Daily British Whig (1850), 4 Dec 1923, p. 13

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1 dock Blood Bitters that can possibly pure and rich. 12 "FOR 15 YEARS WAS: TROUBLED WITH ECZEMA There is no other remedy like Bur- give 'such relief to all sufferers from sema, salt rheum and all other dis-; of the blood for the reason that old and well tried remedy goes to the seat of the trouble and bhi gh = completely and permanently drives diseases out of the system. by nsing the blood and making it : Mr. FP. W. H. Schultz, Pembroke, Ont., writes: -- 'Having been troubled With eczepia for fifteen years, during "Which time 1 tried everything 1 could think of, including doctors, but with ont getting anything to do me much! good I finally decided to take Bur- lock Blood Bitters, and I was certain- | surprised to find that two weeks' 'Sfter I had started to take it I was relieved of my trouble, That was months ago. and I have not had sign of it since. | surely wish to mk you for this wonderful medi- ne and strongiy recommend it to yone suffering from the same . 18 manufactured "FT. Mttburn Co; Ont. only by | Limited, Toron- ~~ | 1 FG Rickets"? 1 SCOTTS oP Food Unrivalled ' amount EMULSION | | | erating WELL IN | Our Glasses | By careful studying the expression' and facial contour of each patron, we furnish glasses that are attractive as | well as optically correct. Modern. ' " mess is & hobby with us and to this | we attribute our constantly growing | business. | R. ARTHEY, RO. VISION SPECIALISY 148 PRINCESS STREET Photie 2108, Open evenings by appointment. L [XK B es e--------_ * Dare to be true--nothing can ever | | | e---- , oul | sures | upon the Government. EETTERS | To The. Editor The Pulpwood Embargo. Annapolis Royal, N.8., Nov. 30.-- (To the Editor): If there is anyone in Canada so ignorant of the facts | suggest that it necessary make a careful f the situatiop with a view the chief Mat would even to he was study o ur forests mt be fu t r states bat this evident just what the Government had in mind in appointing the Royal! Pulp wood Commission, it will cause even the most credulous to wear a smile. Even the cynical comment of one of the ministers responsible for the appointment pect the Commission that do was "we 'do not g- to discover anythiug we not already know." This for political reasons Any figures with of wood being for home consumption as expressed by statistics published in the past, must be entirely ignor- ed inasmuch as they will have no bearing on the Every avail able man is being pressed gerviee of cutting pulpwood for cx onralission was appointed to the either regard cut or uture into the port, and the supply of labor is t only thing that ern the put just so long as the government allows thi: depletion r+ forest continue, witl gov out deplorable of resources to while the amount necessary to keep | wood-using industries op- increasing by leaps and our own bounds. The 18 that diately east without the embargo imme reason 1 stress its save enactment would to Canada 30,000.000 the loss of at trees an the of thr expenditure money, nually one dollar of and this is the vation measure whereby this happy result can be- obtained. When anyone goes so deliberately state that | centrating my campaign on this fac tor of the situation for private rea song, he what he knows to be | absolutely false This is only of cight other important that 1 have urgently pressed , I have also | personally expended thousands of dollars in the interests of forestry and fire protection in Canada, and have only recently secured the ser- | vices of one of the best foresters obtainable so that the province of only forest conser far as to am con- | says one | mea- | export, | { all THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG | Nova »cotia mignt have the benefit lof advice of a hignly trained n adamition to tnis 1 am preparea tnat Nova Scotra may be pruce and pine seed- charge While: 1 Lesitate to refer to my efforts io J this respect, I do so only tc refute {the despicable and' false statements by this correspondent. to the amount being exported from amount small, ac- correspondent, to use a to, read the expe having TS the farn supplied with supl 1 lings free of i made With 1 that an to this regard WoO is Canada cording sO nag the of woud X ported from Canada !s so trifiing why did the