HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1921-7-7, Page 3NEWTARIFE BILL LESSENS DUTY
ON WHEAT IMPORTED INTO 11
Cornplete Revision of the Underwood Tariff
of Bil, as h Affects CanadAt
A tespatch from Washingtou save: pound on freell hoof end Yell which
;-The new Republican Tariff Bill res
storing the principle of protection to
American industry and completely TO,
Vising the UuderwoodsSimMene tariff,
•
•
Lor pearly el8,11,( year on the ,stiltute,
,bahlts, was "#;t:tcidliced in the Ileuse ofi
WddnesdaY RePreseutictive Ford-
ney of Michigan, Chairman of the
"Way a andeMeetaa ,,Conutittithh,
'Some featUras deltre Pce;miinent
Tariff' 13111 of particular interest •to
Canada follow;
The duty on wheat, which was 35
cense 'per buahel in the Emergency
Tariff Law, ' is reduced to 25* conte,
which was the, Pay,ninAldrich rate.
Canadian wheat came in ,free under
the Underwood Act.
The duty of 15 cents ,per bushel, on.
corn in the Emergency Act, which was.
the sarne as the Payae-Aldrich Law, is
retained,- corn, having been on the
free list'in the Underwood Act.
There is a duty of two cents per
Is the•same as in the Emergency Law.
nutter is given ze duty of eight cents'
por pound, which is t,n hicrea,se from
the Tette of siX cents in both the Emer-
gency Isavs end the Payne -Aldrich
LI'l,V. and, PI t49,, 'Psts9, (11.' ,in.tul°-
0, 4,
bec•-half-C40 irn't0A,'Ildertventl Act
" 'There is if utsdor slic' cente" per` doz-
, ,
en an eggs, as compared with five
cents in e the Payne-AldriehLaw;
Onions are given a duty or 75 eenta,
per 100 pounds', as againet 20 cents per
bushel of 51 pounds' in the Underwood
.Act and 40 ceets per bushel of 57
pounds iti both the Pastne-Aldrich and
the Ernerg,ency Acts'. ,
The .duty on 'pOtatoes ' is made 42
cents per 106 pounds, instead ,of 25
dents per bushel of 60 pounds 'in the
Payne-Aldricli Lew and 2r) cents per
bushel in the, Emergeney Law. Pos
•tatode were on the free list in the:Un-
clervsood Lew.' Increased duties are
provided for olives and almondat the
request of Ca:lifornia growers.' s I
Dawson, YT, --Silver ore valued at
more than $50,000 reached here re-
cently. It wae the 'first 230 tons from
the Keno Hila camp, which was pro-
ducing'last year in promising style.
There is a total of 2,500 tons valued
at nearly $750,000 waiting shipment
at Mayo Landing. A new find at Keno
is reported, and it is said to he of the
richest ore found there. , The ore is
said to be totrahedrite,
Vietoria, B.C.-Federal and provin-
cial government reports show that
British Columbia contains approxi-
mately half of the saw -timber of Can-
• ncla. The total vain° of the forest
products of thep rovince for the year
1920 was .$92,628,807, as ag'ain.st $70,-
285,094 for the previous year. The
value of the lumber cut advanced by
nearly sixteen millions, while the in-
crease in the value of pulp aed paper,
amounted to over nine millions.
Edmonton, Alta. -Carrying banking
aceornmedation for the -first time into
the noisthern oil district, the Union
Bank of Canada., will ,open, a, brench
at Fort Smith, in latitude sixty de-
grees north. It is ''not to beeeXpecied
that the Fort Smith Branch of the
Union Bank can become a, profitable
venture, particularly in its- initial
stages, buf it; is charatteiistic ordeal,-
" edian banking 'that the banker should
„accompany the forerunner of civil-
dization and development ireany move-
ment tending' towards national pro-
gress. ' ' • • ,
Regina, Sask.-The establishment
of "a municipal air harbor is now ali
but an accomplished fact, and of two
sites submitted by the eity to the
Canadian Air Force nessociation, the.
asseciation selected one comprising
about one hundred acres. All thatge-
mains to complete ,arrangements is
the receivirig and erection of the Bcs-
soneau, hangar, which has been ee-
served for Regina by the Canadian
Air Board.
Winnipeg, Man. -A pulp berth, con-
• sisting of 718 square .miles of pulp
and timber lands, just east ,of Lake
Winnipeg, has been awarded to J. D.
McArthur, representing the Manitoba
Pulp and Paper Co. Under the agree-
ment, a pulp and paper mill, to cost at
least $1,000,000, -must be constructed
within three years. The company pros'
poses to construct a two -machine mill
with a daily capacity o 125 tons, but
the building will be so constructed'
that machinery can be -added to double
its normal daily cepacity..
.0tNvva, Ont. -The value of Net.. -
.than -air airerhft for forestry patrol
and similar work in Canada will; it is
expeeted, be demonstrated diming the
present fling. 'season by ,several Can-
adian lumbering firms, working in 'co-
operation with the, Canadian Aix
Board. • The machines, whigh are
equipped with 100-3iorsepower Rolls-
Royce engines, will be loaned to the
various companies interested in the
experiment by the Air Board: It is
.expected that eight complete machines
will be in operation, in different parta
of the Dominion durnig the year.
Montreal Que.-The Howard Smith
paper mills at Cornwall have opened
their, new, bleached sulphiteerniNewith
,aeopacity of, 70 tons of; sulphite per
day. The pulp will be neartutlaetered
fronir pnlpavood cut on, the Company's
ribreliasecl ' last year in the
Gaspe Peninsula. The erection of this
mill' makes the company independent
Or other sulphite conipasdea' for its
supplies, ar,o, Wittk As raw material,
puts it in a position to manufacture
highsgrade paper,' to the best advan-
tage.
• St. John, N.B.-The twelve lumber
mills and two pulp mills owned and
operated by the Fraser Co., Ltd., are
operating at full capacity, es well as
all the s.awmille; , The daily output
of the company's •plants amounts to
approximately 230 tons of pulp and
1,200,000 feet of long lumber, as well
as-shing•les, laths and boxwoods.
Sydney, N.S.-At least one million
tons of Cape Breton c,eal will he ship-
ped to the Montreal market this sum-
mer, . according to Alex. Dick general
sales senaria,ger, Dominion Coal Co.
This company has already shipped to
Montreal this year, by water, 150,000
tons, or as much as was sent up the
St. Lawrence during the Whole of
1-920.
St. John's, Nfid.-It is understood
that Spain has increased the import
duty on salted codfish from Norway to
the extent of two dollars per quintal
in retaliatio'n of the Norwegian Pro-
hibition Act, which prevents the im
porNtione of wine from Spain. This
will create a stimulus to the New-
foundland cod 'market.
BRITISH EXPEDITION TO EXPLORE
• UNCHARTED VUTHERN SEAS
4 despatch from London says: -Sir
Ernest Shackleton, who commanded,
the British Antarctic expedition in
1907 -09 -which reached within 97
miles of the South Pole -and also the
Antarctic exPedition in 19„14-10, will be
the leader on a new voyage of dis-
covery, covering 30,000 miles of un-
charted sections ,Of the Southern At-
lantic, the Pacific and Antarctic Seas:
He will sail from the part •of London
at the end of August in a 20Q -ton ship,
• brigantine rigged/ named "The Quest."
Ho will have with him a small picked
staff, including Six companions of
former Polar expdditions.
„The expedition, which will be called
the Shackleton-Rowette Oceanograplin
cal and Antarctic Expedition, will .be
financed by John Queller Rowett, of
Agriculture Research, and Frederick
Becker, a well-known peper manufac-
turer. "The Quest" will be equipped
for every branch of scientific reeearch.
She will carry a complete hydrograph-
ic survey and soundings, and will
touch at va,rieus little-known ishuids,
where the flora and fauna and geo-
graphical structure will be studied
and photographed. A speeially con-
structecl „seaplane wil be taken and
air currents will be„ charted. ,
flossel
as'eeniesca
-Tido f-IP5 chei' 6t,T
ALL 13AN6ED
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As3-ro
(CC lb.ENT
,a7,..m.,•woonttint.1
• (iTA NYADv/ce
AlVaarrir 442ky,
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11
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es. eesteen
HEIGHT AND REACH
CANADA3S.WOOL, TO
BE SENT TO EUROPE
New U.S. Duty Will Prevent
Export to States.
A despatch from Washington
says :-Canadian wool, which forms
one of the 'Chief exports of the Do-
minion to the United States, probably
will be sent ta•Europe in future, ow-
ing to the recent duty imposed by
the Emergency Tariff Act on wool
ahipnients, according to .a report to
the Department of Commerce: The
United States hitherto has been the
'outlet for approximately half of the
Canadian clip.
Extremely low prices are being paid
for wool at country points in Canada,
the report adds, and it is said that
large quantities of raw wool axe be-
ing sold at from six to twelve cents
a pound. The highest price paid for
the best wool is approximately 33
cents.
Canadian wool interehts will be
,
obliged to find other markets for an
Os -portable surplus amounting to
about 7,500,000 pounds, or 50 per cent.
of the whole wool clip, it is stated.
Three-Year,Old Travels
. 4;000 Miles Alone
A despatch from Port Arthur
says: -Her baggage consisting of two
letters, dealing with her father's war
record, three-year-old Winnifred Jose-
phine McKinley passed through ,here
on Tuesday on, the C.P.R. transcon-
tinental train en route to her uncle's
hone in Swift Current, Sask. From
her far -away home in Glasgow, Scot-
land, to the Canadian West, ever 4,000
miles, the "little orphan has only the
kindly directions- of -train and steam-
ship officials to guie her.
11
E4 HEMORRHOIDS
ARE CAUSED BY
CONSTIP TION.
There are few complaints more common
than hemorrhoids, commonly called piles,
and Scarcely any which cause more
trouble and misery.
Piles are dividedinto three classess
Le., itching, protruding and bleeding, and
consist ina fullness of blood and languid
circulation in the portion of the lower
bowel or rectum.
The chief CaUSCS, pf piles are con-
stipation, straining at stool; and the
using of drastic purgatives. This latter
we would very strongly advise against
as these strong pin•gativee, especially
those containing calomel' and other
mineral drugs are too strong for the
average person's bowels,
A rnild laxative will do more to correct
this trouble than -anythingt'else, and
this you will fincl in Milburn's Laxa-Liver
Pills, a pill that is purely vegetable,
small and easy to take, and does not
griper,)vertken or sicken.
Milburn's Laxa.-Liver Pills are 25c.
a vial at all dealers or, mailed direct
on receipt of price by The T. Milburn
Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. n•
It's a Great Life
SEEMS
eaeo
The Leading Markets.
wheat-No.
1 Northern,
• Manitoba w
$1.88%; No. 2 Northern, $1.85%; No.
3 Northern, $1.82%; No. 4 wheat,
$1.'70%.
Manitobaeoats-No. 2 CW, 48%c;
No. 3 CW, 45%c; extra No. 1 feed,
45c; No. 1 feed, 431/2c; No. 2 feed,
42%e. ,
Manitoba barley -No. 3 CW, 75%e;
No. 4 CW, 70%e; rejected, 65%c; feed,
64%c.
All the above in etore, Fort William.
American corn -No. 2 yellow, 75c;
nominal, Bay ports,
Ontario •
oats --No 2 white, 40 to
,
Ontario wheat, -No. 2 Winter, $1.50
to $1.57, nominanmer car lot; No. 2
Spring, $1.43 to $1.45, nominal; No.
2 Goose wheat,'" nominal, shipping
points, aecordsng to freight. •
Peas -No. 2, nominal.
Barley -Malting, 65 to 70c, accord-
ing to freights outside.
Buckwheat -No. 3, nominal.
• Rye -No. .2, $1.25, according to
freights outside.
Cheese -New, large, 181/2 to 191/2c;
twins, 19 to 20e; triplets, 191/2 to
211/2c; old; 4arge:33 to 34c; do, twins,
331/2 to 341/2c: triplets, 341/2 to 35c;
new Stilton, 21 to 22c.
Butter-Frash ,dairy, choice, 25 to
26c; creamery, prints, fresh, No. 1,
32 to 33e; cooking, 22 to 24c.
Marga.rme-22 :to 24c.
Eggsz-No..1,4,9cie'etsa41 to 42c,
cartons; 43 to l4tfe:nless.
; .
$2B.8e5aalto's-'-'$3C;apnr"imhesa,rid$14132.41cOktecio'$2b.5u0s.hei'
. Maple products --Syrup, per imp.
gal., $2.50; per 5 imp. gals., $2.35.
Maple sugar, lbs., 19 to 22c,
Honey -60 -30 -lb. tins, 19 to 20c per
11).• 5-21/2-11). tins, 20 to 21c per lb.;
Ontario comb honey, at $7 per 15 -
section case.
Smoked meats -Hams, med., 36 to
38c; heavy, 30 to 31c; cooked, 50 to
55c; rolls, 27 to 28c; cottage rolls, 28
to 29e; breakfast isa.con, 33 to 38c;
special brand breakfast 'bacon, 45 to
47c- backs, boneless, 42 to 47e,
Cured meats -Long clear bacon, 17
to 191/2c; elear bellies, 19
Lard -Pure, tierce.s, 14 to 141/2c;
tubs, 141/2 to 15c; pails, 15 to 151/2c;
prints, 151/2 to 16c; Shortening tierces,
11 to 111/2c; tubs, 111/2 to 12c; pails,
12 to 121/2c; prints, 14 to 141/2c.
Good heavy steers, $7.50 to $8;
butcher steers, choice, $7.25 to $7.75;
do, good. 36.75 to $7.25; do, med.,
$5.50 to $" '5; do conn, $4.50 to $5.50;
butcher ne.Zers, Choice, $7.25 to $7.75;
do, med.'$0.75 to $7;25; butcher cows,
choice, $5 to $5.75; do, med., $3 to $5;
canners and cutters, $1 ,to $3; but-
chers' buals, good, $4,50 to $5.50; do,
corn., $3.50 to $4.50; feeders; good,
900 lbs., $6 to $6.50; do, fair, $6 to
$5.50; milkers and springers, choice,
$40 to $60; calves, choice, $8 to $9; do,
med., $6 to $8; do, corn., $4 to $6;
Jambes yeatfrege, .$8te $8.50; do,
spring., $13 to $14; sheep, choice, $4.50
to $5.50; do, good, $4 to $4.50; do,
heavy and bucks, $2 to $3.50; hogs,
fed and watered, $12; do, weighed off
cars 812.25. do If.o.b, $11.25. do
I 77 7 ;
country points, $11.
Montreal.
Oats, Can. West., No. 2, 61 to 62c;
No. 3, 56 to 57c. Fleur, Man, Spring
wheat pats., firsts, $10.50. Rolled
oats, bag's, 90 lbs., $3.05. Bran, $25.25.
Shorts, $27.25. Hay, No. 2, per, ton,
li-Y-OU -Don't Weaken
EIGHTY/IC.11T DAig' STRIKE
IN BRITAIN FINALLY SETTLED
Principle of a Share for the Workers inthe Proliks of the In-
dustry is Definitely Establis hed--,Miners Agree, fq Cut-
io.Wages and Abandon D emend for Natioind Pool.
A deSpatch from Londonsays--3y1- on the induetiet the $3 Per cent, res
tallies greet coal esense, ono es see lentomatihnoel:goeNli,finirze,oerct:ehedes realinaleindgolt90 ptehie, exeaniite:
For the first time there hes been
definitely established the principle of
a share for the workers in the pi•ofits
of the industry. It is also the firet
most pretnaeted and costly to the na-
tion in mgdorn times, was settled on
Tuesday at e conference of the Gov-
ernment, the mine owners' and the
miners. Unleaa the -re Is $013113 hitelt
it Is 'expected that a number of mines occasion on which profits -sharing has
will begin operations on Monday. But been establiahed 'on a national scale.
it be,many weeks before enough The miners have agreed to accept
coal will be available thr some of the out of two eliillings per shift in July,
big iedustrial plants to get under way, two shilling six pence in August and
or before the railroads can resume two shilling's in September. The new
anything like their normal service. permanent agreement will run froM
Broadly speaking, the leinens have October, 1921, to December 31, 1922.
given up. their dement for a national It is impossible to estimate the dam -
peal and nationalization. The mine age to British industrial life during
owners, on the other hand, .forego the 88 days of the strike, hut it has
their determination to cut wages in been colossal, and ite ramifications
the drastic manner which originally have been felt in every vvalli of life.
brought about the strike, and which, Although the recovery of industry may
in some cases, amounted to 45 per cent. be protracted, the announeement of
reductions. • The Government is ex- the settlement has had an immediate
pected to grant $50,000,000 subsidy . psychological effect on the country at
After allowing for stand clearages large,
car lots, $21 to $22. ,Cheese, finest
easterns, 16%.c. Butter, choicest
creamery, 32 to 35e. Potatoes, per
bag, car lots, 50c, Eggs, selected, 40c.
Hogs, $6.50 to $13; calves, $3 to $6;
lambs, $6 to $8, and common cattle,
$1 to $4.
Ulster's Parliament.
Friends of Ireland on both sides of
the ocean are glad that the opening of
She Ulster Parliament, attended by
the King and Queen, was accomplish-
ed without mishap. There was no note
of defiance in the solemn proceedings.
The address of the King breathed no
spirit of bitterness or anger. He was
in the right in declaring that the Eng-
lish-speaking world desires nothing
more heartily than a cessation of the
strife that has rent the Emerald Isle
and set the hand of brother against
brother these many mournful years,
The Ulster Parliament is not creat-
ed to vaunt a superiority of political
condition or to monopolize official
favor for the loyalists. It stands as a
beacon to the day of amity and true
concord among ,Irishmen of every
creed and faction. It stands as a sym-
bol of the hope of unity.
Canada's War Veterans
• Receive Pay at Par
A despatch from Ottawa says -
The Militia Depaitenent will still con-
tinue to exchange at par, pay and; al-
.
f .12ownees$7eriv ett soldiers Eng-
' lish currency although theteonditions
surrounding the privilege have been
made much mere stringent. It was
considered that it would have been
unfair to soldiers who might stillbe
paid in, English money to cancel -the
privilege, Sir Henry Drayton, Min-
ister of Finance, said on Wednesday.
es;
There is sufficient power in one
gram of radium to raise a battleship
of 28,000 tons, one hundred feet in
the air.
1.reirereaswannarrsv
d 11§I 1GESTION
Aid DY'EPS
CAN EAT ANYTHING N
The misery which stomach troubles
cause, the sufferer Imows only too well,
and anyone who suffers knows what
joy it would give to be able to eat three
square meal's a day, and not be punished
for it after.
Before you can eat heartily, and not
pick and chooee your food, you must
put your stomacla right Se that it, will
produce its own digestive ferments.
For forty-two years Burdock Blood
Bitters has been makbag weak stomachs
strong, and permanently relieving severe
cases of indigestion and dyspepsia that
very often other remedies were powerless
40
writes: -"I haveh.
Mrs.
Alice Becknorth, Fesscrton, Ont.,
writes: -"I
been a great sufferer
from indigestion and dyspepsia for
several years, and could not eat any-,
thing without almost dying from the pain
in the pit of my stomach. Seeing egjeeneen meet easy le.
Burdock Blood Bitters highlyshrecora-
mended I tried a bottle, and can gladly
say it relieved mc. I can eat anything Green flies, the pest of the garden -
now, and am in perfectly geed health." er, reproduce very rapidly, nineteen
B.B.B. is manufactured only by The generations being possible in sixteen
T. Milburn Co., Limited, 'Toronto, Ont. weeks,
By Jack abbit
T'SiP‘IF
jUIZ's( DON'T
f
SINN FEIN CHIEF
REFUSES PARLEY
De Valera Says Acceptance of
L George's Invitation Im-
possible in Present Form.
A despatch from Dublin says: -
The propeeal of Mr. Lloyd George for
a conference in London on the Irish
question between representatives of
Southern and Northern Ireland and
the )3ritish Government is impossible
of acceptance ie its present form.
This declaration is made by Eamonn
de Valera, the Irish Republican leader,
to Sir James Craig, the Ulster Pre-
mier, in reply to Sir James' notifica-
tion that he cannot meet MT. de
Valera in a preliminary conference
in Dublin.
Mr. de Valera's letter is quo•ted by
The Irish Bulletin, organ of the Dail
Eireann, as follows:
"I greatly regret that' you cannot
come to a conference in Dublin Mon-
day. Mr. Lloyd George's proposal, be-
cause of its implications, is impossible
of acceptaneen,in its present form. 011n
political differences ought to be ad-
justed; and, can, I believe, be adjusted
on Irish soil. But it is obvious that
in the negotiation of peace with Great
Britain the Irish delegat'on oug-ht not
to be divided, but should act as a unitI
on some common principle.
All four Southern. 1.),,ionists, Earl
Middleton, SIT Maurice Dockrell Sir
Robert H. Woods and Andrew Jame-
son, have accepted 1Vir. de Valera's in-
vitation for a conference at the Man-
sion House, Dublin, Monday, which
will presumably form a prelude ,to a
further repay by de Valera, eo the
British Prime Minister,
The refusal of Sir James Craig to
attend, however, it is contended, will
detract from the importance of the
conference, and many Uniordets here
regard the invitation to the Ulster
Premier as "mistaken tactics" en the
part of the Republican leader.
South Ireland
Parliament Inaugurated
A despatch from Dublin says: -The
opening of the Southern Parliament
on Tuesday afternoon lasted less than
ten minutes. The function was purely
a formal one, called to satisfy the
statutory conditions of the Home Rule
Acti,
Lo•rct Chief Justice Moloney and
Charles O'Connor, Master Cif Rolls,
represented the Viceroy and read the
proclamation summoning the assem-
bly. Only a few members were pres-
ent. These included four Imperial-
istic members of the Senate from
Trinity College and fifteen others se -
elected to that body. Nearly all the
mentheraef the Lower House are Sinn
Feiners. They ignored the summons
to attend. There was little public
interest in the inauguration of the
Parliament.
After the inauguration Parliament
Ft6uggs
6-er-riNG
eeeneuGH oche
1-r -ro BUN( PIN
ceste.
leiteSELF
_
CUR
fr\ot'E.L
te-enesettles:'-t---
--seesteressenearetnate-
•
13 A D
The after effects of mcik may bo
reackdag„ as the irritation, of the
epratory passages is ono elan,
acteristiczi of this disease abd
often these who have 'seen rpl u
,
become delicate mid liable tehene troieblels
hence measles ahould never be regarded
with indiffetenee.
Measles are ,gsacerallY fellOdveti, bhnella
acute attack on the mucous membrane&
The sneezing is aboompanied with a
watery diechargo, sometimes bleeding
from the nose, a cough of .a Abort, fre-
quent and noisy elia-racter,'witla little or
no expectoration, heaeseness of the voice,
Once the cough karts You should
procure a bettle ofDr. Wood's Norway
Pine Syrup, take a few deeps, a day
and thus prevent. bronchitis), Teieurtionia,
" erhaP3 PlisuuRd°11. gcttPlg ,a foot-
holdon your system.
Mrs. Oliver Kelly: Bellislo Station,
N.B., writes: -"Two, years no I had
the measles, and they left me with a
bad cough, I kept getting worse until
at last I could not sleep, My neighbor
told me or ll)r, Wood's Norway Pine
ISyrup, so I sent and got a bottle, and
before I had used'it my cough was all
better.
I find it a great family medieine for
...olds and cough,and I now keep it in
the house all the tune."
Dr. Wood's Norway Pine SYrup, is
,35e. a large bottle 00c., at all druggisia
end: dealers. Put up only by The T.
Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont,
When I Was a Boy.
Now and then every man turns over
the pages of the picture -book of mem-
ory, and goes on turning until he
comes to the earliest pictures of
that present him as a boy.
In many households to -day real pia-
ture-books are kept; fond parents are
preserving snap -shot photographs of
their children growing up, and in the
days to come they and their children
will have the visible biography to re-
capture "childhood's sunny hours."
Many a mother would rather sacrifice
every other book in the house than
part with that collection of pictures.
But we all may have pictures in
our heads. Among those we like the
best are those of the irresponsible ex-
istence we had before, we were re-
stricted by a sense of duty and des-
tiny and the solemn responsibility of
life.
We look now at the men and wo-
men as old as we are, and as we clasp
hands and the eyes meet we are say-
ing to ourselves, if not audibly: "Can
this be the child I used to know? Can
this be my playmate of countless ad-
ventures? Hew keg ago that was!
I wish. I could go back and be as .1
was then and make a fresh start.
wish I had my life to live over again;
I should do so much better with iti"
The regrets are una-vailing. We can-
not go back. But the thought is not.
mournful. If we could live again the
years that are past we might have
done worse -a great deal worse. Each
period of life has its own rewards an
satisfactions. Nature mercifully ad-
justs her compensations. There is a
happiness of childhood; there is a
happiness of age. To realize in ma-
turity that we are serving mankind,
that we are helping to bring in the
better day, may bring to us a plea-
sure that is fax above the thoughtless
gayety we knew when we were young,
We cannot reverse the calendar and
the clock, yet we may keep the spirit
of youth -its hope, its enthileiasm, iN
optimism. If we cannot go back to
childhood, our childhood may go for-
ward through the years with us. It
profits nothing to talk dejectedly of
the "lost illusions" of youth and he-.
moan the forfeited chances. It is ours
to take what is left us and make the
most of it, rejoicing that the beat of
what we had when we were children
is ours to the very end of our lives.
Lord Byng of Vimy, Canada's new
Governor-General, is to land at Quebec
on Augu.st 11.
Hou. W. H. Taft, former United'
States President, is appointed Chian
Justice of ILS. Supreme Court.
IS YOUR HEART WEAK ?
ARE YOUR NERVES SHAKY ?
.1P* SO USE
IMILSURN'i 'HEART and NERVE PILLS.
There are many people, at the peesent,
tune, Whose heart is affected who
bertrsAll'e iinetriing, and 'genergi he.alt
11-111P6a.is.f.i'Cli. we .offer 111,illotirn'S.Heart ail '
NeiVe Pilla as th6 liesy, 1re1nesi1 t1iii„..1
Scienere lit'S ,iaddy. ).9,3: ;AO' la'inbleE'r,
Thee i511P havi 4 wp der01 orc4 c'i.
1
114 \yeakened. heart ''`an Ithe shattefe
Isiervtia layStdni; VA)iiitilig as tiiik.a
ti\C Very' best elenialita 1. til idliel '(!. ;
airtili\,!!;,-rto.,,Aixid.xp6cliiarreer.V111.4.,.troiaurtsti,iiesi. 13;,ii.‘s,yoa. slew',
;ffitil heart and Vivi, t:Olatfi: 1 ba
terrible headacheA Talc', diesin'eha, decitiltr
not eleq), *4 1.,(1.Ew *iipstati.,, 1 WA
taking doctors 'ined.P0,Inr.4 dal
1ielfi•,m6.: 1: ;WaaOpilTitki
p, -.A'r disIfeatragebte
Then arriend told.inc)(dr illeitrn'a Peary
iind Nerve Pills. 4ft:a 'ECtripi one bd
I. began to feel bet*, •Iiiiild 'afteg 'aeAret
boxes 1 felt like a At*-ioidiiia' 1110.ktit
le:eon:Mend them to 'all .cretIt friende
Millen:Ws ltes,rt, Mei Nertre. 'Pills ate SOc.'
a box at all dealers, orm si led direct by Thti)
r. Milburn Go, lemited, Toeonto, 0114