West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 24 Aug 1922, p. 6

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*\ During the past year big game huntâ€" ers shot 1,016 moose, 68 caribou, 108 mountain sheep, 47 mountain goat, and 1,120 deer in the Province of Alâ€" berta, according to the report of the chief game warden. There were 5,209 Heensed hunters. Owing to the lack of snow in the early part of the seaâ€" son the hunting was not as good as it| would otherwise have beem | A despatch from Ottawa says:â€" Under the authority of the Militia Act, and in response to a further reâ€" quisition from the officer commanding the district, the Department of Milâ€" itia is sending 500 additional troops to the disturbed mining areas in Nova Scotia. This will make approximateâ€" ly 1,000 members cf the permanent militia which have been sent to the strike area in addition to the nonâ€" permanent militia, which are availâ€" able at the ordors of the district: officer. f The Chinese use shark fins for makâ€" ing a thick, gelatinous soup. "We can make just as much money unwatering mines as digging eoal." Pressed for a definite reply in view of the fact that Number 10 had alâ€" ready been abandoned finally, the Secâ€" retary said: Asked what the miners intended to do if the operators held out until the mines had been hopelessly destroyed, Mr. McLachlan said they. would not be destroyed. "Only those men who just marched byâ€"referring to the Great War Veteransâ€"miner paradeâ€" can prevent their destruction though; nobody else will do it." 1 to operate maintenance machinery there. One company official stated that if the present state of affairs conâ€" tinued for three more days every mine would be rendered unproductive for six months or more. Meanwhile water is pouring stoadâ€" ily into the pits of all the mines in the Glace Bay area, while officials at the Scotia Colliery are being allowed On Thursday afterncoon thousands of striking miners and members of the Great War Veterans‘ Asscciation parâ€" aded from the United Mine Workers headquarters at Glace Bay to No. 2 colliery at New Aberdeen, where the soldiers from Halifax are encamped. There they met a new Waterford conâ€" tingent of veterans, the majority of whom were United Mine Workers, and to the music of four bands the two bodies marched back to South Athletic Field, where a mass meeting was held. ( No general outbreak of disorders had occurred at an early hour Thursâ€" day evening. According to Secretary McLachlan there is not likely to be any. "It takes two to make a quarâ€" rel," he said, "and unless the company brings in strikebreakers there will be no trouble." ‘ ment that the company could not yield to the demands of the strikers, even though refusal meant destruction to all the collicties. A despatch from Sydney, N.S., says:â€"Interviews with the heads of the disputing factions of the Nova Seotia coal strike on Thursday yielded a mass of conflicting testimony. Disâ€" trict Secretary J. B. McLachian of the United Mine Workers definitely stated that the miners would stick to their decision even if it meant starving, while H. J. ‘McCanp, Assistant Genâ€" eral Manager of the Dominion Coal Company, gave a no less firm stateâ€" Owners Prefer Ruin to Yieldâ€" NOVA SCOTIA MINES FLOOD; MINERS FIRM soft coal as was done in 1902. The Fuel Controller approved and suggestâ€" ed that the Federal authorities be Although no concrete action grew out of the conference, those present learned a good deal about the situaâ€" tion as it affects the province generâ€" ally, and the individual consumer in particular. From one source came the suggestion that the Dominion Governâ€" ment should take the duty off Welsh' The gist of the Controller‘s advice was as follows: Do not rely on Amâ€" erican anthracite. If you can get Amâ€" erican bituminous