
5 best Amazon Prime Day deals you need now!
If you're not yet a Prime member, now's the perfect time to sign up and unlock exclusive access to these limited-time offers, plus enjoy fast, free shipping, streaming entertainment, and more.
50% off
CONTIGO Steeterville Tumbler
It is estimated that Canadians throw away 1.6 billion single-use plastic cups annually. We can do better. This 40 oz stainless steel tumbler does it all: keeps drinks cold for up to 29 hours, fits in your car's cupholder, and has a large, easy-grip handle. We are obsessed with the new colour glacier – the perfect blue – saving the planet never looked so good. $23.48 on amazon (was $46.99)
Story continues below advertisement
53% off
Philips Hue Lightstrip Plus
Glow up your space with these voice-activated LED light strips. They bend, stick, and vibe with you—literally—thanks to app and Bluetooth control. Slap them on any surface and watch your room go from meh to main character. Perfect for dorms, first apartments, or anywhere that needs a little extra. $49.97 on Amazon (was $99.99)
30% off
Merrick Fresh Kisses Mint Breath Strips
These toothbrush-shaped chews gently clean your pup's teeth while delivering a burst of peppermint. They're made with just 10 high-quality ingredients, and their soft texture is perfect for aging dogs or sensitive mouths. Bonus: dogs actually love them making it easier for us to love our dogs $34.99 on amazon (was $49.99)
You may also like:
Merrick Power Bites Chicken Recipe Treats – $8.63
Story continues below advertisement
Merrick Dry Dog Food – $19.77
Merrick Backcountry Grain Free Wet Cat Food – $53.59
40% off
Crock-Pot MultiMeal Multicooker and Programmable Slow Cooker
Meal prep just got smarter. With two separate cooking compartments and DualSync technology, this multitasking machine lets you cook two dishes at once—even at different temperatures. It replaces over 30 kitchen tools, making it a space-saving win for busy households or small kitchens. $161.99 on amazon (was $269.99)
30% off
FoodSaver Handheld+ 2-in-1 Vacuum Sealing System
This compact vacuum sealer helps reduce food waste, extend shelf life, and make meal prep a breeze. Great for marinating, freezing leftovers, or portioning out snacks. Pair it with the multicooker crock pot for the ultimate kitchen efficiency. This is your sign to get the vacuum sealing system NOW. $139.99 on amazon (was $199.99)
Story continues below advertisement
You may also like:
Philips Hue Smart Play Light Bar Base Kit – $142.49
Oster Extreme Mix Professional Blender – $170.98
Sony BRAVIA Theatre Bar 6 – $548
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Cision Canada
30 minutes ago
- Cision Canada
ELSE NUTRITION ANNOUNCES FURTHER EXTENSION OF ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS
VANCOUVER, BC, Aug. 1, 2025 /CNW/ - ELSE NUTRITION HOLDINGS INC. (TSX: BABY) (OTCQX: BABYF) (FSE: 0YL) (the "Company") announces that further to its news release dated June 19, 2025, the Toronto Stock Exchange has granted the Company a further extension to hold its annual general meeting of shareholders for 2025 (the " AGM"). The Company is now required to hold the AGM by September 30, 2025. About Else Nutrition Holdings Inc. Else Nutrition Holdings Inc. is a food and nutrition company in the international expansion stage focused on developing innovative, clean, and plant-based food and nutrition products for infants, toddlers, children, and adults. Its revolutionary, plant-based, non-soy formula is a clean-ingredient alternative to dairy-based formulas. Since launching its Plant-Based Complete Nutrition for Toddlers, made of whole foods, almonds, buckwheat, and tapioca, the brand has received thousands of powerful testimonials and reviews from parents, gained national retailer support, and achieved rapid sales growth. Awards and Recognition: "2017 Best Health and Diet Solutions" award at Milan's Global Food Innovation Summit #1 Best Seller on Amazon in the Fall of 2020 in the New Baby & Toddler Formula Category "Best Dairy Alternative" Award 2021 at World Plant-Based Expo Nexty Award Finalist at Expo West 2022 in the Plant-Based lifestyle category During September 2022, Else Super Cereal reached the #1 Best Seller in Baby Cereal across all brands on Amazon For more information, visit or @elsenutrition on Facebook and Instagram. Caution Regarding Forward-Looking Statements This press release contains statements that may constitute "forward-looking statements" within the meaning of applicable securities legislation. Forward-looking statements are typically identified by words such as "will" or similar expressions. Forward-looking statements in this press release include but are not limited to, statements with respect to the Company filing its interim financial statements and MD&A. These forward-looking statements are made as of the date of this press release. Such forward-looking statements reflect current estimates, beliefs and assumptions, which are based on management's perception of current conditions and expected future developments, as well as other factors management believes are appropriate in the circumstances. Although the Company believes the forward-looking statements in this press release