West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 26 Jan 1933, p. 6

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

t CANADA w ‘The Royal Bank of Canada ‘The president and the general manâ€" ager of the Royal Bank lock forward to the year ahead with something like optimism, both with regard to their own institution and the Dominion. As Sir Herbert Holt puts it;: "Prophesy continues to be dangerous. . .. My feeling is that present indications point to the initiation of a substantial recovery in 1933, if a reasonable deâ€" gres of international common sense and coâ€"operation can be assured."â€" Montreal Daily Star. The same bag of sugar, 3 packages of shredded wheat, 2 of corn flakes, 1 pound of tea, 2 pounds of coffee, 3 cans of salmon, 1 jar of pickles, 1 jar of olives, 3 cans of tomatoes, 2 cans of corn, 1 package meal, 1 package cake flour, 100 pounds flour, 2 pack:â€" ages Pep, 10 bars of soap, 3 cans of cleaner, 1 can of baking powder, 1 jar of jam, 1 box macaroni, 2 cans of pumpkin, 4 bottles ketchup. 3 packâ€" eges of corn starch, 2 pounds of cheese, 2 packages of oatmeal, 2 cans spaghetti." % A bag of sugar costing $17.75 in 1919 was used as a basis of the disâ€" play, Alongside this bag was placed the goods which the store was preâ€" pared to sell for $17.75. A grocery firm in Dutton, Ont., has contrasted the buying power of the dollar in a most effective way in a window display, The comparison is made between the prices of toâ€"day and those of a few years ago. Truly the cost of Iving has shrunk remarkably.â€"Sault Ste. Marie Star. Japan defies the authority of the 1;; League,. She threatens to withdraw | con from membership. No one desires | tof that, yet worse things might happou. a | It we must choose between condoning | pej; Japanese action and losing Japau as a $4,2 member of the League of Nations, the | jar; choice is absolutely clear, J&ApRAROCIO| goc "boyalty" in the sense in whid we|g1,; have oxperienced it is no compoenshtâ€"1931;, Few Bright Spots It cannot truthfully be said that 1922 was a good year for Canada but the Dominion did remarkably well despite the worldâ€"wide impasse. Here are a few facts from which may be extractâ€" ed a liboral measure of comfort. Last year Canada retained world leaderâ€" ship in the export of wheat, printing paper, asbestos; was second in gold, platinum, and cobalt; was third in wheat flour; fourth in automobiles and wood pulp; fifth in rubber tires. Canâ€" ada concluded the year with a favorâ€" able trade balance of $50,000,000 conâ€" trasted with an unfavorable balance of $10,000,000 in 1931..â€"Kitchener Daily Record. Publishers Feel Stress The Oshawa Daily . Times _ has changed from daily publicaton to three times a week and will be issued Tuesâ€" days, Thursdays and Saturdays; and one d@oes not need to read the publishâ€" er‘s announcement to realize that the change has come about after every other possible means of retrenchment has been tried. It is pointed out that the Times started publication as a daily in 1925 and at no time since that time have any dividends been taken out of the business. It has been a problem for many publishers to continue putting out & product of high calibre with diminishâ€" ing revenues; but it may fairly be said that the quality of the average newsâ€" papor still is unimpaired and that when everything is theaper than ever before, there still is nothing so cheap or necessary as your daily newspaper. â€"Niagara Falls Review. Inviting Enough We wonder why so many people apâ€" poear anxious to spend the Winters in Florida. The Garden of Canada is suroly inviting enough for anyone, and it‘s only about ten weeks to the first day of Spring.â€"St. Catharines Standâ€" Empire Migration Migration schemes to place British unemployed in unpopulated areas in different parts of the Empire through State aid have been tried out, but on the whola their history has not been on« of outstanding success. Any sacheme of the kind would depend upâ€" on the full cooperation of the Doâ€" minions and (Colonies with the Mothâ€" erland, and at present the temper in Canada, at least, is against further imâ€" migration becauso of the oxisting widespread unemployment. â€" Calgary Herald. THE EMPIRE Prices of Farm Produce There can be no effective riseo in prices until there is an expansion in the purchasing power of the people of this country, The cuts in wages must be restored. The unemployed must be put to â€"work. Farmers who live near industrial districts need little convincing that the inability of people to buy agricultural produce is the cause of their own difficulties. Facts Btare them in the face overy day.