coal, get it, but you will be well advised to look elsewhere for a substitute. Anticipate that you will have to find some substitute for hard coal, at least until well on into December, and if buying soft coal, buy from 15 to 20 per cent. of your normal year‘s supply. by the Fuel Controller. minous coal, either admiralty or smokeless, was the measure advised afternoon. Purchase of Welsh bituâ€" ing, While Strikers Declare They Will Starve First. REPRESENTATIVES OF Controller Ellis Outlined Policy Regarding Allotment and in matndasnctn? «m irabtieiieâ€"i>>< T m % rvation â€" Suggested Rer?0v2l of Duty on Weish Coal and Reduced TransPOrtation Rates. "G‘;'eat Britain, which hes taken over 7}00 pounds this year. Shipments of > «d have also been made to Australia, a-w Zesland, Tasmania, the different pr:vimes of Canada, as we‘ll as to asâ€" pofiations or ir'zdivid'u.al-s_ in the United‘ g.ates, France, Belgium, Sweden, y rway, Finland and Peru. | Distribution of the seeds of native _ â€"niferous trees from the Federal ”;ed extracting plant at New Westâ€" minster. B.C., has been quite active 1bely. The largest purchaser of this gacd4 is the Forcstry Commission of _ fown in twonty years from 18,553 to 5"22,904. an average incroase of about 19,000 a year. During the same perâ€" ic}d tl)e rural population has been inâ€" !Statisties show that the urban popuâ€" ; jtion in the Province of Alberta has Hinslier, The products of the company | ill be potato flour, potato starch and | Pxtrine, and it expects to be ready | L* operations by October 1st, employâ€" ; Jg a force of twenty men. | j Great Relief. Lady (engaging a maid)â€""Was your 1 st mistress satisfied with you*" Maidâ€"*"Well, mum, she said sho was ';Ary pleased when I left." |\The surplus potatoes grown in the rsser Valley, Britich Columbia, will > utilized by a new company, the f.( ‘fe Starch Products, Ltd., which is ptabliching a plant in South Westâ€" ii.us‘:w. The p‘r“:d-ucts of the company Lord Northcliffc r’he great British newspaper magnate, i'ho succumbed to the illness which ought him back to England from iritzerland a short time ago. were aimed directly at impof; ta‘tions from Canada. oas ;A despatch from Washingâ€" on says:â€"Retaliatory proviâ€" zons in the paragraph that p}rovidesx for free wood pulp apd newsprint were eliminated py the United States Senate qubring the tariff debate on ursday. |These proposed that, where a country or Province imposed apy restrictions on the exporâ€" ;3 tion of such materials to the nited States, a duty of 10 per egnt. should be imposed upon ;piportations from such counâ€" t$’ or Province. These retaliatory provisions year Retaliatiqn Against Canada ‘ Revoked by U.S. ‘t’}“‘!' committee would undertake to ;'f“:ila'tate transshipment at Montreal. | w. C. Cox, of Toronto, declared that {, itre was actually at the present time & surplus of American bituminous cod’l in Ontario, and that no difficulty .5 being experienced in getting ordâ€" ep; from American firms filled for ts her large amounts. The better prhdes were not obtainable, he said, py" every day offers were being reâ€" cefved for delivery of soft coal of a _i andard almost identical with that of't the Welish fuel. The Toronto dealâ€" Ap. brophesied that the price of Amâ€" prican anthracite, following the close of the strike, would be somewhere in {pe neighborhood of twenty dollars ..\ _.r ton, laid down in Toronto. U memorialiud to that !Northern Ontat.rio r / car‘t the suggestion tha | mq"t should be asked to 1__ _ juce the freight rates | “"'u also met with gene | ;l;hbemg pointed out th } p“:s of hard wood were | dhtributicn throughout I po;fions of Ontario, if !