Les archives de la ville de Dryden

Observer and Star, 29 May 1919, page 2

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Worn out, ou lack. the ener rk us of old. scay--nerves that are star ¢c want of good; rich blood. It's blood nourishment that vital- es the nerves. Your blood is thin, eak, watery. It's filled with pois- 1s that ang on because your kid~ ys don't filter properly. See here, fix up your Iddneys, put bw life in your liver, 'and you 1 feel ¢ new in a short time. To do this. "you must use Dr. atilton's Pills) they make life look ight and pleasant Toa they re- orc harmony and vigor to the or- ans that need repair. Dr. Hamilton's Pills warm the ood and "fill. 'it. with: nutriment at's bound te build you up, that's ire to life your weakness, that in- wriably does make joyous, robust ood ET : Think of it, youth oath Tots ; nerve---foree, plenty of red blood rging airounh your veins--isn't gis ason enough for yous using amilton's ills? y all dealers, ot to nerve. ed for | Sold in Z5c Doses 'anada Fifty Years Hence 73 Gilby bert Parker Says "Has Great Fature It may be said that prophecy on ich a matter is all guesswork, So r as population is concerned that ay be so, and yet we can make a rofitable guesSion. even that. Taking e_cxperience of the United States, swell as of Canada, the immigration 1d the increase of births over deaths ould warrant us in believing that ¢ praqulation of Canada in 1968 will t be Totes than twenty-five millions least, andy as for industrial, com- ¢reial, agrs "cultural and other in- rests, there ican be no doubt of the amense strides that she will make. In agricultig the production has Dominion ready been €B,inious and in fifty]. rs from NOW she will fecd herself the United States (for it must be en thi the United States as aircady tak, up all her agricul- ural land; wit} little fo spare, while yjundreds © eho sands of American armesseitled in Canada during the nash OW vears--42, 918 "entered 05) and send all that is needed i ngland, and export to other "coun- ies as well. Te The prairie that was once called "a edge of the great American desert" ow yields immense crops, and the ew area opened up by the Grand runk Pacific Railway stretches wid-~ - still the area of production. Speaking of the United States, a 'ew York newspaper of high stand- g said a few years ago: : "The old figure used to be of merica as a bounteous toaf-giver eding the world. That picture of er is fading before our eyes. A great hange has come. It is not. ] at the tide "of production slackens, is that consumption grows even ore rapidly. It is not wholly due to smallish = yield that we exported ore fruits to Great Britain than of heat to all the world last year, we iipped more value of cotton cloth an of flour" Why, Alberta iy Sacketcnewia ge ¢ cach five times as large as the ate of New York; as Ontaria, a lepdid agricultural = province, is rger than the states of Maine, New ampshire, Pennsylvania, South Car- ina, Florida and Ohio combined. Manitoba = alone has a greater heat-growing capacity "than the hole 46, 000,000 acres under cultiva- on in the United States, and -Cana-| , has over 230,000,000 acres of the est agricultural land in the world ill to be settled. ; Industrially one has only to think what Canada has produced in the ay of munitions since the war be- n, and of the water power and the ectrical power she has. Niagara. one glves' immense industrial ryan as well as lighting for the ties of Ontario; : and © Shawinigan ves Montreal nd district vast. in- istrial force, while the falls formed the waters of Take Superior flow- 3 into the St. Marie Rives at Sault . Marie "offer mense opportuni- s. 'Shawinigan will be the centre | great commercial' 'enterprise. Pulp ills. and aluminum 'works have urished from the. Shawinigan DO} and this will extend, and has nded, to other ind " Think of the mineral resour ce of Ee mada--good coal -- east and west, on and steel works on the Atlantic ast and at Sault St. Marie, nickel ines at Sudbary which Bobs capi- ------ ize Granalated Eyelids, %i} Sore Eyes, Eyes inflamed | Sun, Dast and Wind ie *relieved by Murine." Try it in your Eyesand in} by' E OUR rine Ri At Four Droge) ) * Eye emedy AL) gH of PAE 2 Ltd Remedy Co. +. Chicage a ) Salve, in Tubes 25e. kMurtre. tye. "twas "alone > |shorts are purchasable on the WV: need. worry. about that! 2. |drawn, and that troops being mobi- 'resolution adopted called for a west- \ ern Canada labor 'convention, to take in all labor organizations west of the : =| both sides of a (uesiion is dishonest. tal has developed, + coke furnaces at Comox, and iron furnaces at y Hui), and elsewhere. : | Jot Arranged by Authorities w Kaiser "Pur One Over" : Government a The Hague, - A strong defence of 3 the position of the Netherlands in re-| gard to the former emperor of Ger- many was made. by M. Hemmskerk, minister of justice, the man who is confronted with one of 'the knottiest| international problems i in history. The responsible for the in the event of a formal demand for Wil- helm's: delivery to the allied powers, outlined the probable proceedings. of the Dutch government in such-a case. 