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Exeter Times, 1902-2-20, Page 3N 0 2"4,7 AT) 00.111.440 IV TS. It is rurAorod on Seemingly good authority that the British Chancel- lor of the Exehequer, Sir Michael HickS-Beatele intomilSo to Prone's.° a • duty of one shilling a quarter -a quarter is eleht bushels -on all, wheat imported into the United Kingdom, • aed et. proportionate duty on barrels of flour. If thie proposal is adopted by Parliament, it will bring a con- siderable amount of mOney into the 13ritish Treasury, but it will 'affect the price of bread only in a very small degree, if at all and will give but very little help, if any, to the Britieb. fernier. It is also evident • that, it foreign wheat alone were subjected to this duty, and colortial wheat were exempted from it, the en- couragement thus given to the • growth of wheat in the colonies would be but insignificant. Neverthe- less, it is true that the imposition of even so small a duty as one shilling a qtlarter would constitute a depar- ture from tlle free -trade principle, and the mere rumor of such a de- • parture has aroused British pro- • tectionists to demand such a tariff upon imported wheat as shall incite British landowners and farmers to grow at least as much of that staple as they did before...the policy of free trade in gratin was adopted, Innura- °rabic) letters on the subject ha,ve lately been printed in the London . Times, and it eannot be denied that some of the tvriters inake a strong case for the expediency of reverting to a protectionist policy, though nearly all of them admit that it would be impossible to obtain at a general election a majority in favor of such an -economic revolution. If the persons engaged in agricul- tural pursuits or deriving indirectly their livelihood from land. formed ' even a small majority or the British population, the House of Cormeons - might be unable to resist the argu- ments ,adduced for inaposing such a duty on the imported cereal as would •• enable British farmers to sell home wheat at forty shillings a quarter, which is said to be the . minimum price that would remunerate them for growing it. These arguments' are based upon the assumption that the safety of de United Kingdom, or, in other words, the preservation of its inhabitants feom !amine, is laces- ' sently imperilled by the conditions . under which its food supply is enow obtained. That the assumption is well founded is aa indisputable fact. Since free tra.de in grain becatne the settled policy of the Unieed kingdom its population has clotibled, while the preduction, of wheat at home has decreated by one-half. Even- the im- ports from the transmarine depend- encies of Great Britain have dwin- dled during the last ten years. The result is that the dependence of the United Kingdom on foreign countries for wheat has grown to such an ex- tent that four out of every 'five loaves that conie to 13ritisli tables are received from the United States, from Russia andfrom Argentina,. Under the ,circumstances, it. may well be asked how England could. be shielded from. starvation if she were "engaged in ever with both ;the 'United States and ItUssice. It may be pro- nounced highly improbable that Eng- IIIIIUNATIC PAINS, CAUSED BY AN' INFURE cox. Drrrow or THE BL003). Linim.euts and Other Old. Fashion- ed. Remedies Will Not Curem The Rheumatic Taint Nast Be Removed From, the Blood.. The lingering tortures of rhenma- tism are too well known to need dee- cription, hut it is riot so well known RIGHT SolfR One ounce of:Sunlight Soapfis worth more.than REDUCES Two ounces of impure soap. ExrEakzn Amu for the Ootogon 1! Vont groper cannot purply, isniie to UV= BROUIRES, MUTED, Toronto, iseadiag bisauaan) and 44.120011, and a trial ocqaplo of Sunlight Soap be oont 4.1 free of Seat. 4.4444444.44.444 that medical. science now recognizes that the. primaxoy cause or rhounza- tiem initure or impoverished blood. The result is that hundrede of suffer- ers apply external remedies which cannot, possibly cure the trouble, The only thing that will really cure rhea-' enatisin is an internal medicine that *will enrich the blood and :free it from rheumatic' taint. The surest, quiek- est and most effective way to do this is to. take Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, which are proved to have cured thou- sands of cases of rheumatism Many of theta. after eel other medicines' had failed. The case of Mr, Philip 1Per- ris, one of the..pioneers of South Es- sex, Out,, is proof oil this. Although Mr. Ferris is 76 years of age lae is as smart as many men of 50. But he has not always enjoyed such good health: Mr. Ferris has the following to say about his illness and cure: - 'For fifteen years I saffered greatly from rheernatisin. At times I would have searere pains in the knees, while at others the