* zes could be lowered pu, the fac P. A. Magrath, chairman of the FJieral Advisory Fuel Committee, and p McCourt, another member of the ’;pe body, outlined the steps taken by the Dominion authoritiee, and stz?t‘d that should Ontario decide to .. Pchase large amounts of Weish coal,‘ : memorialized to that end. From lNortbern Ontario â€" representatives | car‘t the suggestion that the Governâ€" | mq"t should be asked to take steps to _ uce the freight rates on hard wood. m"'k also met with general approval, ;l;hbeing pointed out that large supâ€" pli” of hard wood were available for dhtfibuticn throughout the central po;fions of Ontario, if the freight ufe'wu.ldbelowm'ed to a point wpere cuch action would be economicâ€" ng at an average rate of 15,500 The high cost of living is having the effect of discouraging polygamy in Zululand. Such is the report of the Danish author, Olaf Linck, who has soâ€"journed a year in that country, A good wife costs at present eight oxen,‘ and the market is so firm that many fathers sell their daughters on install-l ments. The man pays one ox when the woman arrives, and one weekly. When the purchaser does not pay the installments punctualiy the father| takes his daughter back. The husâ€"| bands find this on the whole to their advantage. If a man is dissatisfied | with his wife after a woek or two of wedlock he simply declines to pay. Wls sow esnyy e Woodstock, Ont.â€"Operations have commenced at the plant of the Oxford Milk Products, Limited. They have an aM modern sanitary equipment, includâ€" ing mechanical refrigeration and storâ€" age. It is the intention of the comâ€" pany at first to manufacture whole milk powder and skiim milk powder and have sweet cream for sale. Later Quebec, Que.â€"The establishment of American branch factories in Canada continues this year to a greater extent than ever. Among the American inâ€" dustries tolocate in Canada within the past few months have been a copperJ and brass concern at Toronto, cutlery manufacturers at Hamilton and Welâ€" land, electric bulbs at Oshawa, hosiery at Guelph, automobile plants at Sarâ€" nia and Windsor, silk mills at Cowansâ€" ville, auto tire plant at Hamilton, silk dyeing and finishing at Drummondâ€" ville, and textile dyeing at St. Johns. St. John, N.B.â€"The July customs receipts at the port of St. John were the largest ever collected in the hisâ€" tory of the port, according to a stateâ€" ment issued by the local customs house. In the month just â€" passed $820,604 was collected, an increase of $85,469 over July, 1921. According to one of the customs officials business of every kind is brightening and colâ€" lections in every sphere of business activity are good. l Halifax, N.S.â€"Several thousand harvesters have left the Maritime Provinces for the western grain fields. Included in the excursions leaving from Maritime points are a number of new arrivals from England making their way straight to the West in time for the harvest season. 1 St. John‘s, NAd.â€"Threeâ€"quarters of a million tons of ore are to be deâ€" livered to Rotterdam from Wabana for transâ€"shipment via canals into Gerâ€" many. _ Twelve steamers of 11,000 tons of ore a month are to sail to Rotterdam between now and Decemâ€" ber. Overseas shipments of iron ore from Wabana have been practically nil since 1914. The new contracts with German agencies will bring about a revival of preâ€"war prospér{i;’ i;\'the Wabana district. High Cost of Polygamy. @eflar Falckr Canada From Coast to Coast BROADCASTING "A LA BOCHE" TORONTO "Another Wileless Wonder?" es L’;n‘d, take my thanks for little bits of cheer, Which make the land of friendship very dear! The lending of a book; some violets + found, Afild posted to me from a garden ground ; T*w birthday grecting, just a line or 4 two Repminding faith that many hearts are f true. For these, take thanks, 0 Lord; such 1 bits of cheer |‘ MJ:ake my loved land of friendship very . | dear. | Mtyose Jaw, Vidora and Dodsland the 1921 figures for rye are being doubled and at