great American Pulp & Pape r Association - immediately summon all its members by wire to a meeting in New York at the first nifving mount figure I to announcement that tha Government 1 at Ottawa had passed a bill giving | ft 'power to prohibit the export of wood Why did they the members of this Association In or- raise a huge fund to com- bal this embargo? Why did they hastily send representatives to Ot- tawa to interview the Government? And why did the Government pass a secret Order-in-Council exempting contracts made previous to June first for ten years, a period hevond the life of our present wood Why did these American paper resis send one ts assess supply? Julp and af thelr leaders and his attendar Nova Scotia to attend the Commission, and r-on hearings of this Ly did they employ ablest legal talent in Canada to fol- low these hearings about? Why should it be necessary to send a lawyer from Montreal to Nova Sco- a lawyer generally credited some © tia, | with requiring a fee of $500 a day impor- | this Ameri- | this | an | appearing in court in tant cases? Why did can Association annouuce at Wirriealy called meeting thmf for embargo by Canada would ruin the | the why of 80 industry in again, pulp. and paper United States? IT all these things if the amount wood exported from Canada is small that It is necessary to use a decimal in naming the figure? ask The Government at Ottawa pro- | vided no high priced lawyer to look after the people's interest; no one appeared for them, and if any wit- ness darcd to have the temerity to suggest that an embargo would be a good thing Canada, was {immediately taken in band by one.or. the other of 'these ¥lawyers and brow-beaten and his evidence dis- in every way possible, any statements made by opposed for he credited the ses rn ne. | I | | ] Chis os th light, Let your living room glow with the sun by day and with Edison Mazpa Lamps at night. Of all your rooms it deserves the e Room That Light Made The old-fashioned parlor with the shades pulled down--what has become of it? It passed with the lamp, and the living room took its place, Parlors were gloomy --Iliving rooms glow. Folks "sat" in those days; now they play. And the magic that has wrought the change is the fnagic of good best light; for it is the room that light made. "The Edison Mazda which lamps the 1 zive the passing of the kerosene in berhood Agent Jour neigh ata cost hat f the'j to the embargo | vere pot questioned no matter how | ridiculous they might be. This | Commission right well be called a Commissioz for the Protection of | American Interests in Canada. What can the people hope for fror { such a Commission and such | Government? --FRANK J. D. Barnjum. | ' GRAY'S ELEGY. of | | a | Doubt Cast 6n Old Legend In Connec- | tion With Gen. Wolfe. Did - Wolfe recite Gray's while on his way to capture Quebec Elegy | 'in 1759? The question has been rais- { n ed again (n connection with the com- ments on the gift to the Canadian Government of the Monckton papers, { dealing with the taking of Quebec: Monckton was one of Wolfe's briga- | diers, and may have known import- | erto not made public. A few years ago Col. William published a brief paper in his. book, ant facts concerning the capture hith- | Wood, the eminent Quebec historian, | | "In the Heart of Old Caaada," en- | titled "Wolfe and Gray's Elegy." in which he sifted the evidence up to that time available. In short, takes the view that, in all probabll- | ity, Wolfe did recite this poem while | reconnoitring up the river on the day | previous to the battle, but rejects the idea that any such recitation was made during the attack itself. Wolfe, | he points out, was a striet disciplin- arian, and not the man who would break the first rule, which provides for silence during surprise attacks by night. I'he old legend that Wolfe recited the poem in the presence of "Mid- | shipman Robinson," who was steer- ing the first boat down to the final | attack on Quebec, is probably based on the presence in the party of John Robison (not Robinson), who had tome out to Quebec in 1759 as tutor to the ybung sop of Admiral! Knowles, and was "rated as a mid- shipman"" for purposes of the expe- dition. Col. Wood then quotes Sir Walter Scott as saying in his letter to Southey on September 22, 183¢, that he heard from Robison "at very first | hand" that