are reasonable, it can give no assurance that the expectations and assumptions in such statements will prove to be correct. The Company cautions investors that any forward-looking statements by the Company are not guarantees of future results or performance, and are subject to risks, uncertainties, assumptions and other factors which could cause events or outcomes to differ materially from those expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements. Such factors and assumptions include, among others, variations in market conditions; currency exchange rates; the Company's ability to obtain any necessary permits, consents or authorizations required for its activities; the Company's ability to access further funding, to continue its projected growth, or to be fully able to implement its business strategies. In addition, there are known and unknown risk factors which could cause our actual results, performance or achievements to differ materially from any future results, performance or achievements expressed or implied by the forward-looking statements. Actual results may differ from the estimates, beliefs and assumptions expressed or implied in the forward-looking statements. Readers are cautioned not to place undue reliance on any forward-looking statements, which reflect management's expectations only as of the date of this press release. The Company disclaims any obligation to update or revise any forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise, except as required by law. SOURCE Else Nutrition Holdings Inc.


Ottawa Citizen
30 minutes ago
- Ottawa Citizen
'You may not have the best hand': Former U.S. ambassador on Canada negotiating with Trump
Article content Cohen also said tariffs can be helpful as leverage to negotiate things like boosted defence spending for NATO. 'I think that's a good thing,' he said. Article content But he also criticized Trump's across-the-board high tariffs, like the 25 per cent tariff on potash, an essential farming input that's scarce in the U.S., as making no sense. Article content A: 'I think he's in a very difficult position because (he's not a free agent but a personal representative of President Trump, but …) he's from a border state and has a longstanding understanding of the U.S.-Canada relationship and its importance from his Michigan roots,' Cohen said, noting how the former representative for Michigan's 2nd congressional district has gone out of his way to repeatedly talk about the importance of the Canada-U.S. relationship. Article content Article content 'I think he's doing the best job he can to continue to send a message about the value that he personally and that the country puts on the U.S.-Canada relationship.' Article content Q: Any final advice for Canadians about their relationship with the U.S.? Article content A: 'There's almost an inferiority complex in Canada — lines like 'we're the stepchild' or 'not big enough to matter' — I always hated that,' he said, noting how Canada undervalues its importance as a friend, partner, and ally. Article content 'There are things Canada can do that the United States cannot, because internationally, (the U.S.) is the 800-pound gorilla. Canada, though, gets to be in conversations in the global south where it can express views about promoting democracy and democratic values that, if promoted by the U.S., would fall on deaf ears. Canada can open the door and help achieve America's No. 1 foreign policy goal, which is the promotion of democracy and democratic values around the world.' Article content Article content Canada should never also never undervalue the role it has played in its actions, Cohen said. 'When the United States went into Afghanistan, Canada was the first country to join us. Americans should never forget what Canada did in the (Canadian) Caper, getting our last diplomats out of Iran safely (after the 1979 revolution), at great danger to the individual Canadian diplomats and to Canada on the international stage. Article content


Vancouver Sun
30 minutes ago
- Vancouver Sun
'You may not have the best hand': Former U.S. ambassador on Canada negotiating with Trump
Canada's view of its southern neighbour has understandably dimmed after President Donald Trump launched a tariff war. With Trump declaring more tariffs against Canada effective Friday , National Post spoke this week with former ambassador David Cohen, former president Joe Biden's envoy to Ottawa from 2021 to 2025, who was tasked with resetting U.S.-Canada relations following the first tumultuous Trump term, which included its own tariff actions against Canadian goods. Much of Cohen's work involved navigating a landscape where bilateral co-operation could no longer be taken for granted and where he had to rebuild an alliance strained by trade disputes and fiery rhetoric. He's since returned to private life but still gives talks boosting the U.S.-Canada relationship. Start your day with a roundup of B.C.-focused news and opinion. By signing up you consent to receive the above newsletter from Postmedia Network Inc. A welcome email is on its way. If you don't see it, please check your junk folder. The next issue of Sunrise will soon be in your inbox. Please try again Interested in more newsletters? Browse here. (This interview has been edited and condensed due to length.) Q: What were your proudest achievements as ambassador? A: 'I think the most important achievement was all of Mission Canada,' said Cohen. 