many other points increases of GrTE‘o 10 per cent. are shown. Not a sitgle point in the province has reâ€" pt‘)'F‘ted any reduction in the rye acreâ€" Sqskatchewan, according to a governâ€" ment report. The 1921 acreage seeded to: rye in the Maryficld district has beien quadrupled this year, and three times last year‘s acreage is seeded to ry‘e in the Swift Current district. At they will make buttermilk powder, ’cream powder and ice cream mix powâ€" 'der. The plant can handle about 60,â€" 060 pounds of milk for making powder :and there is a large creamery equipâ€" ‘mrnt to handle churning cream. _ \Winnipeg, Man.â€"Complete with all modern conveniences Manitoba‘s new $1,000,000 school for the deaf will be formally opened in September. _ A theatre for moving pictures and pan-; tomimic teaching is also a feature of | the school. For boy pupils there is a printing shop, while girls are taught drivssâ€"making and other household‘ arts. Stand mirrors for "lip" and "speech" reading are also installed. ‘Regina, Sask.â€"There are very large increases in the acreage sown to rye 2t‘ some points in the Province of My Thanks. â€"Passing Show, London â€"Lillian Gard Wt al | _ Mariica flovurâ€"1st pat:.. in jute |sacks, $7.80 ter bHl.; 2nd =â€"t3., $7.30. | _ Checssâ€"New, large, 1 u% to 19¢; {twins, 19 to 19%c; trisets, 20 to |20%4ec. O%d, large, 25¢; twins, 24 to |24%c. Stiltns, 25¢. Extra old, large, |26 to 27¢c. Old Stiltons, 24c. ‘ | _ Butierâ€"Finest creamery prints, 38 ’to 39¢; ordinary creamery prints, 34 t S6e; No. 2 creamery, 32 to 34c. Dairy, 29 to 31c. Cooking, P1c. Wls O i dn ns BP is BBvin ) smcsA We s in Drecsed poultryâ€"Spring chickens, 35 to 40¢; recsters, 23¢; fowl, 24 to 27¢; ducklings, 30c; turkeys, 35 to 400. Live polutryâ€"Spring chickens, 30¢; reosters, 17 to 20¢; fowl, 20 to 22¢; ducklings, 30¢c; turkeys, 30 to 35¢. Margarineâ€"20 to 22¢. Eggsâ€"No. 1, candled, 28 to 29¢; zelects, 82 to 38¢c; cartons, 31 to 36¢, Bearsâ€"Canadian, handâ€"picked, bus., $4.25; primes, $3.75 to $3.90. l Meaple productsâ€"Syrap, por imp.| !:‘a!..' $2.20; per 5 imp. gals, $2.10; m o c n n on ham . | _ Baled hayâ€"Track, Toronto, per ton, | extra No. 2, $22 to $23; mixed, $18 to |$19; clover, $14 to $18. | _ Strawâ€"Car lots, per ton, track, Toâ€" | ronto, $12 to $13. |__ Ontario wheatâ€"New Ontario wheat, | No. 2, 95¢ to $1, at outside points. [ Ontario No. 2 white oatsâ€"New. 34 Ontario cornâ€"Nominal. Ontario flourâ€"1st pats.. in jute cacks, 93‘s, $6.80 per bbl.; 2nd pats. (bakers), $6.30. Straights in bulk, seaboard, $4.50. x; to Barleyâ€"No. 3 extra, test 47 lbs. or better, 55 to 58¢, according to freights outside. Buckwheatâ€"Nominal. Ryeâ€"No. 2, 65 to 70c. , MilHeedâ€"Del. _ Montreal freight, bags included: bran, per ton, $22 to $23; shorts, per ton, $24 to $25; good feed flour, $1.70 to $1.80. 1 Torontc. i Manitoba wheatâ€"No. 1 Northern, $1.27; No. 2 Northern, $1.19; No. 3 Northern, $1.14. Manitoba oatsâ€"Nominal. Manitoba barkeyâ€"Nominal. All the above track, Bay ports. ‘ American cornâ€"No. 2 yellow, 80¢c; No. 3 yellow, 79¢, all rail. ; Trinity Sunday was definitely cstabâ€" lished in 1384. Arthur Griffith Head of the Dail Eireann and foundâ€" er of the Sinn Fein, died at his resiâ€" dence near Dublin of influenza. He was described as the Father of the Sinn Fein and was regarded as the principal intellectual force in it. Drought conditions have inâ€" creased the menace to alarmâ€" ing proportions, and on Thursâ€" day night more than 2,000 were fighting the fires in variâ€" ous sections. Northâ€"West Minnesota A despatch from Duluth says:â€"Six known dead, hunâ€" dreds homeless, at least two towns wiped out and a dozen others in imminent danger, was the apparent toll of a series of forest fires which swept Northâ€"Western Minneâ€" sota on Thursday, causing the w o rs t conflagration since 1918, when four hundred perâ€" sons lost their lives. ic o o w n n Heopude Aupust s a dull month comâ€" Eneaet . o M is dieations of TolThIn® Proticrn (act merdally. and (the operation, of the i y increasing law has not yet acquired its "swing. enues, and the success of the n°W, _ Simuitaneously customs receipts are stamp taxes as money makers is beâ€" going up. Those for July showed an ing demonstrated early. Although the increase of over $3,000,000 compared tax has been in operation only a fortâ€" with the corresponding month, while night, revenue from this source has the August increase promises to be gone as high as $1,500,000 in a day. more marked again. â€" The estimate This figure is inordinate and is atâ€" will be exceeded. tributaible to firms or companies pty-! Likewise, in regard to income and ing in one day for the embossing of, business profits revenue it is apparent their cheques for a month, thus obâ€" that the estimate of $60,000,000 is viating the necessity of affixing well within the mark. From this stamps. An ordinary day‘s meifptl:m $51,000,000 has already been from the stamp tax, however, are‘ collected in four months, the proporâ€" around half a million. * tion being $45,000,000 from income‘ How it works out is exemplified by| and $6,000,000 from business profits. comparing a single day in July with The latter tax has expired and collecâ€" one in August. On July 15, befm!tiomm in the nature of old taxes, . the new lovy came into effect, the re-! If things keep up at the present ceipts were around $280,000. On the j rate the financial showing at the end corresponding day of August they‘ of the year will be exceedingly favorâ€" amounted to $590,000. It will not be able, especially if expenditures are surprising if the month‘s revenue from| kept in check and the railway shortâ€" this source aggregates $15,000,000, age within bounds. l Disastrous Fire Sweeps BIG INCREASE IN FEDERAL REVENUES UNDER OPERATION OF NEW STAMP TAXES 0€ Weekly Market Report ma nps _ #iM. ... .l oH o PP AAOUS ch‘se lots, $10; com. lambe, $8.50; straight lots of culls, $7 ; sheep, fli!" good lots, $4; com., $3; hoge, $18. ~ Canners, $1 per ewtb.: â€" ;25;’33. 338;' med. calves, ';7;me.,‘ ) and u : m cholsso l-.')ts.p ein. plfinmbt'_i.;b Q!Q: ‘ts 0 PEC s onl E 15%c. _ Butter, choicest 30 %c. Epos smlantad an. VATSâ€"â€" Can. West. No. 2, 58 to 59¢; do, No. 3, 51 to 52¢. Flou;;slgmitoh spring wheat pats., finrsts, $7.80, Rolled oats, bag of 90 lbs., $2.20 to $3.30. Branâ€"$25.25, Shorts, $27.50, Hay â€"No. 2, per ton, car lots, $25, Cheese, ~fingst enthorne ITku _ 2. $12.75. »4 to $4.25; milkers, *s'ébvv LC amutd { 2 CC ConlUsic a i i to g80; the course * lion and ch 1:ll)(‘).lrtl‘g‘::'l gzo dtz $90; calves, o«'hgic(l:& 'l"::ne wd Irish afairs. com., $3 to $7; spr 1ed., $7 to $8: do,| Valera and 4: long periods wic, $12;" sheep, choice 100 % $11.50 to | Irish Pollins were the forc ; sheep, choice, $5.50 to $6; do,‘ figures, but the Grife:y â€" zf;xi. $3.50 to $4.50; do, com. "1 eo”m was powerful aiw riffith ; 807 yeartings, choice, 86 to $7, do, Four, Nt hnd been the stendy x : fed and wateregs‘, Stabilizi i steady $13.50 to ;,375."%‘;, a watered, ing force in Irc] y: ; ftro .ob., $12.75 u,!"‘l a time f reland,. $13; do, country points, $1230‘ i) @mew weak "Pt" th* heart of C: o 7 in 09 eny mcaud rolls, 28 to 31c¢; cottage rolis, 35 to 88¢; breakfast bacon, 32 to 85¢c; speâ€" cial brand breakfast bacon, 41 to 43¢; backs, boneless, 39 to 43¢. Honeyâ€"60â€"1b. tins, 13 to 13%¢ per Ib.; 5â€"2%â€"lb. tins, 14% to 15%¢ per lb.; Ontario comb honey, per doz. $4 to $4.50. Potatoesâ€"New Ontarios, $1 to $1.15. Smoked meatsâ€"Hams, med., 34 to 86& oggked ham, 48 to 52¢c; smoked Montreal, Oatsâ€"â€" Can. West. No Fond mother (in shop) â€" "Is this baby‘s bonnet well made?" Salesladyâ€""Well made, madam? It