â€" London Daily Herald. Living Costs Have Shrunk Japan and the League tion for the loss of all respect and all authority.â€"Manchester Guardian. World Conference‘s Opportunity ‘ I believe the road back to freer trade lies largely through such (re-! gional) agreements, if, as in the reâ€" cent convention between Belgium, Holland, and Luxembourg, they inâ€" volve no increase against any counâ€" try, secure a substantial and progresâ€" sive reciprocal reduction and are open, on similar terms, to other countries. For the rest, the most useful action the approaching World Economic Conâ€" ference could take would be to lay down principles in the light of which each country would undertake to reâ€" examine its own tariff system The most important of these would be a clear explanation and explicit conâ€" demnation of the "compensatory" or miscalled "scientific‘ principle of making a tariff equal to the difference of costs at home and abroad. Trade is based upon exactly the difference, and the compensation for the difference by tariff is destructive of the very foundation upon which trade rests.â€" Sir Arthur Salter in The Yale Review, Enough to go Round If we could only see it, for the first time in history the astounding adâ€" vance of productive machinery and swift transport make it possible for everyone to be rich beyond the bounds of Utopian imagination, Men are not worse or much better than they used to be, but they are the creatures of habit and tradition and fa" altogethor to enlarge their loyalties to fit a larger world. When we can at last be rich by sharing, why should we perâ€" petuate the greedy habits we leaint when there was not enough to go rourd?â€"New Satesman and Nation. Watch Germany There is no longer anything to dread from Prussia‘s naval yards, nor her armament firms. The challenge now is from her factory chimneys,~ her modern industrial equipment, and her potential financial position. The Gerâ€" mans vowed when they lost the war that they would win the peace. There are significant signs thi:; the vow will be keptâ€"London Daily Express, Social Trends The report of Presiqent Hoover‘s Committee on Social Trends suggests strongly that the ills of the nation are to be laid at the door of the social theorists rather than of the business man. The business me has done his job pretty well. Those who like to call themselves social engineersâ€"thé politicians and the social workers, among others â€" have fallen down. America has lacked not mechanical but social invention, the committee finds. Our industries push ahead, but our social mechanisms are laggard, and the substitutes which are attemptâ€" ed often prove even less serviceable than the institutions they replaced. Yet the specialists who have failed in their selfâ€"appointed tasks insist on dictating to the very men who have succeeded in theirs. â€" Chicago Triâ€" buns. Ottawa.â€" The World Economic Conference likely will be held next Spring or early in the Summer in London, it was learned on good auâ€" thority here last week. No definite decision, though, has been made. The matter is one to be arranged shortly by the council of the League of Nations, Stock Invades Hollywood Speaking of courage, a real oldâ€"fasâ€" hioned stock company has crept into Hollywood. Something of a feat, in view of the fact that not a single other legitimate production graces the downtown theatres. It is a genuine relic from the past, even to the anteâ€" diluvian heroine with the rural accent who proves to be an opera singer in disguise. Even to the company manâ€" ager who steps out after the second curtain to announce next week‘s atâ€" tractionâ€"San Francisco Argonaut. World Economic Parley ___ To Be Held This Spring Prime Minister R. B. Bennett pro-l bably will head the Canadian deleâ€" gation. Naming of the personnel of the Dominion delegates, however, would .be somewhat premature at the moment. The general tariff policy on which an economic committse is working includes economics, quotas and proâ€" hibitions, â€" The monetary eubâ€"comâ€" mittee is devoting its preparatory work to monetary and economic poliâ€" cles, involving price levels, export restrictions and movement of capiâ€" tal from one country to another. $1,267,969 in 2930 to $1,11%,635 in Ottawa.