The Exeter Times, 1922-2-2, Page 3Ohl FE:ET ALL VAY
FIA6gt ACI-itt) Air
/et, e
Weineeotey -,tefiear buidena •
ef the hoeselield, bet being ou
feet all day long with the continual
toping, bencliego and .neVer-einline,
strain it, is,Inoeweridee, that, sooner or
e400001' /atm", the back- gives out,
AM weak ,, baelted, -.suffering evenien
should use Doan'seKidziey Pilheionethe
first, siva of any baok wealezese,eadetliere-
by .preeent soine serious kidney- trouble
liable to follow.
Mr. Julia ..MbRikeno'fle 29rtSy1ney,
eerites:—"I was so "troubled with
pain in'my back I did not know what
to do.
1 was on niy- feot r;),ay,,alicliny hack
ached so at'iiight I could scarecly-walk
up,,one, flight a ais. .4 friend ad- ,
vised one ,to try Don's Kidney Pills,
and aftee taking three boxes X am, as
well -ea ever, aiidican 'work flora moiling
till night,„ - 1 aefellways telling my friende
of whet "Doan's" have done for me."
See' that our ira,de mark the "Maple
Leaf" appears ,on the ,oblong grey bele
None genuine without it.
Price 50e. ae.btec ,at ,alledealees, ot
mailed direct on receipt of price by The
T. Mi/burn Co.,. Limited„ Toronto, Ont.
FAIL TO IDER".:TIllf
SIX INSANE POILUS
I
Retn'rnecl by Germany :After
the Arcrri—istice, Have Not
1,3.-OVered.
A despatch from Paris says
:—
Among the most pathetic sequels of
the war is the conditionof six French
prisoners who were returned t Feanee
,
from Germany after the artriistice and
who are still eenicInntified, 'They are
insane and were found Tandering be-
tween the lines. The Germans did not
identify them, but • kept •them in a
hospital until after tee armistice was
eigmeele when they sent them ,home.
The men never recovered their reason,
however, and all efforts to identify
them have failed, although the Minis-
try of 'Pensions has done everything
possible in this coneection,
The next step will be to publish
their photographs in every newspaper
in France and to have their -pictures
shown in ervery cinema theatre in this
c-ountry. Even this, however, is con-
sidered douibtful of results, •as it is
quite possible they are fore601am- who
volunteered to fight for France. There-
fore they most probably will remain
"unknown 'soldiers" until death re-
leases them.
University Finances.
The authorities of the provincial
university went before the Ontario
Government last week with the build-
ing program for the next three years-.
ur` buildings it was stated, are long
' overdue and thottld be commenced at
nee. e a, foreitrY and 'botany
building. a women's building for fe- ,
4
TREND
;he 'Frtc aiaiJ riAttenaceo,
Talk bY WaShina tea end London.
A .6SsiiIiitelf, fr cm Pais says -.-7-
T11;(9. may,. "recorded in III-elle:14
poticts'Ias a' day (Y2 LINV aVenhig, A real
to i-hIat oeng
„ , ;•„
by other na1S, -which, has .beenOQTh
•
'pletelY nlisePt is riow being &Splayed.
•
The btdy1 od (...tonche,,' which eatioe
• , . ,
sintfillta.neonisly 'from Iy17,*aiSliinglon. and
Lonclon i eaponeibe fez.- tilds 'Change
of attitude' `,,by dip1onats po1ittgiaa:4
and publicists. • While there s still.
considerable blustering, hi retort to tile
piai.nSpeaking by ;the Vnited States,
tbere is en 'eloekulls pnideIrcru'r-4'.11*.tod
diSdiray„, -together -witlithei,d,awning
a epalization of the helel truth by
publiceimen. .
'1'61111.n the severest slibel.,,has been
given 'To y7-6.1-fed1e o -y COrnrnission's, ej.
port ,041.ing or_therednetion rof the
a'pfClei;41.4an, re..>"iiarations to
'within the tcapr6iCity Of that nation to
pay, arid. the reduetion of tlie armed
fouces od2 certain European nations;
force s 01"),), 4, the :principal
Causes of monetary inflation.