will last your baby a lifetime." The Ministry is endeavoring to make offers attractive to the thouâ€" sands of war fliers, who are expected to welcome the chance to get into the air again without binding themselves to the army. The reserve organization will train exâ€"pilots in the newest types of maâ€" chines, giving them every opportunity for keeping their hand in without seriously interfering with their civilâ€" ian occupation. It will be known offiâ€" cially as the territorial air force. The men composing it will report quarterâ€" ly, getiing twelve hours of fiying in the course of a year with full pay for days of training, besides an annual grant of £30. _A special course il“' planned to build up the technical force,, which will have a fortnight of study | each year. A mechanics‘ reserve of| war veterans also is provided for thnt! there may be no shortage of personnel in the event of sudden emergency. l The Ministry pufposes further to‘ grant between 2,000 and 3,000 tempoâ€", rary commissions to R. A. F. olficeu‘ not wishing to remain in the service but willing to continue for three yecrs.! They will be paid the same as regular| officers and upon retiring automtfiml-* ly.will pass into the reserve. The pro-i duction of aircraft will be such as to permit placing a great fleet in the air| in a few hours‘ notice. | which probably will be inaugurated early next month, offers inducements to demobilized fliers, and whi‘e it will not establish as many active squadâ€" rons as the French army has, it will isure a formidable force equal to any emergency. Unofficial circles regard this as the answer to widespread censure of Great Britain‘s neglect of aviation. The Air Ministry is mapping out an extensive program for building up a reserve air force which, it claims, will place the potential strength of British aviation beyond parallel in the world, says a London despatch. The scheme, If things keep up at the present rate the financial showing at the end of the year will be exceedingly favorâ€" able, especially if expenditures are kept in check and the railway shortâ€" with prospects of further increases, because August is a dull month comâ€" mervciaily, and the operation of the law has not yet acquired its "swing." Simuiltaneously customs receipts are woings up. Those for July showed an Reserve Air Force for Briâ€" tain‘s Defense. Specimen of French Humor. , selected, 38c. Z9 SnbtatatW‘t 4fi 4 Th c oi 12 110 » $7 to $7.50; do, med., ; do, com., $4.50 t> $5; choice, $5 to $6; do, 'Si; canners and cuttors. 15% to creamery, Grith:, 3 1 °. ° Sommon senge Homfilnfi&m_m ud Stabiliper. This man of exquisite tm : Tretand when she noeded m084, world, Ineland needs« «. °C " th This ipq °V Needs common Sthse ; CUT HCnF Ho ’Dil%n E:J__De Valera the treaty a,., 2 °h stood f25 for the treaty and for the clections of June that revealed the Republican weakness and gave the Free State its mandate to Suppress the Republicar hm & ore l*n else in the world, Inreland nacil C Irish figures the course of Irich a C200 Couee PCaTi ily upon him, More than man in Ire‘and, he had . Angloâ€"Irish pact. ~He had grip of Robort Barton, Fr ders, Charles Burgoss anq Childers is in Jail, Burge and De Valera is "on the G!‘i.ffi':ll" dfl.lfll MaAY ranca His death wi}] hurt and n er the Free State that leane ily upon him, More than ’ Arthur Griffith died in Dublin listâ€" 4 ening to the faint and far echoes of ‘the gunfire of a dying civil war. He L’hadcomeavery!munyin his fifty | years, Twentyâ€"five years back his son, | one of the bitterest political pens sinse ]' Dean Swift, was ge‘ting into its | swing. He was editing the United | Irishman and vision‘ng Ireland 2s a !nttion. This dark «tt‘e man, one of | the dark Celts with a strain of Welsh | in him, was beginning the carsor that made him the org@nizer <‘~ "S:cm Fein." He knew English pricons and what it meant to lie *out in the hills." H‘e q‘d head of the Dail Birsaas and "‘onm _ armâ€"mâ€"arm with Gaelic / and Middleâ€"Age mysticiems, H grown to be the broin of the nation as Michael Collins haq to be its swordâ€"arm. Opt of the of six years of rebollion, amb arson and murder he was bpi order, | When a man decides what sort of life ‘he is to lead, posterity is concerned, | and the world is better or worse for | theâ€" choice he makes. | _ The quictest of lives cannot wholly | escape decisions wherecon a great doal | depends. A human being goes neither Irig'ht nor wrong alone; he inspires or disheartens others whom ke may | never know; he lifts up or he drags |\ down when he is unaware. No bloâ€" ’mpher can tell, in the case of a great, | good man, the most valuable result of 'tnch a life in the lives remote or nem that he has quickened to be better _ _A man sits in his prison cell and wonders how he came there. It is not the man he is now who put him behind the bars; it is a man he abhore and repudiates, one who long ago beâ€" trayed and undid him, when the evii side of our common human nature rose §up suddenly and overcame the good. !lt took two minutes to do the wrong thing; it has taken ten years for the I?expin‘tion. Why? He asks the ridd‘e of his own universe and has no ansâ€" wer. Al he knows is he made a misâ€" take. HMe cannot retrace the false step. But he need not take the same step again. He can go the other way after this, and a right kind of penal system will fortify him in the purâ€" pose of so doing. than they were; as none can estimate, for a bad man, the subtle poison that hhftbdfindtocreepintheveimd those that shall come after him, 'thn a man decides what sort of life is one of mismating. An infatuation led to the lxu]-ive error, which has made the time since then a period of penance and repentance. Of ways. â€" Wise after the event, we recegnize now, and too late, the irreâ€" deemable folly. Very oficn that folly evil is liable to continue as he always has chosen to do and to be. As we review our own careors we think we see what foc‘s we were now and then, and we would give anything if we could travel back over the years to that spot where once we halted and considered at the divergence of the Eoc / Peat NRERIOIE OeE o e success. A great many choose and cw.ndm-nce-ful. Life that fivnulnmoldwices.ho;iv- us repeated chances. He who has chosen wrong and gone wrong may choose again and go right. Yeteveqdeutnuufionoftheput le-Nuin-onedechUindelfl‘ble im press on our present. The man who repeatedly has been kind and genâ€" erous has established a habit not likely to be shattered; the man whose thuuohts and acts were consstently “m,bwmu. decision to go to the right or to the left years ago. Ampenonwhuhlufiend' ously feels that the choice of a voca» tion makes a big difference, and it does. But it does not follow that the first choice offers the final hope of O‘Connor The course of life is a : motives, What we are now, 7 o y Tiree: in Irelund.. 1 time when the heart of Cl weak and he seemed ce L. m Cl id The Brain of Ireland. Life‘s Choices. may cause ney confusion and rich afainrs, long periods w . Pmoel resdy to a and Burgess n Griffith stood fa~ & .% C i nail done, P hd come to ci. and De \ urgess is the run bhad hn eland can least ites raths ay be ad come on D» rem=st influâ€" at There ream wi ho« n twa i and ns C he 4 es Av. W Cana d from t bec pr the eame 1 ol CBU t 8 W of be Cana exter more place l au on to«lay ther a the the beer & emin« mann times they I provil tion EuCC@ up h izing i1 very cultu and Ing t grea 4¢ varli ber‘i prox gion the attri ple â€" who limit ih U who. ther their Stat bom We s un lish build mind gens that befo for 1 It rate ing inc ir No U W be ADS B Ad M In

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