â€"Madame and the young ladies did not stint themselves in 1931 where toilet preparations were concerned. The output of Canada‘s tollet preparations in that year made a large increase, the factory value being $5,946,292, as compared with $4,206,513 in 1930. Incidentally the Feminine Canada Spent $5,9146,292 On Cosmetics UNITED STATTS Much Prized Scholarship Won By Surrey Girl Latin and Greek, for whick the Craven scholarship is awarded, are not Miss Flower‘s only linguistic acâ€" complishment. _ She speaks French and German and is a Celtic scholar. The girl, Miss Barbara Flower, daughter of Dr. Robin Flower, the poet and deputyâ€"keeper of Manuscripts at the British Museum, is the first of her sex to win the prize. Two previous holders of the Craven Scholarship were Lord Asquith and his son Raymond. Beam Tells Course "I am at Lady Margaret Hall," sho said, "where the Latin is optional. in the examination you have a piece of English poetry to translate and it is most difficult at times, but to me it is always of interest." A 20â€"yearâ€"old Croydon, Surrey, Eng: land, girl has won Oxford‘s most sought after award â€" the Craven Scholarship. Dr. Flower said his daughter went to Croydon High School and won a scholarship to Oxford just over a year This is done through atmospherics caused by light flashes originating in the storms, most of which pass over the Tasman Sea. This is of great meâ€" teorological importance owing to New Zealand‘s isolation, and the absence of outside information to assist in weaâ€" ther forecasts. Adelaide S. Aust,. â€" Interviewed when passing through this city on his way to Cambridge University, having won a British Empire Carnegie Felâ€" lowship, Prof. Perey W. Burbidge, proâ€" fessor of physics in the Auckland. Uniâ€" versity, related, with great interest to natural scientists, how in New Zeaâ€" land meteorologists were now able to detect cyclonic disturbances 1,090 miles away without the aid of other stations. Can‘t Sell Eggs Before 7 a.m. in Berlin Berlinâ€"â€"He who goes shipping at 6.30 a.m. may buy rolls and milk for breakfast. But if he wants eggs, he must wait until 7 o‘clock. The instrument used, said Profesâ€" sor Burbidge, consists of two loop aerials which intercept the storm sigâ€" nals, and transfer them to a special instrument where they are made to focus a beam of light on a screen. The direction of the beam‘s movement indicates the course, and intenst=s the static disturbances. A Berlin police regulation, which rigidly controls the hours for sale of all retail goods, has recently been changed to permit the sale of milk oneâ€"half hour before the regular opening time. Baked goods had previously been permitted to be sold at 6.30 o‘clock. Dairy products such as butter and eggs cannot. however, be sold until 7 a‘clock, _ _ _ _ The Craven scholarship is worth £40 (about $160) a year for two years. Majorâ€"General Yuji Takanami, one of the Japantse military leaders Shanhaikwan just before the Japanese began their latest drive which w rules the easiern front. Steam shovels making way for the $32,077,000 bridge Francisco.~ The job will take At least four/years. of Distant Storms Golden Gate to Be Spanned Infantile Mortality In Quebec Decreases Quebec.