This, "coupled with the eablegrani
from Washington that SecreIta.r§1,
objects lo gbing to ger'°'11
unless, li`klance aeltcns ,her arfiry: and
'bala,nees her inidget, , kind ;cali,dicl. ines- I
sages, from .).4e Loaph caTrporbe?h
telling- French readers' -14.14t
?Pinion is ....hostile to"L' 'Order'
,caye's modifications „-;of the Anglo -
grenIeb p.aenpeth thrp, fi,ank admis-
sion: "Our ease*Is 'had ii-I."*Wa
ton ab it is. th LondIen." The *SeT111• -:
officiad Temps is so perpleed over
;the ''atti,titdeof the, United States en
the .c*.o..a;c#.[re.-1:16-ie' thnL t are'
no,unees that it will nob discuss it,
iayolding the. is.sue by egying that as
;the news 'conies ' by Way: of London,
it may .be inexaet; but - adding, "It is
flifffiC1,11tOr 110 'to 'believe that the
TJnited,,,ka,0,s;,.GOVernment has really
Made tan iiiidiirtouS aoraparisori between
the ti,olehevist army end the army a
ER. ISM'
FRItZEN. WILDS
,
,Tramp 30 Miles
to Erliig Aid to Orphaned
A desrea•Vh frosn F William
says:--07-ve children, ranging in age
n.
Tram less thaa year to 12, have
reached, 'Wittman)), on the Canadian
crala-
GterXl.e..11t Rairvay, PEITed by*eV.'
14-year-or1d brother after enduring
terrible hardships in •the wilderness.
With• his wife and himself dying
from influenza, Mehl -aro Nan Tuchleee,
an Indian trapper, called his eldest,
sera, Atchime, 14, to his bedside and
gave him $1,200, the fruifruits,of his
trapping, and bade him care for the,
children.
The same day, January, 13, both'
parents died. Unable to busy the
bodies, the boy Wt. -them frozen solid
in the shack, vela). the five young child
dren, and ,set out on snawsho es t� fetch
his nearest neighbor, 30 miles away.
Waien. he returned with John Hin-
goosh, two days later, the five ehil-
dren, inducting the baby, -were gnaw-
ing raw moose flpsh the only food in
late shack, and hatcl burned every Scrap
of furniture to keep from freezing,.
Hingoosh and young Atehii-no.,packed
them on the dog ,,eled and meshed on
to Watcomb, where all obtained food
and medical attention. The dnfairt, it
is fearetik; /nay
niaie students residences and gymn-
asium, either an adrninstration
te „relieve University Cellege of
the exeeutive offices or en extension
to provide the necessary classroom ac-
commodation for University College,
and a supplementary heating plant.
One and a half million droners assured
now but spread over three years,
would ena.lele the University of To-
ronto to commence these -four -urgently
needed buildings -at once.
U.S. Navy Tests
Use World's Helium
• A despatch from Newport News,
Va., says:.—The world's supply- of
helium, encased in the (bag of the
dirigible C-7 at the Iiampton, Roads
naval base, is to be- compire,ssed and.
sent elsewhere. The C-7 is to lee -de-
flated before February 1.
The gas, it is understood, will be
taken to another station for experi-
mental purposes. The 0-7 recentlr
was given a successful test.
Sir Arthur Pearson's
Estate Left to Family
A despatch from London says Th
widil of the late Sir Arthur Pearson,
Sounder of St. Dmistan's Institution
for the Blind, has been probated. The,
estate is yenned "act 04.000; and is left
entirely to the family.' There 'are no
tharitabie 'bequests.
