
tion whether or not the Canada Tem-
perance Act should continue operative
in that 'city. The Act has been in
force in Quebec for several years, and
it is now proposed to repeal it and
allow the provincial law, whic.h per-
mits sale of beer and wine in licensed
hotels and provides for sale of spirit-
uous liquor through Government ven-
dors to residents of the province, to
take effect.
Demobilizing Troops
of 1919 ,Ckss
A despatch from Paris says:—Sol-
diers of the lass of 1919, avho were
mobilized early in May for duty on
the Rhine, in the Duesseldorf area,
cemmenced returning to Paris on
Thureday.
Two thousand of them went direct
to the city barracks, where they will
be demobilizeci in a few days and re-
turned to their homes.
The 1919 class troops gradually are
being replaced on the Rhine by sol-
diers of the class of 1921, who now
are in training.
RESPONSIBLE FOR MANY ILLS..
Milburn's Laxa-Liver Pills stimulate
the sluggigh liver so that it will regulate
the flow of bile to act properly on the
bowels and thus clear away all the
waste and poisonous matter that is
responsible for constipation, biliousness,
sick headaches, heartburn, jaundice, etc.
Mrs. Alice Mehill, Napanee, Ont.;
writes:—"I was very badly run down and
had a torpid liver for over fournienths.
I tried several remedies, but got no relief.
One day my husband broil& me home
a vial of Milburr,t's Laxa-Liver Pills' and
before I had used.'half the vial 1was
much better. I only used two vials, and
I am a different person to -day.'. I can
safely recommend laxa-Liver Pills to
anr one troubled with liver trouble."
r
Milburn's Laxa-Liver Pills are 25a.
a vial at all dealers, or mailed direct on
receint of price by The T. Milburn
Co limited Toronto Ont
•,-vg,071111171X973.1777M271r.'3717X1¢711EI=17.
CCNTCOLD IN
U.S. ASSAY oFFIcE
Contains the Largest A/nount
•of Gold Ever Collected
in One.Spot.
A deapateh from New Yerk,
The Leek of counting, piece by Piece
ml, le. by note, the large et, amount
of geld_ and gold ceatificatee ever
brought together in one epot in the
history of the world has •been 'under-
taken by four of the faetest counters
in the employ of the Governmeet.
These four men emistitute a board
repreeenting the Treasory, Depart-
ment and the Mint, and it is their
task to -check up and calculate the
amount of gold now held by the
nitecl States Assay Office, with cer-
taficatee held there, and to certify the
amounts as correct to the last penny.
Just how much gold the members
of the board will be obliged to count
will not be made public by the Assay
Office officials. In fact no figures
568 IVIurders Lie ever have been given out as to the
emount of Gold the vaults hold. It
at Sinn Fein's Door
London, June 16. --Murders by
rebels in Ireland since July, 1920,
have totalled 568, Sir Hamar
Gree,pwood, Chief Secretary for
Ireland, stated in the House of • England Imports much
kaown, however, that the amount
is laPweads of $10,000,000 000, and
probably close to $1,250,000,000. It
is the largest amount of gold ever
concentrated in one :spot
Commons on Thursday. The
Butter,
number Of 01701"en forces convict-
ed • for murder in the same
period, he added, was: The mili-
tary, none; the Royal Irish Con-
stabulary, one; and the police
auxiliaries, one; the latter being
found to be insane.
REICHSTAG FIXES
STANDING ARMY
New. Law Passed in Berlin
Setting Limit at 100,000
Men.
A despatch from Berlin says:—The
Reichstag on Thursday passed a new
law fixing definitely the exact number
of officers and men which the Minis-
try of War will be permitted to hold
...under arms. The law obeys orders
given by the inter -Allied Council Com-
mission. The total number of Ger-
many's military forces is not to ex-
ceed 100,000, including staff officers
and sub -officers, the numbor of which
is not to exceed four thousand. The
law further provides that the number
of offners to be discharged annually
shall not be more than five per tent.
of the total number of officers and
The War Minister will be unable,
therefore, to tall more than 100,000
to the eolors annually as was origin-
ally planned.
University Finances.
"A university supported by the
state for all its people for all its sons
and daughters with ;heir tastes ael
arptitud,as as varied as mankind, can
place no bounds upon the lines of its
endeavor, else the 'State is the irre-
parable laser." (From the inaugural
address of Charles Richard Van Hise,
late pre -slid -cot of the University of
Wisconsin.)
Service such as that indicated in
this quotation is being attempted by
the Provincial University of Ontario.
but this service is greatly curtailed
by the lack of funds: The University
of Toronto must "get along" on an
annual income on Which a United
States university of equal size) would
starve, So cramped are the accom-
modations of the Previncial Univele!
sity that the President's home has
been expropriated ,arid is being "made
over" into clessrthins. Of all the
dreary and uninspiring environments
imaginable for purposes of teaching
that of an old house made to serve as
a sthool is the weret! Yet the Uni-
versity of Toronto uses six. old 'houses
for classroom accommodation!
On June 10th approximately nine
hundred graduates received their de-
grees from the Provincial University.
Computed in dollars, what are these
.highly -trained leaders worth to the
Provin,ce? As well ask a father how
much money his 'cliilderg wortih to him.'
The University of Toronto is
struggling to do an inmeenise work on
a relatively meagre income. The 'ac-
ceptance by the Provincial Govern-
ment of the University Commission's
Report would solve 'bile problem.
It's a .G—"—m---"j"--reat
04,...ammvxmaletwarammateacoons,..A.sm.
M•i
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ME-
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o N
NI"
ere.
LeaglialP M1
Manitoba wheat—No, 1 Northern,
$1,85%; No, 2 Nertherre $1.84%; N.
8 Northern, $1.76%; No, 4 wheats
$1M69a%nftoba oats—No. 2 CW, 465./se;
No. 3 CW, 41%e; extra No. 1 feed,
41%c; No. I feed, 39%c; No. 2 feed,
893/se,
Memitolre barley—No, 8 CW, 78%o;
No, 4 CW, 7584; rejeeted, 68740c.
All the above in ,store Fort William.
440A.merican corn—No. 2 yellow/ 42 to
Ontario vslmat--No. 2 Winter, $1.50
to $1,60 nominal, per car lot; No. 2
Spring., $1.40 to $1.45, nominal; No.
, 2 Goose wheat, • nominal, shipping
BPpoints,aeaa'l:311T-eci\le °°141a1211.nii''111tin,P 162f153:lejtogh7t0e,, aec ortl
in g to freights outside,
I Manitoba flour—First pat., $10.50.
second pat. $10, Toronto.
Ontario flour—$7,i5-0; bulk, sea-
board.
Millfeed — Delivered. Montreal
freight, bags included: Bran, per ton
$25 to $27; shorts, per ton, $25 to
$29. good feed flour, $1.70 to $2 per
f'13'f-lay—No. 1, Per ton, $20 to $23;
' straw, car lots, per toe, $12.
Oheese—New, large. 171/2 to 181/2e;
twins, 1$ to 19c; triplets, 181/2 to
191/2e; old, large, 33 to 3c; do, twins,
331/2 to 341/2e; triplets, 341/2 to 35e;
New S,tilton, 20 to 21c.
Butter—Fresh dairy, choice, 25 to
• 26e; creamery, prints, fresh, No. 1,
England during recent months has 30 to 32e; cooking, 22 to 24c.
Margarine -22 to 24c.
been' importing butter in quantities Egg—Nn. 1, 36 to 37e; selects, 37
lefliParaileled since 1913 and scarcely to 38e; cartons, 40 to 42c.
paralleled since them, having received Beans—Can. hand-picked, bushel,
112,720,680 pounds from January 1 $2.e5 to $3; primes, $2.40 to $2.50.
to April 1, a total almost twiee as Kal3le products—Syrup, per hal°,
great as that received during the cor- efal" $2'50; Per 5 111113' gale- $2'351
' 9 to 22c.
cunt of butter imported in •En W1eesugar,nie ____131 -30 -lb lb.. 1
time, 19 t 90
responding period of 1920. The Pail-
glandiper lb 7 . 5-21/2-m. tins, 21 to 22c per
'
during the corresponding period of ' lb. Ontario comb honey at $7 per 15-
1913 totaled 114,001,440 pounds. An- section case.
ticipation of an advance in price fol- 'Smoked meate—Hame, med., 36 to, these summer days. • He has restored
A
FEACK1NG
COU 0 IA
Oam lloQueekey Relieved By
Dr. Wood's KotrwaY P'41t0 3YrUP.
The terrible, haeking, lung -racking
cough that 6t1014$ toyou in spite of "every-,
thing you have done to get rid ot it, is a
great danger to your health, and the
longer it sticks the more serious the •
menace becomes.
The constant coughing keeps the lenge
and bronchial tubes in. ancliean irritated
and inflamed Onditien they get no
chance to heal.
Yee will find in Dr. Wood's Norway
Pine Syrup a. reine,dy that loosens the
phlegm arid het.als and soothes the lungs,
thereby fortifying them against serinue
pulmonary disease.
Mr. J. W. F. Whitely, Vermilien, Alta,
writes:—"I wish to express my thanks for
what Dr, 'Wood's Norway Pine Syrup
has done for me. For a nienber of
weeks 1 had been suffering from a very
severe hacking cough, and all the remedies
teied failed to relieve me. At last I
secured a bottle of "Dr. Wood's," and
after taking it I secured great relief.
Needless to say it is now my ietention
to always keep a 0upply on baud."
"Dr. Wood's" is 35e. and 60c. a bottle
at all dealers. • The genuine is put up in
a yellow wrapper- three pine trees the
trade mark; manuifactured only by The
T. Milburn. co., Limited, Toronto, Ont,
Lenine's Scrap Heap.
Lennie, or it may be his bureau of
propaganda, is •working with :speed
lowing decontrol may have been re- 38c;
heavy, 30 to 31c; 'cooked, 48 40 the factory system, given up the hope
52slila 97 130' 28c• cott-ge roll's 28 ponsible for the unusual volume of --c; 4 makeee, geed Conimurrists out of
recent MI) arts. .
The sources /from which England
re-ceived this butter show an import-
ant change. The Antipodean colonies
which increased their butter prodoc-
4 •
o' -
specialthe peasants, brand breakfast bacon, 45 to ta, restored coinage and
47,c;' ,borreless, 41 to 46c. authorized trade and profit-making
Cured meats --Long clear bacon, 17 within the last month.
to 1,8•c; clear bellies., 15 to 16-c.„ Moscow dispatehes now • i ,
ndicate
Lard—Pure tierces 121/2 to 13e; that the good! Bolshevist will pa.y Ills
'
tion during the war are eager to be- tube 13 to 131/2,c; pails, 1314 to 13%c; fare hereafter -when he rides, that be
come the most important source a prints, 14 to 141/2e; Shortening -Ai -ere -es, will buy a stamp when he wants to
England's future permanent supply. 11 to 111/2e; tubs, 111/2 to 12c;
Pai1s-4 mail a letter and the depositing of
Argentina is also looking to the
Beg_ 12 to 121/2e; prints, 14 te 141/2c. private moneys in &rite banks is to
lish market as an outlet for 'her sur- Choice heavy eteers., $8.50 to $9•50; be restored. True, these are "co -
plus production, having delivered 22,- good heavy steers, $8 to $8.50; but -
697,584 pounds of butter in England chars' cattle, choice $8 to $9; do, operative State banks" and may serve
Lennie's ends in ways that do not now
during the first three months of 1921, f,./.°°51'; $7.50 to $8; do,med. $7 to
appear; but banks are a part of that
compared with but 4,245,584 pounds , $6 50 to $7. 1m' tellers'
during the same period in 1913. Can- ea to
coWs, &ice, *$6.5t) to $7; ' do, good, "capitalist system" which Lenine Inc
$6.50; clo, com., $5 to $6;''but-
chers' bulls. good, $6 to $7; do, com.,
$4 to $6; feeders, best, $7.50 to $8;
8
aria, -while not fulfilhng the hopes of
the English butter trade, is now pro-
moting the butter industry, confident do, 900 lbs.., $7 to $7.50; do, 00 lbs.,
fought all his life.
The infamous Tcheka is to go also.
Or, rather, it is to become the Soviet
"Black Hundreds" and loses much of
that the United Kingdom will afford $0.7b .1:0 • $6.75; do, com., $5 to $6; its olcl power. Itis no longer to. be
an unlimited market in the future. canners and cutters, $1.50 to $4; milk -
of England's imports,. is meeting the e°ITh
new -competition o
offered by New Zea- 1 hags, $9 to
ers, good to ehoice, $50 to $85; d,o,
spr ngers, $40 te : $60; larrabss year- i has h's
and med., .$30 to: $50; choice,
$10; do, snring, $13 to: provocateur, sheriff, prosecuting at-
Denmark,judge and executioner, as it
Altogether the reports have it that
en.
always the chiaf source
land, ,Australia, Argentina and -Can-1114'c slibepa 01181ae, $5.50 tO $6; do,! Lenine is making a long start..toward
atha by aocepting lower prices. In ' come. $2 to $4.50; calves, good to; pulling ,down the thing that he has
spite of that fact, imports from Den- Ch0 i CC, 810 to $12; -hogs, fed and i been building for more than three
mark during the first three months oft watered, $11 to $12; do, weighed
offyeare, the edifice he has dreamed of
1921 ,show a decrease of 48.2 per cars, $11.25 to $12,25; do, f.o.b., $10.25 i
i
all his life. Something, more is added
cent. compared with imports from to $11.25; do, country points, $10 to i
$11. -- ' to his scrap heap every few days.'
Just what is happening is veile:d
Montreah and, doubtful; :but there has been some
Oats, Oan. West, No. 2, 60 to 611°;! kind of change going on in Moscow
do, No. 3,55 to 56e. Flour, Man :
-- 'iefor three months. It it impossible to
Spring -wheat firsts.
that country during the corresponding
period of 1913.
Butter prices are declining gradu-
ally in England. The large govern-
ment ,stocks remaining unsold on
March 31, when decontrol took place,
exerted a depressing influenCe upon
the English butter Market.
PLES and BLOTCHES
• ALL OVER HER FACE,
Pimples, blotches and all other , un-
sightly skip. troubles are caused by the
blood being in an impure condition.
Those little festering sores, eppear on the
forehead, on the nose, on the chine and
other parts of the body, and although
they are not a dangerous trouble they
are very unsightly.
There is only one way to get rid of
thein, and that is by purifying the blood
of all its impurities,
Burdock Blood Bitters is without a
doubt the best_ remedy for this purpose.
This valuable medicine has been on the
market for the past 42 years and its repu-
tation is such that you are not experiment.
Mg with some new and untried remedy.
Miss Marguerite Brigley, 61 Maine
es.ve,, Halifax, N.S., writes:—"I have
suffered very much, during the last two
years, from pimples and blotches,-having
them all over my face. I tried different
remedies without any relief. I was
advised to try Burdock Blood Bitters,
which I did, and after taking just two
bottles I have been, as I believe, perman-
ently relieved, as I haven't had a pimple
or blotch since. 'el can highly trecom-
mend Burdock Blood. Bitters.
Rolled oats, b.ag ea npats.,pa., $3.0 $10.50.6. Brae,' know how Much of it is 'Soviet pro -
$27.25. Shorts, $29.25. Hay, No. 2,aaga,ncla and how much of it is a1
per ton, car lots, $21 to, $22. 1 genuine change of front.
Cheese, finest easterns, 141/2 to! There are hints that Lenine and
1.43jc. Butter, choicest creamery, i Troteky are fighting a quiet and dead -
28% to 29Ye Eggs fresh 35 to 36c
. , • ly battle for contrel, that there meet
Potatoes, per bag, car lots, 50e. be a break and that bolshevism will
Goed yeal, $7 to ,$7.50; nied $5 t
°Inlit into two or more factions,. There
to. 13. coin $10 $121 - hogs
$7. Ewes $3 to $5- Lambs, good $12.501
off .
5 't
oar. is -evidence of this. Lenine em -
weights, selects, $12.50; heavies, $9.50 erges more and more as the strongerrri
to $10.50; sows, $8.50. man of the Douvirs, as the future
• dictator of another and etill different
Ruseia that may be even more den -
Some Lion. gerous to the world than the Russia
'
A number of men were sitting in a Soviets.
of the
village shop yarning on various ex-
Power seems to be passing more
and more into the hands ef Lenine.
periences.
Trotzky appears less end less in the
One of them had. just concluded tell -
picture. Levine. dominated the recent
Mg how he had killed a, great South -
African lion with a revolver. Communist Congress much as the
"That's nothing," said another man, young Napoleon dominated the
French Assembly after his "whiff of
rising from his seat. "Why, when I
grapeshot" had swept the 'boulevards
was in South Africa, walking through
the jungle, I saw a great lion, but t .and just befor,e the Eighteenth Ther-
hadder.
no revolver to shoot it with!" tin
It appears that the "strong man of
"What ever happened?" asked the
startled crowd, Russia is 'climbing to the top. What,
he will mean to Russia and to Eur-
knife,"Why, I simply took ou my pocket -
lope is a riddle that waits upon to -
and cut off its- head!"
"What, exclaimed the man who had morrow.
Erst spoken. "Cut off the lies,c1 of a
lion with an ordinary pocket-knifo!
Fiddlesticks sir—fiddlesticks!"
"Indeed, 1 did, sir!" answered the
second speaker. "But perha,ps I ought
B.B,B. is put up only by The To
TeRlbure Co., Llinited, Toronto, Ont. to say it was a dandelion,"
Life If Yon on't Weaken
(7s1 -1e. 11)1b 13t) -r
soe
LIt
Seia. eete
•asma.,(11-t(K6
7:77:7775.777.777....-77=m5775.7.5=517.755417.70r777.,7,.
—
By Jack Rabbit
(.3
Cheap Cruelty..
In France the maxim.um penalty for
cruelty to animals is a fine of
HEA T and NE VES
BOT EIRED HER:
Housework. Played Her Out.
Mrs. Earl Farr, °genie, Sask., writes:— ,
"Three years ago my heart and nerves
began to bother lee. I could, not do my
housework without being almost com-
pletely played out, After sweeping a
small room I would have to sit, down and
rest, and would feel as aLt could not get
enough air.
Every few nights 1 would have horrid
dreams, such WI the well ceving in while
I was pumping 6, pail of water, or the
children, or my husband falling in; and
I could get no rest as 1 would be awake ,
some time atm.. • I went to my doctor,l
and he told me it was my nerves, that '
they had been shaken by it previous.111.
nese. He gave me eonie medieine, but
as son 13.8 it Was gene 1, was as bad'
OA ever again, 1, got haif,adoson boxes
of Mitharn's Heart tied Neirve Pine, and
• they helped me so much 1, got more, mid
cad truly say. 1 have no lack of heelth
nOW, and don't feel so tired after a geed
,days work; 'aa before after eweepleg,
,the sMrdi room; also have had riono of
thoso, hoiiid decima for mmilha sad
• 146?i'iee 0e. ti eiSa ap,,f,pidosol