â€"A decrease of 47.4 in inâ€" fantile mortality rates in the Proâ€" vince of Quebec has been recorded since 1926, when the Provincial Health Department commenced keepâ€" ing vital statistics, and health units wer first established in the Province, for whereas the infantile mortality ~aie in 1926 was 142.0, it dropped to 94.6 for the first 10 months o‘ 1932. While a total of 68,480 infantile deaths have been. registerea since January 1, 1926, the numbers have gradually decreased with each year. The 1926 total of 11,666 decreased to 10,730 the following year, and 10,432 in 1928. The next year saw a greater drop to 9,810, but 1930 recorded a slight increase, 10,045 being recorded while the lowest rete was shown in 1981, when the infantile mortality total was 9,443. For the first ten months of 1932 the number was only 6,445, or a little over 50 per ce at, of the 1926 figure for the same period. The infantile mortality rate shows that for 1926 i‘ was 142.0, for 1927 129.3, for 1928 123.6, for 1929 120.5, for 1930 120.1, for 1981 112; and for the first ten months of 1939 94.6, this being the first time that the rate ever « opped below the 100 mark. If conditions were as hopeless 2s the pessimists sometimes paint them, we should still have our honor; and that could not be taken from us. If it were true that the battle is lost, we should have the great consolation of dying with faces toward the foe, and with scorn of fear. The pessimâ€" ism in which a great deal of modern art is steeped is the cursing of those who cannot look fate in the face. The air of the last two decades has been filled with the eyes of the panicâ€" stricken, the defeated, the disheartenâ€" ed. "The old sources of hope are lost," they tell us; "the old leaders are shown to have been mistaken; the old faiths were lies; the oldâ€"enthusiâ€" asms are dead; we are defeated and the cause is lost." Well, if there are those who believe all this, let them go to the rear in silence, and give tkeir places to men who have courage, even if they have lost hope. Mother â€" "Does your husband make a report to you of how*ehe spends his time?" it Sinoâ€"Japanese Warâ€"Still Waging Daughterâ€""Yes, but he censors To a Pessimist Japantse military leaders in northern China, surveys their latest drive which would indicate that Mars still which will spar the Golden Gate at San Pomologists See Challenge in Loss of Popularity of Fruit Canadians Ate Less Apples in ‘32 Montreal.â€"The per capita consumpâ€" tion of apples in Canada has decreased 10 per cent. during the past five years, the average being 29.7 pounds petr person per annum as compared with 34 pounds which was the per capila consumption in the five years from 1921â€"25; but the consumption of oranges, bananas and other fruits has considerably increased, and this was regarded by apple growers as a chalâ€" lenge to them to increase the public demand for their fruit, J. L. Webster of Macdonald College, reported at the meeting of the Pomological Society of Quebec here. Dr. J. E. Lattimer, professor of agriâ€" cultural economics at Macdonald Colâ€" lege, declared that taking the country generally the fruit grower occupied one of the bright spots in Canadian agâ€" riculture. He maintained that growâ€" ers should take a keener interest in the British market which they had neglected for the past ten years. W. B. Gornall of the Fruit Branch, Ottawa, followed with an analysis of the British market and ruling prices, Canada‘s interest in the British apple market was between September and April and during that time it imported an average of 3,523,977 barrels of apâ€" ples, of which the United State: supâ€" plied 65.35 per cent. up to last year. With the new trade agreement it is anticipated this figure would be cut in half. Better Handling Some of the many problems that have to be solved by appleâ€"growers of the province in order to bring their fruit to the market in an attractive unâ€" blemished condition were discussed by ove 200 apple growers at the meeting. The improved shipping conditions on the Welland ship canal, says the Bureau report, showed their effect and traffic increased from 7,273,886 tons in 1931 to 8,535,641 tons, a high record for the canal, W.x:' vious record * for 1928. x /d Ottawa.