BAD NE ACHES
FOR 7 YEARS
Ernest I-rquhar, Rose St.,
Dartmouth, NS, Writ.CS:—"I have been
troubled for two years with bad head-
aches and tried many cliffelent remedies,
but found ho relief. I was telling a
triend of mine about the bad pains in
my head and she told me to try Milburn'
tease -Liver Pills. had tried many
pills arid powders, but I thought I would
teved was quite pleased with them so
your pills a trial, took one vial
took two more, and now I don't fed
any headaches or dizziness. I am very
thaekful to Laxa-Liver Pills and 1 can
otecommend them to everyone."
IMELou N'S
rciatly in -116,1z the C:eOretions, clear aWay
oll effete and waste matter, and give
tone to the whole intestinal teack,
, Price, 25c. 'a vial at all dealers, or
mailed direct on receiptof price by
The T. Milburn Co., Limited, '4'oronto,
*Ont.,
Geriznarny Asked to
Pay for Lusitarnia
• A despatch from Washington
says—America's againet, ,• Ger-
many for the sinking of the Lusitania
$16,000,000•
a,nnouncement that ar
claims will be taken up by .ra special
commission, as soon as the enabling
• treaty can. be 'ratified, State Defoart-
ment officials estimated that the grand
total is in the neighborhood of $750,-
000,000. Many ef these are "unprov-
ed," however, ancl the final amount
will be considerably smadder, it was
stated,
Greatest of Dictionaries
• Nearing Completion
A despatch from London Isays:—An
0-,derd dictionary b'egun- in 1879 by
the late Sir James Murray is nOW
nearint completion. When finished
the 'dictionary will fill more than 15,-
000 pages, and will 'contain about 50,-
040,000 printed words. Sir James
Murray, who •died in 1915, rose every
morning at 6 o'el•oek to -work on the
dictionary and continued on his task
for the greater part of the day. '11
took hip two Months to deal with the
history of "to" as used with an in-
finitive.
THE GOLI i DS 0
NO"TEERN ONTARIO
ourstRAspiat FAMED
,
•
FIELDS F YUKON.
The Daily Income of the Mhies
„
During 1922,ShoU1d Reach
A:pprO;Eimately $7,800.
Nostiern °olitfirst 'i°
Isas had s.t
• aide's gold producing areas, rapidly
leaving behindth produetkon the fam-
ed fierkle of the Yukon and outstrip-
ping by a wide margin the I/inning
areas of ether of the provinces of the
Dominion. In 1919 the gold fields of
Northern Ontario. produced 65.9 per
cent. el the gold of 'all Canada; in
1920 they produced 73.7 per ,eent. of
the sante total. Production in 1921 has
been more than maintained, a hand-
some increase being indieated in re -
burns to dlate, whilst developments
during 1921, not completed tsufficient-
ly to increase output that year, will
result ins material increment in pro-
duction in 1922.
The 1920 production el the Northern
Ontario gold fields amounted to 564,-
959 ounces and in the previous year
505,739 OlInCes, an increase in .192,0
of 11.7 Per cent. In the declining
,frvoulaz of 1921, gbild ore was being
.p.ut through the reduction plants of
the gold mimes of the Porcupine and
'kirkland Lake fields at an aggregate
rate Of apm
proxiately 2,065;400' tons
every ;thirty daYs. Based upon the
achieveinents of the months, of. Sep-
tember and Oceober, an estimate of
I
AA!
1/7
,se,\ c"egerie.
a9‘5, cA\
e.eeteise,„
GERMAN' POVERTY
• Poor Fritz -e -"But, mine clear Herr Bull, yot.1a,nriet get blood out off ter
stoner. Ve hat nodding to pay mit; ye are destitute'.•
—Western Mail (Cardiff)
'S ROYAL tit° E TERTA*0
BY SPECTACLE OF ELEPHANT ROUND -UP
clesreateli 'from "Mysore, India, The Prince of Wales witnessed the
says:—The Prince 'df Wales was an,
eye vyancees at, the ineusual spectacle
of a round, -up of wild elephants. The
round -up watS held on the hank of the
K,n1thand River, forty-six miles south
of the capital (tVlysere) of the pro-
vince., ,
The resistance *of the captives was
so VipYrOlIS and dte4itermined that only
roirr out ef tWently-ii0ht were finally
driven into the roping ring and tied
mp, during the tittle that the Prince
watched the operations.