pain would spread to my hips and ' shoulders. teied sev- eral remedies which were of no avail until I began using Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. Teook eight or ten boxes and they completely cured the trouble and L ,am now as smart as anany men much younger, I have a great deal .of faith- in the pills for I know of other cases where they have beet). equally as successful as in mine." Dr. Williams' Pink Pills make new, rich, red blood and strengthen the nerves with every dose. It is in this way that* they. Mire such troubles as rheumatism, sciatica, neuralgia, kid- ney and liver trouble, partial paral- ysis; St. Vitus' dance and erysipelas. Through their action on the blood they restore the color to pale and sallow cheeks and cure the ailments that make the lives of so realty women miserable. The genuine alwavs have the full name "Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People" on every box. Sold by au dealers or sent post paid at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50, by addressing the Dr. Wil- liams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. land will' everehave to confront, the two powers named at the sa,nae time.* 'Some of the British •adviecates of a reversion to a protectionist policy • insist that 'theer countrymen are dwelling in a fool's paradise when they take. for granted that the United States and Russia will never be found allied against Great Brit- ain. •• ' • , But, it may be asked, Would not the British eavy bo able to assere the trangport across the oceari * of adequate qtianeities of. wheat from Canada,. • .A.ustralia, and Argentina, even if the customary supplies from the United States .aiid Rude% wers sot off ? The' aeswer is that the existing wheat surplus of Canada, Australia o and:, , Argentina would bridge but a fraction of the vast gap between Englarid's ,demand for wheat and (her home supply.. What, "theneis , to be done ? • The correspondents of the Lohdon Times •achnit that the, suggested .establishment of pilaff° grana,riee or the subsidizing of pri- vate granaries, to lee stored • with sufficient 'wheat to feed --the British population for ,e, yeer -ahead, is im- practicable. The sole- " remedy or palliative. left is, to napes& so large a duty on' imperted wheat as would impel the 'British • farmer to put again„ under the plough all the land in the British Isles that was , for- merly devoted to the cultivation of that cereal. Evert thus encouraged, the" 13'11.151sh farmer • could not meet More than half of the hotie demand, but, if the home stipple?. of wheat were doubled, it might be possible to avert general starvation for while ,ley a ' re.course. to other means of nourishment. Unquestionablyt the British advocates ge' protection are right in asserting that the 'Safety of their, country is endangered. by its preeeet itability to provide More than a Mall fraction of the food . • . iteredh et requires. Unfortunately the prOblene by whieh Englaed is con - I -Meted is one leeepeble of solution, The indestrial population of Great' 13ritain greatly outinimbers the agrieultural, and the former ele- Meet will never eebnait to the great itterettee in the price of bread which eveuld follew the impasition of a large clutna importeff Wheat. DON'T ROOK THE ORADLE CRYING AND —OTHER TRIFLES THAT BENEFIT CHILDREN. ing. Many Diseases of Later Life Are Yawning is also a very good ex - Caused by Soothing Children ercise. prOduees, a strong con- traction of all the muscles, forcing out the impure blood and stale lymph. Half a dozen yawns on get- ting up in the morning are as good as a cup of strong coffee. • All of these habits are common to final thernSelves much better after the sernion than before. Not everyone can preach, and sing. But it is open, to all to .talk and to read .aloud, and these latter are al- most as good as the former, Ani- mated conversation, with plenty of gesture, is a wonderful stimulant. Dr. Harry Campbell asserts' that talking prolongs life. Perhaps this accounts ectit, the fact that women. live considerably tenet than men. Talking relieves the breathlessness caused by a weak and dila.terl. heart. It also takes the place of exercise ; so that on a wet or stormy day it will do quite .as well to talk for a couple of hours as to play cricket, or golf, or to cycle, pr walk. Barristers, teachers, politicians, and the like find that they need very little exercise beyond what, •the3r get in the wa.y of their busieess. But people run down in health should talk very little, as it takes too much out of them. 