â€"Traffic through Canadian canals in 1932 increased 10 per cent over the previous year, the Dominâ€" ion Bureau of Statistics reports. The total was 17,955,700 tons, an increase of 1,766,600 tons. Among the questions discussed was that of pollinationâ€"the selection of the proper varieties of trees necessary to ensure proper pollination and conâ€" sequent fruit production, From the Central Experimental Farm it Ottawa came H. Hill, of the Department of Agriculture, who went into an analysis of the polienizing values of old and new varieties of apples that have been produced in the experimental plots. Canal Traffic Gains ____._] Death in the Dark TORONTO Electrical News, a trade. jOUNU@! serving the electrical industry, bas launched a campaign for better highâ€" way lighting. Campaigns are not un usual in these days of business depresâ€" sion. But in this particular instance the jJournal in question advances facts and figures which are well worthy of public attention. In presenting an imâ€" posing â€"array . of official statistics it argues that lack of highway lighting is a chief cause of motor accidents and automobile killings. "The main outstanding conclusion," says the paper, "is that, although a smaller percentage> of automobiles travel at night, more than 40 per cent. of accidents oceur then. For the twoâ€" year period ending August, 1932, there was a total of 17,581 acidents in On« tario.. Of that number 10,067 occurred in daylight, 1,$78 at dusk, 6,095 at night, ‘Of these 8°3 were Tatal, 47 per gent; of which occurred after dark. Vâ€"X"ta_l;le supplied by the Ontario partment of Highways gives~the lowing information: Hour of Occurrence 12 to 1 a.m. .. 1 to 6 a.m. ... +6 to 7 a.m. ... 7 to 8 a.m. .> 8 to 9 a.m. ... 9 to 10 a.m. ....> 10 to 11 a.m. ... 11 to 12 a.m. ..~> 12 to 1 p.m. ..> 1 to 2 pm. ... 2 to 3 pm. ... 3 to 4 p.m. ... 4 to 5 p.m. ... 5 to 6 p.m. ... § to <Tâ€"p.M. ... 7 to 8 p.m. ... 8 to 9 p.m. . 9 to 10 p.m. ... 10 to 11 p.m. . 11 to 12 p.m. ... Not stated ............. Hamburg. â€" German shipâ€"owning concerns are thinning out their fleets, sending vessels upward of 12 years old, a total tonnage of roughly 200,â€" 000, to the scrapping yards. Many of the older ships bear names that were well known on the North and South Atlantic and Far Easiern passenger trade routes. The Hamburgâ€"American Line is scrapping about 100,000 tons, includâ€" ingâ€"the 10,000 ship ~General Belâ€" grano. ‘TOLLLS . 11â€" .cruesevcsssoem ATJDBL . 98 In order to understand the true significance of the bove compilation it would be necessary to have figures showing density of traffic at the hours indicated. But the relationship of inâ€" adequate lighting to highway acei dents is selfâ€"evident. Incidentally, it would be interesting to know to what an extent the drinkâ€" ing driver is responsible for the acciâ€" dents after midnight. The proportion of accidents between midnight and dawn as shown in the tabl. above, apâ€" pears to demand some other explanaâ€" tion than insufticient electric illuminaâ€" tion. In any event, the Electrical News has rendered a real service in presentâ€" ing the results of this research to the public. The North German Lloyd is disâ€" carding 14 bottoms, including the 8000â€"9000â€"ton vessels Derflinger, Seyâ€" dlitz and Luitzow, The Hamburgâ€"Sudamerika Line is breaking up the Argentina, Villaâ€" garcia, Santa Fe, Bilbao and Santa Tereca. The Hansa Line is scrap ping several of its. old 5000â€"ton freighters. Following an old custom, G. W,. N. Ramsay, wearing the uniform of the Atholl Highlanders, was rowed across the tidal waters of Loch Etive from Achnacloich to Argylshire, Scotland, to meet his bride, Miss Maryel Campâ€" bellâ€"Preston. ‘The wedding was then solemnized in the historic Archattan priory at Archattan, before clan chiefs and guests representative of many Highland families. The wedâ€" ding reception was held in the old priory refectory, where King Robert the Bruce, held the last Scottish parliament. paraliel opportunity does not even have to knock, it is sought. Word received here says provincial interâ€" ests are installing creamery machinâ€" ery in a plant with a capacity of 200,000 pounds to operate on a strictâ€" ly cash basis. Farmers of the area will take the milk and cream to the pligut and will be paid in cash for it, A fiour mill was installed last year in the Fort St. John district on a coâ€"operative basis to handle the farmers‘ grain without the long haul out to existing mills and the return journey to the area where the flour London.