'I set as a priority to rebuild, strengthen, and nurture the U.S.-Canada relationship, and I think we were largely successful in accomplishing that objective.' Cohen also noted helping to shift Canada's defence spending debate away from an almost exclusive focus on GDP percentages by arguing that commitments must be tied to existing security threats. The public view often was, 'Why does Canada have to spend money on defence? We're surrounded by oceans on three sides, and by the United States on the fourth side.' But, Cohen said, 'that wasn't and isn't true. There are legitimate security threats, and Canada has a special responsibility and should have a special focus on continental defence.' He noted that under prime ministers Justin Trudeau and Mark Carney, the defence discussion has lately become centred on continental defence and the Arctic, which resonates more with Canadians. In fact, in December 2024, for the first time in over a decade, a majority of Canadians supported more defence spending, according to polling by the Angus Reid Institute . This, said Cohen, 'contributed to the additional defence spending that has occurred – and made it easier for (Trudeau and Carney) to make commitments about increasing the amount of investment that Canada would make toward defence, ultimately being able to sign off on the new five per cent threshold that was agreed to this year.' Q: How well do you think Carney's team has been doing amid the trade war and negotiations? A: 'Prime Minister Carney and Canada are doing about as good a job as they can do in very difficult negotiations that are not always rationality-based … President Trump has not been all that crystal clear at times about exactly what it is he wants to accomplish and the underlying reasons for his positioning,' he said. Cohen pointed to the White House's original 25 per cent tariff announcement and how it was premised largely on border and fentanyl issues, even though he said fentanyl imports from Canada were a very small part of the U.S. problem, especially compared to Mexico. He questioned the rationale for raising tariffs on Canadian goods from 25 to 35 per cent, given the tiny and shrinking amount of fentanyl coming from Canada. But Cohen also pointed out that 'Canada sometimes seems to overvalue its leverage, without fully recognizing the huge asymmetry in our almost trillion-dollar trade relationship. Three-quarters of Canada's exports go to the U.S., but only 17 per cent of U.S. exports go to Canada. Sometimes that gives Canada an overinflated view of (Canada's) leverage in negotiations.' Q: Do you think a new U.S.-Canada trade and security deal is coming? A: Cohen noted that Republican voices, such as Sen. Kevin Cramer of North Dakota, are publicly starting to highlight the critical importance of the U.S.-Canada trade relationship and expressing confidence that an agreement will eventually come. Cohen agreed, saying he believes a deal is coming – he's just not sure when. On Canada's path to securing the best deal, Cohen stressed that delivering concrete defence results matters far more than mere promises. 'Carney has said all the right things. What he now needs to do is to deliver – that is, money actually has to be budgeted and then it has to be spent.' He also noted that the Golden Dome initiative , a spending priority for the U.S., could help Canada reach pledged defence targets. 'Actually putting concrete actions behind the commitments is something that Prime Minister Carney can do.' Cohen also noted that Canada's supply management issues, particularly with dairy, remain politically sensitive. 'There are a whole series and host of issues that are outstanding between the United States and Canada,' he added, 'and I think bringing any of them to the table with potential solutions that would be attractive to President Trump is a good strategy and a good tactic.' Q: Do you expect the current trade talks to bleed into the required review of the U.S.-Mexico-Canada trade agreement this coming year? Do you think Trump is looking to rip that up? A: 'I think it's inevitable these negotiations will bleed into the statutorily required review of USMCA,' Cohen said. And while the deal is a legacy of Trump's former U.S. trade representative, Robert Lighthizer, 'I think there's a part of Donald Trump that views it as a Donald Trump legacy too, since he was personally at the table and personally involved in closing the ultimate deal in 2018.' While Cohen doesn't think Trump is interested in ripping up the agreement, he acknowledged that there 'may need to be adjustments to it or revisiting of issues that Canada resisted during the original negotiation.' 'I think it's almost inevitable that there will be certain elements of USMCA that will end up needing to be renegotiated as part of the review process.' But he expects it to survive because 'it has been such a good deal for both sides.' Q: Has there been long-term damage to the U.S.-Canada relationship from the last few months of trade tension, or is a reset feasible? A: Cohen noted the trust quotient between the U.S. and Canada plummeted from about 58 per cent during the Obama era to around 10 per cent in Trump's first term, before climbing back to the mid-50 per cent range under Biden. Today it's at 16 per cent. 'That history says it'll take work, it'll take effort from the United States perspective – we'll be dealing with a skeptical Canadian audience,' he said. 'But the U.S. market is too attractive (to not repair the relationship). The Canadian market is historically too much of an integral partner within that market.' 'With a different government and a different approach, I think businesses on both sides of the border will probably be more ready to come back to the table and to engage in rebuilding the relationship. I think it's going to take more to convince the Canadian public that the United States really does care about Canada, although I think that is achievable.' Q: Can friction between the U.S. and Canada be a good thing? Can tariffs? A: 'I think civil friction is healthy because it respects the sovereignty of our allies and often ends up improving the United States' decision-making,' Cohen said. 'But I don't think just because the United States is the largest economy on earth, has 10 times the population, a much higher GDP, and just because we dominate the trade relationship, means that everything we say Canada should agree to just because we say it.' On tariffs, Cohen said he is mostly a free-trade supporter and believes governments should get out of the way of businesses, the true drivers of economies. 'I think tariffs are really dangerous tools to use because I think they can interfere with the natural work of businesses in growing economies — that is what businesses do better than governments.' But Cohen also noted that targeted use of tariffs can be appropriate. He cited the example of softwood lumber tariffs, used by both Trump and Biden . 'It is just about indisputable that Canada, through its governmental policies by the federal government and by multiple provincial governments, unfairly favours Canadian lumber producers, creates preferential treatment for Canadian lumber producers, and discriminates against U.S. lumber producers.' 'As a result, U.S. lumber producers are disadvantaged vis-à-vis Canadian lumber producers, and the mechanism for levelling that playing field is the countervailing softwood lumber tariffs.' Cohen also said tariffs can be helpful as leverage to negotiate things like boosted defence spending for NATO. 'I think that's a good thing,' he said. But he also criticized Trump's across-the-board high tariffs, like the 25 per cent tariff on potash, an essential farming input that's scarce in the U.S., as making no sense. Q: How is your successor, Ambassador Pete Hoekstra, doing in his job? A: 'I think he's in a very difficult position because (he's not a free agent but a personal representative of President Trump, but …) he's from a border state and has a longstanding understanding of the U.S.-Canada relationship and its importance from his Michigan roots,' Cohen said, noting how the former representative for Michigan's 2nd congressional district has gone out of his way to repeatedly talk about the importance of the Canada-U.S. relationship. 'I think he's doing the best job he can to continue to send a message about the value that he personally and that the country puts on the U.S.-Canada relationship.' Q: Any final advice for Canadians about their relationship with the U.S.? A: 'There's almost an inferiority complex in Canada — lines like 'we're the stepchild' or 'not big enough to matter' — I always hated that,' he said, noting how Canada undervalues its importance as a friend, partner, and ally. 'There are things Canada can do that the United States cannot, because internationally, (the U.S.) is the 800-pound gorilla. Canada, though, gets to be in conversations in the global south where it can express views about promoting democracy and democratic values that, if promoted by the U.S., would fall on deaf ears. Canada can open the door and help achieve America's No. 1 foreign policy goal, which is the promotion of democracy and democratic values around the world. ' Canada should never also never undervalue the role it has played in its actions, Cohen said. 'When the United States went into Afghanistan, Canada was the first country to join us. Americans should never forget what Canada did in the (Canadian) Caper, getting our last diplomats out of Iran safely (after the 1979 revolution) , at great danger to the individual Canadian diplomats and to Canada on the international stage. 'On the one hand, be proud and recognize how incredibly important you are to this relationship … On the other hand, recognize that in tough negotiations, you may not have the best hand because of the asymmetry of the financial nature of the relationship.' 'That tension is one of the most interesting aspects of dealing with Canada.' National Post tmoran@ Our website is the place for the latest breaking news, exclusive scoops, longreads and provocative commentary. Please bookmark and sign up for our newsletters here .