The herd of wild elephants had been
gathered and concentrated during the
past two months by forest officials,
who cut off a track of jungle.
it drive front a special platform thirty
feet in the air.•
,
Every difficult maneetwer in getting
the eaptives in the roping ring ,was
applauded by the Prince. • It was in-
tensely exciting when fires were burn-
ed 'behind the elephants. The fire,
however, did not' held the wild •beasts
from furious attempts t,o eseapeThe
big tusker leading the defence clia'rged
the tante elephants being used to help
herd the wild ones. Fellowed by the
other captives the tusker forced his ,
way hack to the jungle, all except four
of the younger ones escaping. one
young tusker lay on the ,ground weep-
ing itt sheer rage.
$1,584,000 in gold bullion per month is deal only with the seven mines at
made. This means that ere is being present producing and do not include
drawn fibre the gold mines of North- properties in the develepment stage
ern Ontario, at the rate of approxi- which, on a conservative estimate,
mately, 25,996,800 tdns annually, re- would add another 300 or 400 men to
• sultingein, a yearlyproduntion ol about the total employed
$19,008 000. This means an increase The prospects for 1.922 are even
of more than seven million dollars over brighter and indications would lead to
the 1920 valuation, according to the the assumption that this year's pro-
eetimate of a writer in the Canadian duction -will again be substantially
Mining "Journal. Another estimate of tgreater, as the result of ;the initial
the Temiskaining district, Which em- steps in development effected in 1921,
braces the Porcupine and Kirkland which will he completed this year. The
Lake fields, is a daily rate of $52,300, same authority *estimates that com-
er equal to more than thirty per cent. pleted developments will add- to pro-
of the total current yield of the United dilation to the extent of 780 tons in
States. daily 4pacity, divided as follows:
• The preliminary estimates of the Schumacher, 200 tens; Porcupine'
Canadian Mining Journal of the value Crown, 140 tons- Porcupine V.N.T.,
for the year, by ieclividual mines, is 100 tons; Dante Lake, 100 tons; Tough -
as follows: Hollinger Consolidated, Oakes, 140 tons; and Onthrio-Kirk-
$12,000,000; Dome Mines Company, land, 100 tons.
$2,880,000; McIntyre -Porcupine, $2,,- • Allowing for an inteome of $10 per
100,000; Wright -Hargreaves, $720,000; ton, and not making allowances for
Lake Shore iVlines, $540,000; Teak- enlargement of plants, which will un -
Hughes Gold Mines. $384,000; and doubtedly take place, the daily income
,Kieleland.,Lake Gempanye43845000. el these mines should reach approxi-
mately $7,800, nOT 'at the 'rate of $2,-
Over 3,000 1VIefi Entployed.
847,000 per year. This production,
In ei-der -to, produce gold at the added to the current output, tends to
above rate there are approximately indicate a yield atethe rate of $21,-
2,600. Men employed- at Inc „mines, of 855,000. 'Additional probabilities are
the Pbieu.pine distriet, whilst
there increases of possibly $2,000,000 a Year
are approxiina:tely 500 Men at the
mines of the Kirkland Lake district, ()11 Inc Hollinger and $1,000,000 on Inc
• MclEtYre" thereby making a tetal
making a total of 3,100. These figures °t
close to $25,000,000 Within the'rang-e
a possibility within the next year or
SO, or about six million dollars in in-
crease eve Inc 1921 estimated value.
Canadian Remains
Member of Saar Board
A despatch from London saysWord has been received by London
friends of R. D. Waugh, ex -Mayor of
Winnipeg, whe is the Canadian mem-
ber of the Saar Valley Commission,
that the League of Nations bes ex-
tended his appointment for another
year. Mr. Waugh .sia.ys that all the
recent trouble in the Saar Valley has
been caused by propaganda engineered
from Berlin.
Reason Sufficient.
Mrs. Pa.rieleigh was startled by, the
following observation on the part of
her five-year-old boy:
"I like God better than I do daddy."
"Indeed! And why?"
rkets of the World A
• Toronto,
Manitoba vneat-,No. 1 Nnrthern,
II.11.20
• Manitoba elat,s-....Tp, .2 CW. 55i
f•••..xtra No. 4 feed, '51A;:e; No. 1:fee
,
111.aniteba
. the ah4i,I.\ie, EaSI-''PIortS...'
Ainerlyan corn—No. 2 yeutqw, d9½
No: 1l c6,81/2,e;'• No.": a '7 ,'Y.116
. , •
67 Yee ; 'tra'ck, Ttntb,••
Ontarlor O.,..tts.-",-Nr,e." 2. white; 'nominal
Ontario"' Whead,--,-Nedirinal. •
• Barley ----Ne. 3 eictra",•-, test 47 lbS",. or
better, 57 to 60,c, according to freights
outside. •'
B,uckyheat--,-No. 2, 78 to
Itye-efrelo, 2; 86 to' 88e.
• Manitoba flour—First pats., $7.40;
second' pats., $6.90, Toronto.
MwnHdba flour -90 per cent. pat.,
belic, seaboard' per barrel, $5, '
,Montreal freights,
begs included: Bran, per toil; $28;
sharte, per eon; $30; good feed flour,
1:14R..4W
1i3naltc°111$41y0 to$22;.81:
No. 2, $21.5Track, Torenter ton, NORWAY 'PONE " Vit1LIF
mixed, $18. .
Straw—Car lots per ton, $12,
Cheese—New, large, 20 to 201/2c;
twins, 201/2 to 21c; triplets, 21 to
211/2e. Oltd, large, 25 to 26c; twins,
25½ 10 • 26.1/2c; triplets, 26 to 27c;
Staltons, new, 25 to 26e.
• Butter---Fresb dairy, choice, 28 to
35c; erearnery: prints, fresh, 38 1043o;
No. 2, 34 to 36c; ,Cooking, 25 to -26e.
I Dressed poultey---Spring chickens,
30i -to 38e; roasters, 20 to 25c; fowl,,28
to 32e; ducklings, 32 to 310; turkeys,
50e; geese, 30e.
Live poultry—Spring ethlekene, 22
to 28‘.-i; .roostees, 1.8e; fowl, 20 to 28e;
decklings 32c• turkeys, 40 to 45e;
EGAN
IC
, reneb,itie is net,ase
the iniicoqe;meOerefi
a: ti* ,;:a011
#.fr.
, vereteet
towed by
difficulty iii-bteatliink
dry, harshieerenpy, ,ecin
teased in
Slieht
swereem
• ing, and is on1Jjd.:ITY
The matter
• sticky, but1atefbenseiof a.,I-gitentS1/
Yellowish'eelter ahdiS"SaniefiniCS Streak -
with blood: •,
• •
On the,
41hOuld by us
,
S"
• gemesaer'-2airGei
igne--.-2(1 to 23e.
Eggs ---No; 1 storage, 35 to 38e; new
iaiclistraightst, 52 to 54c; new laid, in
cartons, 54 to 56e.
Bea.ns—Can. hand-picked, bushel,
$3.30 to. $3.50; PrilTle.S, $2.80 to $3.10.
Maple products --Syrup, per imo.
gal., $2,50; per 5 imp. gals,, $2.35;
Maple seg -ax, Fla., 19 to 22c.
Hone -60 -30 -Th. tins 141/2 to 150
per De; 5-21/2-1b. tins, 17 to 18e per
ib.; Ontario eornb honey, per des.,
$375 to, $4.50. .
Smoked rneatS--Harns, med., 25 to
27c; cooked ham, 36 ,to 40e; smoked
„23 to 24e; ,cottage rolls, 25 to
27e; [breakfast bacon, 25 to 30e; special
brand beeektfaist bacon, 30 to 35e;
backs, boneless, 32 to 36c.
• Cured ,meats—Long. deal- 'bacon, 13
to 20e; tclienr bellies, 18½ to 2O4c.
Lard—Pure tierease 131/2 to 14c;
tubs, 14 to 141/2e; 'pails, 141/2 to 15c;
prints, 161/2 to 17e. Shea -telling tierces,
13c; tubs, 137442c; pails, 14e; prints,
151/2o.
Choice heavy .steers $7.50 to $8. de
good, $7 to $7.50; ibuteher steers,
choice, $6.50 to. $7.25; do, good, $5.75
to $6.25; clamed., 85 to $6.50; do, cern.,
$4 to $5; butcher heifers, choice, $6.50
to $7; de, med., $5.50 to $6.50; a,
cone, $4 to $4.25; butcher cows, choice,
$5 to $6.50; do, med., $3.50 to $4.50;
canners and -cutters, $2.50 to $3; but-
cher ;bulls, good, $4.50 to $6; do., come
$3'te $4;* feeders, good, $5 to $6; do,
fair, $4 tb $5; stotkers, good, $4 to $5;
a, 'lair, $3 to $4;, milkers, $60 to $80;
springers. $70 to' $90; ',calves, choice.
$12 to $12.50; do, ailed.. $9.50 to, $10.50; I
do, came $6.150 to $7.50; lambs, choice
$11 to $12.50; do. cone, $6 to $7;, sheep,
choice, $5.50 to $6.50; do, geed, $4 to
$5. clice cern, $1.50 to $3- hogs fed
and watered, $12.25 to 312.50; do,
f.o.b., $11.50 to. $11.75; do, country
points, $11.20 to $11.50.
Moritreal. '
Oats, Can. Werst. No, 2 59 to 60e;
do, No. 3, 57 to 58c. Floure Man
Spring wheat pats., firsts. $7.50. Rolle'd
eats, bag of 90 Pos., $2.85 to $2.95.
Bran, $28.25. Shorts, $30:25. Hay,
epre,r, ton, car eieamexn3
lot,st,.$27tio$28, 6e.
Eggs, selected, 34 to 35e. Potatoes.
per bag, ear lots, $1.21 to $1.25.
Germans Buy British
Warships for Demolition
A despatch from Berlin nays :—A
big German firm, awarding to the
Adit Uloratendbla,tt, has purchased
about thirty British tv.a.eshies for de-
molition. Its object is to pro -vide raw
ma mat tea Gerrnae. 111 ustriee. The
price is reported to have been about
£500.0004 sterling'.
EdUcation Counts
"Mary, said tthe mistress of the
tame, when she discovered Gust on
the table "C ean write my name on ',"be
table."
-Yee, ma'ans, rept ed Mary, beaming,
always. 4,aid tiheTe is JaothiLg like
ducation."
THE CAMEL AND THE NEEDLE'S EYE "Because daddy punishes, me a great .
114=121.170.21...114.1.121103.6021.119913,11..itH
ene
a
—Breoklyn Eagle deal quicker than God does."
•
reat Life If Y
va.macewsegew2rwermara.s......m.,, •
,reeeesekei•re . See
wmaeres....*
s THe.
dukoSir VaNDeRfuti_
ViC1/4(CLOPeDi
TriKr•Ni:04116) EVeit.
PNW11.10)– -raLs
you tVegli"iiiR6
\Lc?')
(41,40*
IV IT CAPS
tL ivitt
ti4 vius5Pyio silos
10„,t, O'NE cYCLOCIA
MCIAMM4
Ntt, SVI
eAKE,I4
N'04.11 1:)0gT
EINT Llre.
e.-
0
ee"
t.rthnoedurebdhleeY:v t sboenelyemLnigiochusroitiw
nliir,,
Mr. Jobe. H. Root, 40'; Maple Aw
Handl ton, Otte, wilS'Iroubled
with bronchitif , and ,,had ;very bad
cough. • 1 had it so Iong r was begirainig
to get afraid of otheeedevelopment 9,
tried all kinds of cough remedies, but
without relief. I wasadvised, by a
friend, to try De. Wood's N'Orway- Pine
Syrup,- Ise 1,,got„ a hottle Iconvnicto
me to belieee tha,{, 1 1iad atftis t, *gotten
the right medielbe, 1 used set'eral bot-
tles andelle pfaeticuti? have
reeommencled 'at to 'Others smee, and
good results followed Ir is -certainly a
wonderful "Broneliial Cough Remedy,"
Price '35c. and 60e., a bottle. ,
Gerrnan Chaneellor
Proposes New Taxes
A despatch from Berlin says:
—The German. ;Chancellor, Dr.
Wirth, announced in the Re4ch-
stag on Thursday the Goveni-
ment's new taxation proposals.
They are:
First, a compulsory loan of a
billion marks gold, bearing 'in-
terest only after three years, in-
tended to govern the budget ex-
penditure for 1922, not relat2mg
to posts and railways; second,
abandonment of the tax on post-
war profits;, thira, a two per
cent. business tax; fourth; the
duty an coal raised to 40 per
cent., duty on sugar to.be fifty
marks per 100 kilograrnines.
.The taXation proposals of Dr.
Wirth wffl increase the property'
tax by 200 per cent.
British Columbia. Entitled
to.Another .Mernber
despattc-h heir. Ottawa, Ont.,
says:—CenenS returns 1.,0,1, British
Columbia ,.shetv.4a eepulatien of 523,-
369. This Will give an .intarease of only
one in the parliamentary representa-
tion of Inc province. As, the three
-Vancouver constituencies have an ate-
g-regate populatien el 176,447, Inc ad-
ditional member will probably be al-
lotted to that city.
Historic uilding
•
Gutted at trederEcton
A despatch from Fredericton, N.B.,
says:—The wooden 'onildirg at Inc
corner of Queen Street and Chancery
Lane, which bore a tablet showing tie
was the structure in -which the legis-
lature of New Brunswick iiret met in.
1?recteriction in 1788, was gutted by
fire 'rhurs,day afternoon. Explosion
cf an oil stove is said to have started
the blaze. •
Motor actors
in Royal, Artillery
A despatch from London ,slays:
--The London Daily News un-
derstands that the War Office is
substituting motor tractors for
horses in every branch of the
Royal Artillery. The enange wili
enable the Government to make
a ten per cent. reduction in the
personnel.
Nrci
CLMi WALK
T NEIGHBE)
10
• Shortness of breath is ohe of Inc'first.
symptoms of 'heart -trouble, and \thee
Inc heart beatameS 'affected , the nervec
work in aynipatliye and it is necessary
-
when the heart beconies 'weakened and
the terves unstrung, to.see that Inc heart
is regulated and stimulated and Inc
nerves strengthened and rested by
AUL URN'S
HEART AND PaIERVE PULLS
Miss Kate Casey, Lepreau, N.B.,
writes:—"I have ewe troubled with
vay heart and nerves for over five years.
I -could not tvalk over to my neighbor's
house without stopping to get my bfeath.
I went to my druggist and asked Van
for :Millenn's Heart and Nerve Mae
and es Boon as 1 had taken two boxes
got relief. I wish that anybody who
troubled Inc way 1 was wilt take MP-
biern'e Heart and Nerve Pills,"
• Price 50e. a box at all dealers, ot
mailed efiroet ee 0(C pt of price by
The 'Milberg.). Co 1,lunited Poi -onto,
Cet.