â€"The following are the Board of Trade figures for the month of December: Total imports, £60, €30,000; exports of British products, £32,140,000; reâ€"oxports, £4,130,000; total exports, £36,570,000; excess of Groom Rowed to Wedding Basis in Far North Victoria. â€" North of the 53rd Obsolete Ships Scrapped British Trade Figures 1 &.DM. «4ssec6}+ § &D .ces 1 AAB. .e.ccawe}s 8 &.BM. ...cucsmn 9 410. . mm I BWR evcmsecmesss § . L WHHI Sssesrssccsievers a trade journal Total Fatal _ AcciCents $H 1,049 69 155 12 251 15 482 38 452 23 127 34 799 42 886 43 786 38 892 36 1,254 1,691 1,310 1,297 1,217 997 872 836 105 ¢“f| Members of the Austrian footbal ducts, team which played against England 0,000; in London recently have been decor sss of ated by President Miklas for "thoi + | awsricer to the Austsian republic." _ 69 12 15 38 23 34 42 43 38 36 63 64 16 82 86 84 57 54 47 folâ€" "The last object of any and all dis ) ease germ# is to kill a person or ever to make him sick, because that des ltroy- the source of food of germs, Killing off people is to disease germt what the willful exhaustion of agricul tural land would be to humans,. Eithet would be a case of killing the goose¢ that lays the golden egg. "Man must therefore blame himsell for a very important part in the causes of every epidemic. He uot only provides the soil upon which the epl emics grow but he cultivates the soil in the sense that he allows it to ve come especially favorable for the rapid multiplicatior of germs. # Poor Rsristance of Human Race Aftords Fertile Field And if you are hospitable to germs and offer them the food they like, you must expect to have bromchitis, of possibly pneumonia or meningtis. In fact, we are assured by The I1 linois Health Messenger (Springfield), epidemics are rarely sudden outbursts that come without warning. Neither do they result alone from the activity of germs. People must share with bacteria the responsibility not only for epidemic diseases but likewise fo; such endemic infoctons as tubercul osis. Says The Messenger: For Germs If you take in thieves as guests, your property will Mbly be stolen. Of course there is such a thing a a healthy person with relatively high resistance being overwhelmed in an attack by a multiplicity of germs. "This danger is minimized, however, by quarantine, but it sometimes maâ€" terializes by contact with carriers, ambulatory patients and in homes in which children or even adults come into contact with tuberculous patients, "Evidence indicates, however, that a decrease in physical resistance is on the whole a more important factor than exposure to large dosage of germs. It may also happen when a person drinks or eats highly contaminated water or food. Colds and pneumonia are particu larly good illustrations of discuses which await the invitation of humans before making an attack,. Germs of these diseases are almost universally present nearly all the time. "By breathing polluted air, by eatâ€" ing a onesided and undernourishing diet, by living for most of the winter in what to all practical purposes is & hotâ€"house, by changing suddenly from high and dry inside temperatures to low, moist outside temperatures, by drinking too much and walking too lit tle, and by indulging too much in other ways the desire ior comfort and pleasure without compensating adâ€" justments, the body is converted inte an incubator for disecse germs, "These illustrations show ho much each community and each individua! can decide for it or himsel{ how many and how extensive will be the eptâ€" demic outbreaks of this winter. "The question as to whether thit or that person will be sick is largoly a question of whether or not the bod7 will be able to resist an attack,. That is a thing over which we have a large degree of mastery if we are clevet enough to recognize the situation and are able to adjust ourselves accord: ingly. "Epidemic menigitis is another dis ease that usually requires an invita tion before establishing itself in the body. A cold or a spree or a conâ€" valescence or an indigestion or an un dernourished condition or a