Wolfe, after reciting the Elegy, declared he sooner would have written those lines than win the bat- | the 'we are to fight to-morrow mora- | og." Prof. Playfair, Robison's suc- | sketch of Robison, in the Trane- actions of the Royal Society of Edin- | burgh in 1815, refers to tLa story as one that Robison "used to tell" about Wolfe's saying he would rather have written the Elegy than "have the glory of beating the French to-mor- row." . Willlam Wailace Currie, in he | To make meals pleasanter-- Tr zee nothing quite like having enough silver- ware! It removes annoyance in serving the meal and makes the eating of it more agreeable And to try to get along without enough silverware For in 1847 Rogers Bros. Silver- plate you can provide all you need quite reasonably. Tea spoons in the beautiful Old Colony pattern, or in is guite unnecessary. any other, cost only $3.75 the half dozen. The other pieces--table knives and forks, dessert spoons, salad forks--are priced on the same moderate scale. A sensible scheme is to purchase now the pieces you need most, and to add others in the chosen pattern from time to time. In the newer patterns your dealer al- ways will be ready to supply your wants. that "1847 Rogers Bros." is made to last a lifetime. leaves nothing to be desired in durability or guarantee. cessor at Edinburgh University, In a | Send for "How Much Silverware," a new booklet which is a faithful guide to reasonable silverware purchases for families large and small. Meriden Britannia Co., Limited, Hamilton, On. the Life of his father, James Currie, | { quotes a letter written in 1804, say- ing he heard Robleon tell the story | himself only the week before. 'Mr. | Robison heard him (Wolfe) say: "I | would rather be the author of that | plece than beat the French to-mor- row'; and from his remark he (Robi- son) guessed that the attack was to be made the next day." Col. Wood concludes that the scene of the recitation of the Elegy was most likely a little to the asguth of mid-channel, a few cables above Sil- | lery Point.--Toronto Globe, White Desert. Hudson Bay is Canada's Mediter- | { ranean, large etiough to accomodate | space | all the British Isles with enough left over to sail around them without sighting | count of his twenty years there, a thousand miles from a post office, a | life of privation and glad and joy- ous struggle for existence, first, and | then for building up in the wilder- | ness a church and a leavened com- | munity. He says an Arctic missionary | | is expeeted to be able to extract | teeth, to set and even to amputate all the {lls to which the fiesh is heir. | f | limbs. and to prescribe remedies for | | The bishop himseit was a medical | i practitioner as well as a missionary, and he nad also to act as his own Joiner, builder, blacksmith, brick- land anywhere. | Bishop Lofthouse has written an ac- | | | Remember It OLD COLONY PATTERN 1847 ROGERS BROS, SILVERPLATE | MERIDEN BRELEANNIN CO) NE, in Si ha MITE] a Na Att Att Naina "i a dl ROGERS 1847 SILVERWARE FOR SALE BY Smith Bros. Jewelers Limited KING STREET COMPARE OUR VALUES. ~ NINA, i, A, SA A Pt, Mahood Bros. All patterns 1847 Rogers Silverware 2 ; layer, mason, or other skilled work- | | man. He was often called upon to | visit a sick Indian or Eskimo a hun- | dred miles away, which entailed a i long and trying walk on snowshoes { Weeks. The amatgur doctor had to 80 400 miles on snowshoes to con- | sult a physician about his wife and | | then find that she must make a 7,000 | { mile journey to England for surgical | treatment. | blows away. He goes kayaking, has contact with the polar bears, travels | | ascertain the possibilities of helping | a few Eskimo. Gift to Canada. Bir Leicester Harmsworth, in mem- Northeliffe, has presented the Cana dian Government with his collection of letters, diaries and manuscripts, including - the celebrated Monckton papers with Wolfe's original letters and orders. The Times in announcing the gift, describes it as of inestimable his- toric importance and a veritable treagure house of information on a | dramatic period io Canada's his- | tory. The Times says in this com- ! nection: | "The people of Canada are rightly | proud of their romantic history, im | which are blended the courage and | enterprise of two great nations. They assuredly wil? be grateful for the gift, which is not only a price- less record of the brave days that have gone, but a living to generations yet to come." Our Peaches In England. Interest has been aroused in the ' fruit trade in London, Eng., by the first ental, consignment of Ontario to that country by Niagara growers. About 1,400 cases of peaches Aftived Manchester and ht of the the Canadian Press that the ox in of shipping to Great ' Aequirement of Culture. Can culture be acquired without ! the taste for it? Many think that through environment | and an absence of many days or even | He builds a corrugated | iron church and a good share of it | a thousand miles or more on snow- | | shoes 'across the Northern Barrenm | Lands," he makes a hard jou.ney to | ory of his brother; the late Lord | children can grow up cultured simply oe 1 yy, "Uy, i a 7 Crore, AT HIS MOTHER'S SIDE, _ Taylor, Phillipsville, Closed His Store, Phillipsville, Nov., 30.--The re cent rain was much appreciated and the fine warm weather for this time of year. Relatives from here atten- ded the funeral of the late Bert Bullard; Plum Hollow, held on Tues. day last. Robert Taylor has clos- ed his store for the last few days and is at the bedside of his mother! who is very low. Miss Margaret Cawley 'has returned to her homo in Toledo after sepnding two weeks at C. J. Myers. Mr. and Mrs. Walier Crons, New Boyne, were at Robert Preston's re. cently. Miss Eva Halladay, Elgin, was in the village on Wednesday last. Prayer meeting was held by - Simple Way To + Take Off Fat There can be hotuiag Fmpler than ue day ous, weight te re- ust purch- TT pet for one dollar, over. Wollow dieting or t . Bat substantial food--be as lazy as you like and. keep best part Tablets is they is your absolute Purchase them from your Company. eis Woodward Ave. Pee troit, Mich. , qu NEE Il | { 11 I, My, 1/7 7} Y 1/7, 77 K %, W WO ST A TOBACCO ) & sr IMPERIAL TOBACCO COMPANY OF a sms lev. Mr. Sander.on on Wednesday 1. ght, Mrs, Peer 'and her mother have returned to their home after ejending sometime away. Several married couples attended the dance at Elgin under the auspices of the R. C. Church. The cheese factory is running about three days in the week now. Mrs. Irwin, aged mother of George! Irwin, is still confined to her room, | after a bad fall she received some time ago. C. J. Myors has Leen on his rounds Aas tax collector. ------------------ lt At Crow Lake. Crow Lake, Nov. 30.----On Thurs- day Nov. 22nd Rev. J. J. Cantrell, Sharbot Lake, gave an interesting lantern lecture in the church here. A number of the Crow Lake ladies | attended the quilting bee at Mrs. J. | A. Bedore's on Thursday. Mrs. T.} 0. McGill is spending a few weeks in Toronto and Guelph visiting friends. Ambrose Wiltsie Is visiting friends in Smith's Falls. John Knapp, Reafrew, is spending a few days at his home here. K. Gganhind, who has been working at Bigin, has finished and is now at his home here, Daniel and Duncan McEwen arrivee at Crow Lake enroule to their homes at Bolingbroke, having spent sev- eral months at Kipawa, Que. James McVeigh, now of Sharbot Lake, is em + r---- a iin em , In the neighborhood now loading a | car of wood. Rev. Mr Fairbairn, | Westport, is this week conducting | the Free Methodist revival services, | Maurice Anderson, who is attending { Sydenham high school, is spending | the week-end with his parents, Mr, and Mrs. W. D. Anderson. Several farmers ncar Athens sold [their turkeys to a New York state {buyer for the American Thanksgive ing markets, the purchase price be. ing forty cents per pound. | Mrs. Marshall and family, Plum | Hollow, have moved to Athens and taken up residence in the Jott Haw- {Kins property, -- {Corns Soften In Foot Bath Pain Stops, Misery Ends Quickly. -- Hot water extraction of corns and caliouses offers the only perfect way ty rid sourself of these painful trou. bles. Take JosPa minute or two and spread a few drops of Putnam's Pain-. - less Corn Extractor over the sensitive surface of the corn or callous, and the | paty is stopped at' ence. Then you will forge: your egorhs, because they will not padn. Elter You yse a hot foot bath for five or ten minutes. Corn crumbles up and drops off. It is & grand and glorious feeling t get from Putnam's Painless Corn Exe tractor. Jt costs but little, and iy sold by ali Ar

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