'His statements were forceful, much impressed throughout the talk, "About the Dutch authorities hav- ing arranged through the kaiser's aids for his flight to our country," by he added, latighing, "the kaiser put onc over on us. Every true Dutchman deplores his presence here and would It would be a good thing if a St. are there any St. Helenas in these days of submarines and airplanes?" Prince Albert in Germany Is Now on Headquarters Canadian Corps Ottawa. -- The following ° aetiele. written by Frel James, official cor- respondent with the Canadian corps, has been received from the overseas. military authorities: "Bonn, Germany. -= Prince Albert, the second son of His Majesty King George V., is now on the Seadquart, ers staff of the Canadian corps." Although the prince has been with! the corps a short time only, it nes been long enough to show that, like} his brother, the Prince of Wales, who was on the Canadian staff for some time, he, too, is a manly democratic youth, possessing a similar 'eagerness to learn of men and n|things. = Prince Albert, wid is tventy-chrec years of age, has been several months with the Royal Air Force, where he taff of not one whit in personal courage and aggressiveness of any of those quali-, ties recognized as common to all ranks of the intrepid personnel. W ith ' the appointment of Prince Albert fo! the Canadian corps _there are two members of the royal family with the! Canadians, Prince Arthur of Con- naught having returned to his old love after his return from his visit to Japan several weeks age, Feed Now Plentiful Situation as Regards Mill Feed, Com, Concentrates. and Screenings. : 0. K. : * "The feed situation in Canada is now excellent, declared an official of the feed division of the live stock branch at Ottawa. "There is plenty of feed offering, both Canadian and imported. There is plenty of corn, plenty of concentrates, plenty of. screenings. The Dominion govern- ment have a reserve of 100,000 bush- els of corn offering at $1.40 f.o.b. Tif- fin, Ont., f.0.b. Toronto, and we fob. Mont real. wp here seems to o Be a Pig remy of flaxseed in thes country for the oil crushers are all busy now. Bran and open market today in straight carload or without the war-time necessity 'buying flotir as well as mill feed. We have 15,000 tons of screenings at Fort William and we are offering No. 4 yellow corn 'throughout the 'West-| ern provinces on a basis of $1. 40 a] bushel, f.0.b. Minneapolis. : plentiful coarse grain crop throughout the greater part of the 'country, farm- ers having sown mixed barley and oats for feed purposes to a larger ex- tent than usual. So with with 'government reserves and the com- mercial offerings there is no danger of fecd shortage in Canada. Nobody Ask Demobilization fe The Winnipeg Trades and Labor congress, at its meeting recently, pas- sed a resolution demanding that Can- adian 'troops now in Siberia and western Russia be immediately with- lized in Canada to invade Russia be immediately 'demobilized. Another Great Lakes. a The man who will not investigate J ~--Lincoln. : St. on Dutch minister, whose department will be} disposition of | 'Holland's notorious refugee clear | and concise and your eotressondenty them, THE "said | thie minister, "I tell you that not one of our officials, either civilian or mil- | itary, bad a hand in it. To use slang," much prefer him out of the country. | Helena could be found for him, but ey proper ty. -iworth $500. 'headquarters fully demonstrated that he is lacking : [than vague |He is a treasury of physical, - [preparing him to put these into jing 'up -mecaey for him, 25,000 tons of linseed oil. real in 200 pound sacks at $6. a ton! - There is al the | i | cording to a Riga despatch 3 "probably visit the United States late] . | in July or early in Angust, This ansy | Noma Canada "Be Pr Prepare Investment in Son vol fave 31, 000 na Percheron colt and you are perfecting plans to get principal and interest out of him. You have $500 in a Hereford calf and you aim to make him a paying You have $100 in a young Berkshire and you give him generous care and proper feeds to secure re- turns from his breeding. But did you ever stop to cast up the investment you have made in that growing son of yours. 'He 'has two Fonds that in the tables of accident insurance are each Hc has two arms and two legs that on the same basis of computation are worth $1,000 each, He has two eyes and two ears that, according to the ratings of the courts are worth a couple of thousand each. He has tractable nerves, and perfect digestion and ability to sleep that put 123). "Montreal Baily Stae. \ MONTREAL, WEDNESDAY, COTOBER 2, 1918 WANT, from {4.-Col. Senior Chaplain | received by friends Montreal. and chewing tobacco." | WHAT SOLDIERS |» A suggestion $0 thosa: who-are sending gifts io soldieys overseas comes (Canon) Frederick Ceorge Scott, of the ~ First Division, in a cable He says "Tha men want playing cards in SUNDAY SCHOOL. LESSON {LESS ON FOR JANUARY 9--THE | PASSOVER 7 1. The Passover Institutéd (12:1- 1. The time set (v. 2). With the in-| stitution of the Passover came a change in the order of time. The cominon year was rolling on a. usual, but with reference to his chosen peo- ple the order is interrupted and ev- erything is 'made to date from this. This signifies that redemption is the first step in real life. "Oll things have passed away, all things have be- come new." Before this the man was {dead in trespass and sin; now he has before redemption counts for naught. The world thinks that real life ends when one accepts Christ, but this is a grave mistake. It! is the beginning real life. : 2. The lamb set apart (v. 3). This previous setting apart of the lamb typifies the Toreotdiiation {pi up among millionaires, would ez bring a hundred thousand. He h "bounding spirits and fresh ambiiic and eager hopes and rosy beliefs (life and men that arc beyond all price. He possesses hereditary traits --the sturdy Derseverance of your mother that 'are ineradicable and immensely valuable, What are you doing to get 'best out of him? Chores, yes. strap, maybe. "A patch of Anything more? What are you do- 1 ,ing to brighten his inner world? What. pictures are you hanging daily in the| gallery of his memory? How are you fitting him to realize his ambitions, Is make of his hopes something more than rainbow dreams and of his here- ditary impulses something better |: 'tastes and tendencies; mental how are you re- munerative circulation? You are lay-| but the best legacy parents can leave their child- ren is the remembrance of an honest (father and a devoutly hopeful mother. 'Whatever may be the state of your bank account, you are rich if you DOssess a boy. And you are equally Irich. if your "boy chances to be a girl. : the The garden. | and emotional values; 'Gaining Fresh Victories | Bolsheviki. Forces are Well Equipped for Warfare - = London, -- With the Bolsheviki armies winning. additional victories received from several sources' cating a let down of allied and Ger- man résistance to them, According to the Express, of | British light cruiser squadron will be | withdrawn from the Esthonian coast 'within a few days because of danger from the ice. "The squadron, how- | ever, will patrol the Baltic as far as Danzig, » new position several kilometers from | Riga, abandoning -a thousand Ger- man' soldiers in that city, according to a Berlin despatch. ~The despatch said that the German cabinet had con- ferred with the "German central coun- cil of Soviets regarding the situation on the Russian frontier. Well equipped Bolsheviki oes have captured Walk and Wenden, ac- 'to the Berlin Vossische Zeitung. This des provisions, and are refusing to fight, declaring they wish to return home immediately. Soldiers defending the railway are said to be deserting, ren- 'man forees: 'impossible. w------ hd will Visit United States Paris. -- President Poincare wilt] nouncement was 'made by the presi- : the ground of peace. practically 'everywhere, reports were | ~indi-| the | German troops have retreated to a 2 patch said the German troops in the| Baltic provinces are practically out of | dering" orderly Na retirement. of the Ger- 2 Tepre: entative and per- fect.» 2» Gas 3. The amb was killed " he whole congregation (v. 6). oe shows hat it was not for the indi- vidual on Y, but for the entire assem- bly. ie setting apart of the lamb was not sufficient, it must be killed, for ¢ 'without ther shedding of blood there is no remission of sins." ~ The lamb might have been tied to the door of the Israelites that night, but. there would have been no salvation, 'notwithstanding its perfection. . Had Christ's spotless life continued till the present time and his matchless teach- ing gone on without interruption, not a single soul would have been savea, for "LE xcept a corn of wheat fall into: the ground and die it abideth alone" : (John 12: 124). 7 : © 4. The blood of the slain Tomb; 'was to be placed upon the sideposts and; 'lintels of the deor (v. 7). It was not sprinkled upon the threshold, as it must not be trampled under foot (He- brews 10:29). © When the destroyer passed through the land he passed) over the houses where the door posts were sprinkled with blood. This blood was the evidence that a substitute had beeri offered for them. They could rest absolutely secure, because the y {matter had been settled according to divine arrangement. The blood was 'The assur 'ance 'port outside of arisen io walk in newness of life. All! is not wien you feel your sins are [| pardoned, but "when I see the blood I will pass over you." _ 5, Isracl feeding upon the lamb (v 8-10). This denotes fellowship. Judg:- ment must precede feasting. The eat- ing of unleavened bread signifies that no sin is connected or allowed in fel- lowship with Christ. All who have entered into the power of the cross will put away sin, 6. They ate the passover ready for action (v. 11), The loins being girt about, betokens separation from sin and preparation an d readiness for 'service, The feet beingiahod indicates to leave the land: their willingness The staff in the hand indicates their nature as pilgrims leaning upon a sup- themselves. They were to leave behind them the place of death and darkness and march to- ward the promised land. 7. The uncircumcised denied parti- cipation in the feast (v, 43-49). Cir- cumcision was typical of regenera tion. The significance of the. ment is that only those £ 1ce of the Passover It was a memorial instiution, call- ing to mind the deliverance of the | Israelites from Egyptian bondage-- behalf, God's interposition on their freeing them from their oppression. This was to be taught to their child-| ren when they came into the land, from generation to gencration. 3. The Awful Judgment (12: 29, 30). That night the throug. a Egypt and sle in every home where not found. An awit from Egypt that 4, The Great Delive 36). ; - : So mighty. was Pharaoh called for this sf Moses in the 'night and requested him to be zone ih his flocks and bends. ort < Work of Swsizalion 'Troops Melbourne. -- The minister of de- fence "publishes a report on the work of the Australian troops in France from March 26 to October 5 last. The report says that the Australians took 28,665 prisoners, 333 guns, thousands of machine guns, mortars and vehicles .and millions of rounds of ammunition. They also captured 116 toh and villages, apart from many fortified farms, mills and woods and they re- leased 251 square miles of French soil The five Australian divisions at the front never than >| 100,000 men, numbered more settlements Swoth -1it will beat fast for sever [then slow, then st destroyer passed that, 11 could .not sleep many pb A Tokio, = The Japan®e "business world closed the year 1918 in a weak and uncertain mood but without re- cording any serious mishaps. In some | cases the partial or complete closing of factories has thrown out of em: ployment in Tokio 10,0000 persons. The foreign commerce of the year was poor though the imports showed va a slight increase. 'There was a de- gud crease in cargo capacity and freight rates were unsettled, The stock: market held firm. The rice _merket had a boom, though the raw silk mar- ket was poor. The demand for gen- eral commodities was weaker, while the prices of foodstuffs were hig her. Bankers were cauti g 1 vancing mon "sources helped : More Hidtory written, / Heart Paipitated ~ Could Count Every Beat ade than ever is When the hod begins to ali Milbuens He cart and will give prompt and per lief to all sufferers from weakness or nerve 'derangen Mss. Walter G writes: --"1 had be doctors told me 1 did not help me w ights, my hear palpitated $0, and 1 could count beat. I used to have such dizzy spells | would have to go to bed. I was no able to do any work for eight mont A cousin of mine had taken Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills and tol : 'what they had done for her.- I eight boxes of them, and now I 'am - able to help every day with the wor 1 am so thankful to tell others what they have done for me, so that they may try this great and wonderfu remedy. I hope: this may prove goo to some one who i is suffering he way x did." = Milburn's. Heart and Norv Pills are 50c a box at all dealers; or maile direct on receipt of price by The T Milburn Co, Limited, Toronto, Ont ~ bad air or germs. It Para-Sani will save ~ Cheaper and more = 'your Dealer. = Ident "himself to the Assoclated Press, or vi in sheets, and the ~ PARA-SANI WRAPPER : Heavy, waxed paper in Household Rolls, with handsome oak Roller ~ Box. Keeps sandwiches, cakes, cheese and butter fresh and wholesome. There is no messy mass of pickles and cake, tomato juice and sand. wiches at the picnic if each article is wrapped in Para-Sani. Para-Sani is also good for household uses. moist until eaten. It protects meat and butter from 1s good for lining cake tins or for polishing irons, > many times its cost by. preventing waste. = Pars-Sent sent proves ~- gt of price or COD. : - convenient ink ward paper] is of better Quality, "mn. APPLEFORD COUNTER cnx BOOK CO, 7s MeDermot Ave. E. . : It keeps bread fresh and _ WINNIPEG, MAN : contamination of flies, ;

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