pair of bad tonsils, coupled with crowding too many people into one room, are conditions which nearly always pre cede an attack of epidemic menin gitis. Carriers of the germs are numâ€" erous enough to make exposure rather common. "As to smallpox and diphtheria, every man, woman and child can take his or her choice in the risk of these infections. "Exposure to infection is almost cer tain for everybody. "The most serious aspect of unemâ€" ployment distress is the possible fâ€" fects on health, particularly of child: ren. _ Undernourishment, overcrowdâ€" ing of living<quarters and a shortage of clothing may lead not alone t# sharp excesses of various communio abfe diseases within the immediate future but to serious health problemé such as tuberculosis, lowered vitality, reduced mental alertness, and an in crease in nervous instability througmt out the life of the generation affected. Health problems like these, because the influence on mental capacity, may become determining factors in the political and economic course of a n# "Every form of epidemic disoase which the winter will bring is now prevalent, Paris.â€"More thun _ $42,000,000 000,000 was spent by France this year on a national highway works program including maintenance and repairs to provincial and national roads, Paris streets and construction of buildings and bridges. tion." Medals for Football Team Layout of $42,000,000 For Epidemics ing Capacit» Reserv« m'._â€"(]pwnrds of | ”. of buffalo meat 1 the Canadian market autumn as a result of * some 1, 200 animals fror Buffalo National Park a bers of Canada‘s grert was made necessary b Uimitations of the imme serve at Wainwright Aanuchtered are the 0; The annual reduction Wainwright, Alberta, =‘ istered by the Departm terior through the Nati Canada, calls to mind gess in bringing back th herd at Wainwright d the Pablo herd purchas minion Government in 1§32 increase. This re the herd down to appro ; T16 animals w« shrewd Montana \ these were establ tional Park while ed the nucleus for over 1,000 in Elk 1 The animals placed in have increased rapid}y twentyâ€"five years since ment of the . ark. A to shipped north to Wood mear Fort Smith, Nor tories; including this y« total of 8,680 have be and the meat, heads, | posed of; which toge §,300 still remaining in £ total of 21,653 animal The practice fol @isposal of the © Wainwright was :( geveral years sinc herd became nece well being. The rounded up and t! were separated ar eorrals convenient toir. They inclu years of age, 400 three two year olds, and 5 Each day since Novem! work began, a certain slaughtered and the ca ed and placed in refrig shipment to the larger lation throughout the eouver, Edmonton, Ca Winnipeg, Toronto, Ot real all receive allotm by citizens in every j minion were given an enjoy a real treat. B mll the juicy tenderne beef and is highly article of food: _ XNi easses from the slau the fifty aged buffalo to be dried and 1 among the Eskimo to The buffalo beads sale, while the skins to robes and rugs, an ladies and gentliomen. treatment the weight been reduced so tha favourably with othe respect. For warmth appearance they ran ©oy, "he‘s got a cabba B&l want the saw b it into the barrow ." tell him he can‘t hay ~ is a potato," wa from other Canadian Injections for A woman of forty tired. She had to s« hours out of the tw last getting up in th« &n agony. to be Kept Withi Four weeks of 1 tion with gland « mow to get up or with oase. ‘This ; the kind, says Dr Bais tout (Paris) & recent discove Levi, pioneer o France. aimmer so intense wou to sleep. A multizian with suprarenal oxtra fro her to get up in t amarter past six, rid Crowsiness besides. A doctor, having ps year, could not get uj ©ourse Of treatment *nergy glandsâ€"from Cal visit, in factâ€"ho c without dificulty, a Aime he was freeq i and pain, MHis knowledge of t tion glands promp: ment untll he had to sleepyâ€"heads. A sup tract seems most p who want to get un An Egyptian ®f profound w« Bal extract, to ; morning instead Attainable hithe A young woma:» fected by a persis went to bed withc The disposa nd wea injectic e88 A TV W urp} nti

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy