HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1921-9-8, Page 7StronghOlds of Nationalists Sinn Feiners and OTang-inen
.Standing Aloof -More Trodps Requisitiqqed to Quell
Distur an,17,es.
A 'despatch from Belfast says :-The
death roll in the ,Bell'ast street •riots
now stands at fourteen. The military'
I
are cordoning „off the disturbed. areae,
but , the sit•uation rernains extremely'
dangerous. .- •
The 'Ulster Cabinet held ,a cenfer-
enee With the police and civic author-
ities and :are requisitioning additional,
•tre'oPs- •
'Gunmen were again active ,the
Old 'Lodge' district. They opened- a
Irreiwy tine
in -,theaidirection of- shan4-
bil..1 Road, ,a thickly; ,populated, Pro-
testcmt quarter. A young ,nian was
kilhid,and four were seriously wound-,
edin 'this fighting.
Vorlernen were attacked on the way
home in WestiBelfastathe pollee were'
obliged -to fire on, the attacking forces,
Which were ,clisperse'd.
:The present trotibld'had its origin in
the Warren and Side streets lying, be-
tween "West Street and 'North Qbeen
'eets. The residents ,of these streets
aa ,old Lodge Road,another. staura
centre, are ,of -mixed -political views,
ana de-lista/it bielcering is 'the -reSult.
'This belled' onIVIonday: A -fortunate
circumstance is ;that Falls Road, the
strOrighold, of the Nationaliets and
Sinn' Feiners, and Sandy how, Shank-
-hill and Ballymaearrett, 'where
Orangeism predonfinates, are standing
aloof.
As the day progressed, the police
patrols increased- their effectiveness
and succeeded in getting 'better, con-
trol of the warring elements.
Sir William Coatcsethe Lord Mayer,
early called on (3e -tie -sal Carter-Ca:Mu-
hell, commander of the troop',
in :Ulster, for soldier's to quell the
rioting., urging the need of protection
for the city's- citiaene, and hi,s demand
was granted.
During the dinner liourea heavy,
downpour of rain (trove the' contend-
ing factions from-tthe streets. POlice
in a "birdcage" leary ininiediately be-
gan .'shepheraing -cariosity :seekers
from the'•danger point.;From e Allot
tirne on the sniping died down. Some
apprehension was felt ae to what
might happen when the • Shipya0
workers returned liorne from their
work in the evening, this being .deem-
ed the meet criticalqiine of the day.•
- If that peried should pass off with-
out, untow,ard, incident, it, was believed
the /dating -could be 'considered ,at an
encl.
During the morning sniping was
carried Oh in full View of the people
in -the wincloWs along Royal Avenue.
It WaS' here. a„inilltinaie ncla litt1eboy
were: wounded bY Shots 'from Kent
Street, which' runs from Royal Avenue ,
to Carrick ,H111, a Sinn Fein .strong -
I P.1 la
.60ko.P6-
t'''''t7e-74M-- •
'fan-
,
hold. A passing trani-car Was utilized i
as a' shield by a se,ction of a crovadi
in the line of fire, but the two were
struck by bullets.
A court martial -sitting at Galway
sent two 'members of the Black and
Tan forces in Ireland to ten years, at
penal servitUde. They. were convicted
of raiding a lionSe at Salt Hill and
compelling -two students to walk bare-
foot over broken bottle.
SEVEN SEATS VACANT
IN THE COMMONS
Anotherfederal Riding Loses
Representative by Death,
of E,}B.-Devil/2.
GERMANY PAYS
BILLIIIV GOLD MARKS
fleel
WATCH YOUR STEP.:
sesee"..et
• . .
were the 'markets; through which Ger-
many 'acquired the greater portion of
the United States exchange necessary
to the completion of the Paynients
maturing at the present time.
ONTARIO TOWNS
MAKE GREAT STRIDES
Census Returns Show hi -
crease in Population in Past
Ten Years.
A despatet from Ottawa says: -An
A 1.1 lianteircenasoef of 95.28 per Ont. in
tihneasthiept
mo
unt. Ate the Allies on
August 31st Fully Paid.
. 9 A despatch- from Berlin says: -An-
-A. despatch frem.Ottawa e
death of Emmanuel B. Devlin, Liberal
memb er of Parliament fee Wr fen t
County, Que, •e, brings
vaeatteies in the Houle of Commons
ap to. .6.-ven. Four seats in Ontario,
ell of which were foimerly represent-
ed by supporters of the Cavcanment,
are vacant, namely, Wes Toik, Lecds
and -Brockville, Durham, Victoria and
Holiburton. Two in Quebec: are un-
renresented--St. Antoine Division of
ntaIeal fennel -1y held the Gov-
i'liue0t und Wright County. ne
seventh vacancy is in Maple Creek,
Saskatchewan forrnerl • t
by Bon. J. A. Maliarg, eb
nor menalier of •the •-•1 t
no uncementsis- made by Otteavon Glaz-
napp, vice-president of the Reichs-
bank, that Germany has paid a billion
gold marks due to the Allies on Aug.
I 31. „a Ile added that. the 'Reichsbank
I had been obliged to take' 68,000,000
I marks in gold dollars and other for -
I eign monies from its gold reserves,
r which are now on, the way to New
York.
A despatch from New York says: -
The Gernian Government, through it.s
fiscal agents in the United States, has
anticipated further reparations obli-
gations to the allies
Accordingeto well-informed 'banking
intefescs representing the Berlin Gov-
ernment, these payments, which are
variously estimated at'$65,000,000 to
$100,000,000, have already been de -
.An inteiresting Bulletinposited with the agents of the British,
French and Belgian Governments in
S CI y.
Purchases of United States dollar
exeiange to effectis transactcon
were cimcludecl several weeks ago, it
was stated. This probably accounts
for the recent tability of internation-
al remittances at this centre and the
marked strength of Dutch and Scan-
dinavian rates
Bulletin No. 1 of the series to be
issued by the Provincial University
during the academic year 1921-22 has
just come _from the press. In this
booklet there is outlined in the brief-
est possible fashion the various ser-
vices that the Department of Uni-
versity Extension has to offer to the
people of Ontario. Fon" teachers there
is a summer session in arts and in
pedagogy, correspondence courses and
teachers' classes during the winter;
for farmers there is a comprehensive eBURP1,6
two cyeelcs' course; for industrial lab-
orers in the large cities there are
evening classes throughout the winter
season; for journalists a one week's
eourse, Then there are extension lec-
'tures available to any locality in the
province; a course on"foods and diet"
for women; k town -planning course;
rural and urban evening tutorial
classes during the winter; ,and, most
radical of all departures, an earrange-
ment by which a group of twenty peo-
ple in any part of Ontario may study,
un,der competent instruction in even-
ing classes, and proceed to a B.A. de-
gree. The concluding paragraph of
this bulletin states that the University
of 'I'orouto will endeavor, in the mat-
ter of higher education, to meet the
needs of any part of the province so
far as its finances and the size of
ite staff will permit. All of this means
that the provincial university is rend-
ering real service to its constituency
and so is performing the true fune-
tien of a modern university. To de-
velop properly this type of s.lh2vice
a ;more adequate revenue will be re -
'Those countries, it is understood,
,
Orillia ............13,334 6,828 6,506
' San Marino, the midget republic, is
to double the size of its army, which
in future will consist of six soldiers.
orm-
ten
'years) is shown by bulletin numiber
three covering the preliminary an-
nouncement of population just issued
by the Dominio'n statistician. The
population of Orillia now stands at
13,334, as conpated with 6,828 in
1911 when the last Dominion census
was taken. The bulletin issued COVeTS
25 cities and towns in eastern and
western Canada. Although Orillia
shows the largest percentage increase
of places covered in the bulletin, Sault
Ste. Marie is a close second with a
percentage increase of 93.26 in the
last ten years, and a popula.tion to -clay
of 21,228. '
The Dominion Statistician armouric-
es that the count is subject to correc-
tion. Adjustments on account of
closed houses and absenteesNave 'yet
to be made. 'Anyone who thinks that
he o -r she has been omitted from the
census is requested to notify the bur-
eau of statistics.
Ontario returns issued are as fol-
lows:
1921. 1911. Inc.
Eastview 5,327 3,169 2,158
Barrie ......... 6,992 6,420 572
Sault Ste. Marie 21,228 10,984 10,224
.Smiths Falls .. 10,594 6,370 4,179
.Sarnia 14,637 9,947 4,690
Ingersoll 5,118 4,763 355
Hawkesbury 5,532 4,400 1,132
Pembroke .. ..,7,873 5,626 2,247
Midland ..........6,984 4,663 2,321
quilted.
. --
This is a very common trouble, especi-
ally with thoee who are hearty eaters.
There'is a gnawing and burning pain
in the stomach, attended by disturbe.d
appetite, caused by great acidity. When-
! ever too muck food is taken it is liable
to ferment and become extremely sour
and vomiting often occurs, s,nd what 18
thrown up is sour and sometimes bitter.
Keep your liver active by using
PAELBURRYS
and you will have no liver troubles.
Miss Agnes Cutting, Shallow Lake,
Ont., writes: -"I have had heartburn
for along time. There was a gnawing
and burnme pain in my stomach, and
tlacu when S vomited there was a sour
and bitter taste. I used two vials of
Milburn's Laza-Liver Pills, and they
have cleared me of nay heartburn." -
Price, 25c. a vial at all dealers, or
n d t o cei t of irice b The
T. Milou'rn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont.
ia, • n re p y
9
THO'-)6I4
ti L ok.M.Q tirt...g-tEN1
,30E Mc6E,E,
t-t.'s TTINe.7` OUT
A' SNOOK OF
ADDRESS .•5
Average Hurnan_Life
Lo h
nge y Four Years
A despat/1 fromcolumbus
C
says :-The average, life of man
has been lengthened four years
in the last quarter century, de-
spite the crime wave, war, auto-
mobile and other hazards.
"Within another generation
the allotted threescore years and
ten will be a thing of the past,"
Dr. George W. Hoagland said,
basing his claims on mortality
statistics of the, American In-
surance Union, of which he is
secretary.
"Iinprovc-ments brought about
in sanitation,' the nationwide
anti -spitting fight and other
steps have contributed toward
man's longevity," Dr. Hoagland
said. "Severe epidemics of ty-
phoid and malaria which former-
ly took such a huge toll of life,
no longer are knoVvn." •
et,
His .Majesty, Pleased
With Irish R6sponse
A despatch from London says:
-King George lias, sent a mes-
sage -co the ArchbiShop of Can-
terbury on the Irish;, situation.
The message said:
"Let us thank God that some
measure of, reponse has been
vouchsafed to my appeal to my
Irish people. With a full heart
let us pray that their reconcilia-
tion may be consummated by the
deliberations now proceeding,
and that they may -be united,
making a new era icor their na-
tive land."
Strawberries as a,'ship's cargo .are
considered dangerous, owing to the
strong fumes given .,off by the fruit
causing diziiness and a form of in-
toxication.
_ ..„-
,
JL_
tiliRAL.TAR
.5 ra/ f=:Giblviter
eetita
Tangier 61
ot-______,,,
Tetuan jaig. ,. •
.
Laralche
.ks,..,t,
R
• •
\.)
a
t......1.
elilla.
.......,, _14,"
....c' '54
't
,..
.. 0„
MW
•
, . N
Uj Cl. a
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100
- .1
2-0
ep ...5n.e5huz ZrE
r-4.... ,. , ...
.(;) • . • ' •
q..•0,•.. e o • G
I R.E N C .11 ZONE-
4064 FEZ la2a
--i.......1.-2,-.:47-................-.-..
1
SPAIN'S WHITE MAN'S BURDEN
The history -of the Spanish zone of 117e'roccio has, beeri''"a. constant war-
. , ,
fare waged on the w.hole with considerable success., 'against the Moorish
trthesirien, together with very slow penetrat_ion and organization of the
eonntrY by the'colonists,".
TO FFICIAL
END IN GREAT BRITAIN
A despatch from Landon says:- their rec rit pay. Salaries under £00
The official end of the war on ,Wed- yearlY are reduced from five to twen-
ty-one shillings weekly, and agricuJ-
tural wages fall six shillings sveekly,„
The Defence of the Realm Act, em-
bodying a ;variety of wartinie restrie-
tions, lOpsed eri liVedneZdnY night. Its
provisions have long been virtually
neseay naght,.briags a cut in wages
,and salaries ef employees.. of the Goa--;
ernment , appreximatin.g , £590,000
weekly. Ciyii servants' bonuses, bas-
ed on the east of living, have been ree
duced 'considerably. The higher grades
syrerkers :lose 10. to 130 per cent, ef. Inoperative.
The LeNtiiiiiF Markets. Arrnenia Appeals to Us
' for
"We of the Near East have one-
half -million martyrs in Heaven. ey
,
Toronto.
Manitoba wheat --No. 1 Northern,
$1.68%; No. 2 Northern, $1.64%. No.
3 Northern, $1.57%; No. 4 'Wheat,
$1.39%.
Manitoba oats -No. 2 CW, 48%e;
No. 3 CW i 47i/c; extra No. 1 feed,
4714c; No. 1 feed, 46%c; 1No. 2 feed,
Manitoba harley-No. 3 CW, 77c;
No. 4 CW, 741/2c; rejected., 691/2e; feed,
691/2e.
All above .in store at Fort William:
American coria -No. 2 yellow, 67e,
nominal, c.i.f. Bay ports.
Ontario oats -No. 2 white, 40 to 42c.
Ontario wheat -No, 2 Winter, car
lots, $1,18 to $1.22; No. 3 Winter .$1.15
to $1.20; No. 1 commercial-, $1.10 to
$1.15; No. 2 Spring, $1.13 to '$1.18;
No. 3 Spring, $1.10, to $1.15; No. 2
goose wheat, nominal.
Peas -No. 2, nominal.
-Barlev-Malting 69 to 72e accord-
ing tofreights outside.
Buekwheat-No. 2, nominal.
Rye -No. 2, $1.00.
Manitoba flour -First pats., $10.50;
second pats., $10, Toronto,
Ontario flour -$6.25, old crop.
Millf ee d -D el ., Montreal freight,
•
bags included: Bran, per ton, $28;
shorts, per ton, $30; good feed flour,
$1.70 to $1.85.
Baled Hay -Track;' Toronto, per ton,
No. 1, $23; No. 2, $22; mixed, $18.
Cheese -New, large, 24c; twins,
241e2c; triplets, 25c. Old, large, 31 to
320; twins, 32 to 33c; triplets, 321/2 to
331/2.,c; Stiltons, new, 25 to 27c.
Butter ---Fresh dairy, choice, 33 to
35c; creamery, prints, fresh, No. 1, 42
to 43c; cooking, 23 to 25e.
Dressed poultry -Spring chickens,
40c; roosters, 20c; fowl, 30c; duck-'
ling -a, 35c; turkeys, 60c,
Live poultry-Springchickens'30c;
roosters, 16c; fowl, 22 to 25c; duck-
lings, 30c; turkeys, 50c.
Marganne-20 to 22c.
Eggs -No. 1, 42 to 43c; selects, 50
to 51e; cartons, 52 to 54c.
Beans -Cam, handepicked bushel
$3.50 to $3.75; primes, 53 to $3.25.
Maple products -Syrup, per imp.
gali,$2.50; per 5 imp. gals, $2.35.
Maple sugar lbs., 19 to 22c.
Honey -60 -30 -lb. tin, 14 to 15c per
lb.; 5-21/2-1b. tins, 16 to 17e per lb.;
Ontario comb honey, per doz., $3.75
toL4.05k0ed. mea
ts-e-H,arna, med., 40 tu
42c; heavy, 30 to 31e; cooked, 57 to
63c; rolls, 27 to 28c; eottage rdlls 30
to 31c; breakfast bacon, 33 to 38c;
special brand breakfast bacon, '45 to
47c; backs, boneless, 42 to 47e.
Cured meats -Long clear bacon, 18
to 21c; clear bellies, 18% to 201/2c.
Lard -Pure tierces, 19 to 19%e;
tubs, 191/2 to 20e; pails, 20 to 20%c;
prints, 21 to 22e. 'Shortening tierces,
14% to 14%c; tab. 14% to 1514e;
pails, 15% to 153%c; prints, 174 to
17%c.
Choice heavy steers, $7.25 to $8;
butchers' steers, choice, $6 to $6.50;
do, good, $5.50 to $6; do, med., $4.50
to $5.50; do, cont., $3 to $4.50; but-
chers' heifers choice $6 to $6.50; do,
med., $5.50 to $6. butchers' cows
.have one cry, and their cry at the
mercy seat is 'How long, 0 L,ord,l,
Wilt T.hpu not avenge our blood from
the band of the Turk?' , And about a
inlilion al,,c1 a ifalf of thatragged rem-
nant who are half starved are crying,
When will the Amerman eanS)e of Jus-
tice feel our woes and save us?' We
continue that ery until justice is done.
"We have given 400,000 young men
to light the battles,of the Allies, and
this out df three million people. What
have we lost? Let us compare our
losses. We have lot every material
we had. Can you imagine that eut'of
that three million people ,in Turkey
and; PerSia, not one has 'a home? This
;is an awful fact. There is not a house
standing, not a village, not a church-,
not a school. When we consider life,
almost two-thirds of those nations
have been slaughtered.,
-"The worst of it is a hundred thou-
sand- of our precious daughters are in
the hands of the Turk to -day. They
were put to auction and sold for $4
apiece. Foi. two years the Turk has
been conquered, but our daughters1
still remain in his `hell. Is there jus-
tice in the world? Is this the sense
of ju,stice of eur Allied nations? The
paintings of France have been return-
ed, but our daughters still are in a
Turkish hell.
"We are exiled to -day. How long
shall our people perish in the wilder -
nese? When we ask for Our orplans
and for our hungry people, people jeer
at us. Why, my friends we don't beg.
If' you conitider that beggary, los.
God's sake let us die -and finish. Give
us a chance to live our own life. We
can prove to the world that we are
worthy to live. For ages we have
fought and stood for -our convictions.
"I put this ease before you; I want
you to give a verdict. Shall we be
annihilated? The Turkish sword has
taken half of us, and, the sword of
hunger is threatening that little rem-
nant. Shall it perish by hunger and
the Turk be jubilant that he a•ccora-
plishecl his purpose of the ages? Why,
my faith is this: as long as there is
an Anglo-Saxon, living, my people will
not perish.- -I ^believe in your ',sense
of justice. I believe your chivalry is
iIat dead, but a living real•ity. I believe
you have a conseienee. You are the
most unselfish people on earth. There-
fore, we come to you and appeal to
you in behalf of our people, We still
believe in Your sense of justice and
that you will do the right. thing by
us in the end."
$60 per year, $5 per month, -will
provide 'food for one orphan:
Send, contributions to the Treasur-
er, Mr. D. A. Cameron, Manager, TO-
ronto Branch, The Canadian Bank of
Commerce, King Street West, To -
choice, $4.50 to $5; do, med., $3 to ronto.
$4.50; canners and cutters, $1 to $2; -
butchers' bulls, good, $4.25 to $5; de, PIEPYOUS HEADACHES
coin., $2.50 to $3.50; feeders, good, 900 ,
lbs., $5.50 to $6; do, fair, $4 to $4.50;
milkers, $60 to $80; springers, $60 to
$80; calvee, choice, $9.50 to $10.50;
do, med., $7 to ,8; do, corn., $2 to $5;
lambs, yearlings, $6 to • $6,50; do,
spring, $8,50 to $8.75; sheep, choice,
53.50, to $4; do, goad, $2 to $3.50;
do, heavy and bucks, $1 to $2; hogs,
fed and watered, $11; do, off cars,
$11.25; do, f.o.b., $10.25; do, country
points, $10.
Montreal.
Oats -Can,. West., No. 2, 591/2c to
60e; do, No. 3, 58 to 581/2e. Flour -
Man. spring wheat pats., firsts, $10.50.
Rolled oats -Bag 90 lbs., $3.25. Bran -
$29. Shorts -$31. Hay -No. 2, per
ton, car lots, $30 to $32.
Cheeee-Finest eastdrns, ' 18%c.
Butter -Choicest creamery, 38% to
39c. Eggs -Selected, 45 to 46e. Po-
tatoes -Per :bag, ear lots, $1.75 to $2.
Good calves, $9; dairy calves, $8 to
$4.
The first trip on the new Paris -to -
Warsaw air service took ten hours, as
compaa-ecl with sixty hours for the
journey by train.
It's a Great Life it You Don't Weaken
\1ER.
triAD -THE LE. Asi
me,Iii 1voto1 irke-
MACIV., SPE
HE. DoEsN'T .
ale 6E1-'5 oul
E -VELE PHoiNIE
BooK
DIZZERESS
ULD NOT SLEEP.
Mrs. M. Danagand, Young's Cove
Road, N.B., writes: -"I was bothered
very much with my heart and nerves;
had nervous headaches attd dizziness,
could not sleep at nights, and my
appetite was all gone. I was almost
on a nervous breakdown when a neigh-
bor told me to try 1V1illearn't3 Heart
and Nerve Pills. This Iclid, and before
I had the second box used I was better."
To shy of those suffering in any way
from derangementi of,the hea,rt or nerves,
such as palpitaon of' the heart, faipt
and dizzy siellssleep1essness,smothering
feeling, shortness of breath, etc., we
can recommend our
MILBURN'S
HEART and NERVE
PILLS
Price, 50c. a box at all dealers or
mailed direct on receipt of pride by The
T. Milburn Co,, Linaitcd, Toronto, Ont.
ITS P., 6tz-,per
1.3FE 6F N'Oki
i)Disi-r WE. ke.Et4
By .1Ac.1; Rabbit
nn
Hits BEEIIIIRE4teinNin
'Diarrhoea, Dpseritery, Colic,
Cramps, Pains in the Stomach,
Cholera, Cholera Infanturn,
01101er,IVI9114110.,,e?1, icknes
Snmrr COMPlat' Arai ail"
Ldosenesz of the Bowels.
SuzIp tiiI4',ianconarinniendation 'enough
WHY SAY MORE ?
We wis4 ½ wp,rii. the :public against
being imposed upoii.' by unscrupulous
dealers who aubstitutethe So-called Straw-
berry ConepOundsfOr'"Dr. Fowler's."
Ask for "Dr. Fowler'e'.' and insist on
etting it. The cheap frnitatione may
dangerous to your health.
A AtigmpgeFuL REMEDY.
Mr, E, S., Gable, Claremont, ,Ont.,
writes: -"It is with great plealeire
write you to say that I can't speak too
highly of your wonderful remedy,' Dr.
Fowler'e Extract of Wild Strawberry.
E was troubled with diarrhoea and.tried
everything I could thinkOf 'teerelieve me,
but nothing seemed to do me any good.
was advised to try4Dr.' Fowler's' and
found it great. I would recommend
it to any one suffering as I did."
Price, 500- a bottle,put up •.only „by
The T. Milburn CO, Lirnited. Toronto,1
Out. '
"Iron, Cold. Iron."
War never a.ineunted to inueli in the
Stone Age.' It never came into its
own until men learned to take certain
rocks, nzelt them and make iron of
them. Iron and its derivative, steel,
have been the war -maker's metals.'
One cf .the arguments advanced to
show that Japan never could be a
fundamentally strong war -making na-
tion hes been that she had not iron
and must import her ores and steel.
Yet it long has been known that the
Japane.se Archipelago is of voidanie
origin and that these islands are so
many heaps of iron oxide deposits of
niagnetic sand.
The sad thing about this for the
gunhuilders and steel plate makers of
Japait has been that this "iron sand"
is a stubborn thing, too stubborn fel.
the usual method of ore -smelting. The
Japanese, however, are a tenaciously
stubborn race given to studions pot-
tering over retorts and test tubes. On
October 18, 1920, the Japane.se War
Office had this to say:
Il'On sand is so genera) throughout •
the length anci breadth of thee. empira..
.that it has leng been plain that if some
method were discovered"' of "smelting'
iron from it Japan never would suffer '
from want of steel. On the strength
of the above, the iiecessaey investiga-
tions were started as early. as Sep- •.•
tember, 1919, by a special committee.
* * The experiments of a year
have been crowned with tolerable suc-
cess, and the process has..been experi-
mented with on a practical scale at
the 13enehieliu Iron Works, under the
control of the Okura firm; with very
sa.tisfactory results. •
The matter dropped from sight or '
hearing. It was guarded as a milit,ary '
secret and still is. In all the talk of ,
arms and armanaents nothing more
was heard until a few cia.ys ago.- Then
the cables announced that Dr. Naito "4
and Gore Matsuka had discovered '
new pro -cess far the making of steel
from "iron sand" that will revolution-
ize the world steel industry, make Ja-
pan one of the great ironeproducing
nations of the earth' and Make the
Mika
do's empire independent of Great
Britain and the United States so far
as iron imports are concerned.
Viekers, Ltd., the great French and
American shipyards and fabricating
plants will miss the Japanese as cus-'
tome: and feel them es competitors- -
If "iron, cold iron, is master of men
all," Japan is about to take her place
;near the head of the table. Nor should
it be forgotten that iron and steel are,
the metals of war.
. ,
•
France and Belgium have to receive! -
from Gea.nean.y 75,000 beehives, with ,
their leoney, in, the autumn,. '
IN tell Ir Fr
'T Y$&
ei,1" OTSPEPSIti.
,
Dyspepsia is one of the most difficult
diseases of the sternach there ie to cure.
You eat too nfuela Drinktoomuoh.
Use too much tobacco. You /omit° the
stomach work overtime.You make it
perform more than ie'ohould be called
on to do. The natural' result ief that it -
,
is going to rebel against the amount of )
work put en it. It is only a matter of a '
short time before dyspepsia follows.
vi3AvtacTia„..6,6cul3katete,1.
is the reniecly you reqUire to restore the
stomach to a normal, healthy condition
So that the food no longer causes distress,
but is thoroughly digested and eseirni-
lilted Arai goes on its wity malting rich
blood and bone, nerve and rauscle.
anufactleillieteal:.1b.1, 2115Yatie.
Tho T. Milburn
Co a Limited, Toronto, Ont. t
1,g