'Ne natural inclination to sheet is so strong that there can be to doubt that it serves a useful purpose. It, has a wonderful effect in producing and intensifying 'enthusiasm, •as may be observed at tbeeeres, public meet- ings; and so forth. Boys Cannot play without shout- ing. Probably the reason of this is that, when making any great effort, We usually hold our breatha-a very injurious thing to do. Shouting pre- vents this, and, as boys cannot be expected to know the laws of health, Nature ha given them the instinct to shout. During a violent thenclerclap a man might run you through the body without MAKING YOU SUFFER the least pain. It relieves the nerves too. Even sighing has its advantages: The belief that at every sigh the heart loses a drop of -blood is far from being correct. On the contrary what happens is that a long and deep breath is taken, and the blood is well aerated. Sighing, in fact, arises from shallow breathing. When we are depressed or weary-, or when our attentioe is much en- gaged, we take very shallow and in- complete inspirations. Soon the blood becomes impure, and, to re- move that impurity, we take a great- ly prolonged breath, which is sigh - When They Cry. ... • Laughing, .crying, shouting, and even singing, seem extremely ridicul- ous perforipaancee when you sit down and quietly ponder 'them. But play, siological anveeepgators have found the whole human. race, showing, pro - out that they are as useful' as they bably, :that they are necessary to are absurd. The man of culture will good health. The more civilized we rarely laugh; will never shout, . and become; the less we indulge in them. will take every precautiou. to prevent And it is not at all unlikely that his children from crying, This 'is that mysterious decay of great na- quite a mistake, and has to be paid titles which sets in when they have for in reduced health. Nature did reached a high stage. of civilization not -give us the strong instinct we is due to their neglect to shout, cry, possess to naake these curious noises laugh, and yawn enough. -London without reason. 'Answers. Oryinge for instance, expands the 4^ - lenge, • circulates the blood, relieves RESTLESS. LITTLE ONES. nerve strain, and lessens the sensa- tion of pain. A child who eries Peevishness an.d Sleeplessness a lustily is sure. to grow' up steonger Sure Sign That Baby is A Goverinnent inspector entering ,a rural post -Mace, on seeing a woman at the delivery counter, said : "I was under the impression that a man was in charge of this office.' "And so he was,' replied . the woman, sharply; "but I married him." "You say O'Hannagan leaves the Orphans' Home a large legacy 7" "`13edad, it's purty large." "How much ?" "Twelve children an' a goat, begorra 1" Hostess -"Mat, going already, professor 7 As-Icl must you take your dear little wife away with you ?" Professor -"Indeed, madarre I an sorry to say I must." In 1898 only 805 ounces of gold were got in, the five Welsh gold...mines egaiest 2,082 ounces 1897; COULDN'T 'WALK FOR YEARS, AN ARNPRIORIVI.A.N IS THANK- FUL THAT NOW an, Is ABLE • TO WORK. Often Found Himself T.Tne.ble to Lie Down Without,the Greatest Pain. -Cured by D6dcl's Kidney Pills. Arnprior, Ont., :Feb. 3. -(Special) - A very remarkable cure of Backache and Kidney Trouble has just been brought to notice at Basin Depot, near here. Mr. J. E. Martin suffered for over eighteen. years with Lame Back • so that he actually couldn't walk or lie down without enduring the most dreadful pain. He tried many medi- cines without getting relief, and was very mech discouraged. Dodd's Kidney Pills were recom- mended to him, and he commenced a treatment, and improved very fast from the first. As the treatment continued the improvement increased until he was able to go about Ida work as well as ever. The theory so often advanced that the Kidneys are the most important organs of the body and that a large percentage of tete sickness and pain which humanity suffers, is due to im- perfect Kidney action. seems to be .amply proven in this particular case, for as soon as Dodd's Kidney Pill regulated and. restored the natural action of the Kideeys all Mr. • Mar- tin's troubles left him at once. Many • remarkable cures by Dodd" Pills have been published, but • cer tainly none as wonderfee as that o Mr,. Martin. , He has written a letter giving the facts of his case, and his announc ment that he was able to work com fortably once more after such a pro- longed period of suffering, has start ed people wondering if there is ,an case of Lame Back, Rheumatism 01 other Kidney Trouble that Dodd' • Kidney Pills will not cure. in lungs and heart than one who is always quiet. A great authority on childrenrs health -Dr. Rosbach-says that many diseases of later life, such as anaemia, consumption, end con- tracted chest, arise from soothing children WHEN THEY ARE CRYING. Of course, if the child is suffering severe pain it should be relieved ; and 0.B. eases the crying should not be allowed to go too far. But it is bater to let a child cry itself to sleep than to rock it in a, cradle or march around the room with it - 1! any reader happens to be one of those unfortunate fatheref who has to perform the latter duty, let him take Dr. Rosbach's hint. The child will sleep more soundly, and awake fresh- er in the morning. Even grown-up people derive bene - Et from a lit of crying.. Women who can cry easily and often keep young in their appearance much longer than those who cannot. There are several reasons for this. Any kind of crying whether quiet weeping or the vio- lent paroxysna which convulses the whole body, lessens the blood pres- sure in the brain. The tension of the nervous system is also relieved. And when the fit is violent, nearly every muscle in the body contracts, with -the same good effects as are PRODUCED BY A BRISK WALK. Whelp. one can't cry, the next best 'thing is to laugh. There is no tonic medicine in the whole catalogue of dinags equal to a good hearty laugh. As Dr. H. Campbell says, the man who makes us laugh is a public bene- factor. Laughing causes us to breathe deeply, and to fill the lurigs with pure air. It also makes the lymph flow out of the muscles, _ and thus serves the same purpose as mite - sage. The only people who should not laugh are those far advanced in heart disease. • The benefits • of singing are • well blown. It develops the ,lunge, and strengthens the heart. Teachers of singing claim that many pupils who come to them with lung diseaSes are completely cured after' a few Months, Of couree, a great deal depenels en the kind of • music cheSen, TO be really stimuleting gong must be of a bright and happy type. Preaching is sontewhat similar tO singing Ito results. Sir Williant Broadbent considers it a highly beneficial exercise for these suffatleg from heart disease. Clergymen, 80 far gone heart diseese that they have DIFF/01.ILTY IN ABCENDING the pulpit, preach With ease, and When babies are restless, cross, or peevish it is the surest possible sign of illness. Well babies sleep soundly and are cheerful and playful when awake. When baby is cross too many mothers give so-called "soothing" medicines, which. contain opiates that deaden, but do not remove the trouble. What' is wanted is a medi- cine that will go right to the root of the trouble and make baby sleep well eat well and be cheerful in a natural way. Su,ch a medicine is Baby's Own Tablets, which are sold wader an ab- solute guarantee that they contain neither opiates nor other harmful drugs. All mothers who have used them for their little ones speak of them in terms of Wannest; praise. Mrs. Albert Young, Stratford; says: "My baby, who is now five months old, has always been very cross and peevish. • She was very constipated and sleepless. She was a thin, deli- cate looking child and cried nearly all the time. I did not know what to do with her. I tried several med- icines but they did her no good. A friend who had used Baby's Own Tablets advised me to try them. I did so, and since using them baby has been quite well, her bawels aro regular, and she has grown PluMP and good-natured. am delighted with the Tablets and keep them on hand all the time, and whenever baby gets cross and feverish I give. her a Tablet and she is all right. These Tablets are the best medi- cine in the world for simple fevers, colic, diarrhoea, all stomach troubles constipation and , other Minor ail- ments of little ones. They are for children of all ages, and dissolved in water, or crushed to. a potvder may be given with absolute safety to the youngest infaet. Mother's who once try them will never afterwards use arty other medicine for thein little ones. Sold by all dealers in. medi- cine or sent post paid at 25 cents a box by addressing the Dr. Williams Medicine Co., BroCkville, Out. , Germany has 24,000 friendly So- cieties and clubs, the 'United King- dom. 22,000 ; France only 8,000. "I congratulate you, my dear sir on the marriage of your daughter. see you are gradually getting ail th girls off your hands." "Off m hands, yes 1 But the worst of it i I have to keep their husban.ds o their feet.'' Minard's Liniment Cures LaGrippe 210 per million of the Englis army commit suicide, 550 in th German, and 1,100 in the 'Austrian e e muiard s Liniment for Rheumatism MAICING UP COTTONS. In making up wash'goods for sure mer use, especially when makin children's clothes, which will need fr quent laundering, there are sever facts which it is well to - bear i mind. First as to linen, duck, gal atea and the other heavy washabl materials; these should be wel shrunk before cutting, too avoi shrinkage in laundering later. Th goods in the piece should be left t soak in. a, tub of cold water for s veral hours, then- allowed to dry par• tially, and should lastly 'be irone until quite dry. A dress cut fro duck, even -the most apt to shrinl of all materials -is quite safe t wear out before it shrinks to to small a size, if treated this way. ' Thinner wash materials, such a lawns, percales and ginghaznas, ma be cut and made up without bein shrunk first, The care to be exerei ed with these conies with the. ,firs laundering. • Before they are washe they should be soaked for hours in pail of water in which has been dis golved a teaspoonful of ' sugar o lead, which will set the color. Warm not bat, water shouldebe used 16 their laundering, and a not too ho iron. The soap, too,'Zest be whit to insure the retention of the color Some extremely pretty white an mixed Cotton braids are to. be bough in the shops this year"for Use o wash, fabrics. These, tog, should b well shrunk if they are to be used o duck or other material, which htu been treated as described above Such braids should be sewed o carefully, to, avoid pulling tight o the dress material, otherwiae 111e are apt to pucker. Page Woven Wire Fent Owleg to the -variations f he Canadian climate, 'considerable alldwisnee must be made in all tonnes for eontraction ated expanainii, Which ittakcal ante- dinary-Wirefencetruierviceablo, tis when it eipande 10 bevaratetelease L. toprelfe Of little Value. Note the centiftruine eon, ,•:ftcsellgthis makes it elastic and atifereottlating. The Page Wire Fence IS reedeof "Pogo" wire, whtoli le brims as strongsiSorditt: witch Pridee Are artIou Crx0iOlt 690 =4zj.ltilitlriteitirVIIt51.01r ie gagernent Nr-alld-"WhY, inuch ball on met. jileap. People "And Not - OBLIMATICAL. Olare.---"Ileve long will your en- to hint last ?" I don'e know hoW money he IMO %Wed, up," «.---•.•af A Woena,n can only throw a crieket 46 per cent. aa far as a Mart, an average, but can jump 0.?, per of the dietance a man cant -----• Dodo -"New, tell me, what do think of xne ?" Penguin - make you my enemy for life ? much l' Ceylon Tea and packets. Black, rap= ,4,4r 1. s e .4 1 ; • .4.3, A. kc . At, .10. . la Tea is the finest the world produces, is sold only in lead Mixed and Greenm tea drinkers try "Wade' Green tea, me said chase stantly ity. first framed room," coal 000. ship a Islas, millions Itsoothes wind best Sold ask banks, Bank 14e, "I shall use the money you gave to spend on my birthday, John," the wife,' tenderly, "in the pur- a something that will con- remind me of your, generos- I shall have the portraits of my three husbands beautifully and hung in our sitting - "THE FOUR TRACK NEWS." •This is a Monthly Magazine of Travel and Education, 'Published by. the Passenger Department of the New York Central, the great four track line. It contains a fund of in- teresting and instructive read- ing matter, and, like all oth- er features of this popular line, is thoroughly up-to- date. Five cents per copy or fifty cents a year from. Geo. IL Daniels, Gen'l Pass, Ag't, New York. Cardiff exports, 12,000,000 tons of a year, Newcastle about 4,000,- Newport and Sunderland each abroad about.2e million tons year. For Over Sixty Years WINSLOW'S 200T.111.26 2 Yrilir hos been used by of mothers for the r ohildren while teething the child, Enftens t1 . mons, ithays pain, ewes colic, regulates the stonrich and. bowels, and is the remedy for Diarrhcen. Twenty-five tents a bottle. by druggists throughout the world. Be pure and for " 21.28. WINSLOW 0 SOOT.111.22 6211.11,P.' — The United Kingdom has 400 of which the largest, the of England, has a capital of millions sterling. - ' great - ARD'S tack • quently 5 in r ; L bridges longest by 1 diseased. .1 tional , inflamed flamed foot, to flamed ' ; case - in i for 5 • i i L has i 933, Messrs. C. C. Richards & Co. Gentlemen, -Last tvinter• I received benefit from the use of MIN- LINIMENT in a severe at- of La.Grippe, and I ha -ire fre- proved it to be very effective cases of Inflammation. 'Yours, W. A. HUTCHINSON. s ant&coaat...lro.ortWagovx.c.1.-mx.resaras:OX There are altogether 30 miles of on the Siberian railway. The is that over the Yenissei, at Krasnoyarsk, just half a mile. Deafness Cannot be Cured local applications, as they cannot reach the portion of the ear. There M only one way to cure deafness, and that is by constitti, remedies, Desfness is caused by an condilion of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When :hie tube is in- you 'nave a rumbling sound or imper hearing. and when it is, ent'rely closed deafness is the result, and unless the inflam niation can be talon out and this tube restored its normal condltinn, bearing will be .de, greyed forever; nine cases out of ten are clused by catarrh, which la nothing but an in- condition of the mucous (meats; We will give One Hundred Dollars for any of Deafness (caused by eat rrh) tholen 't be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send circulars, free. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, 0. Sold by Druggists. 75c. Hall's Fainify Pills are the best. — The number of ants in five nests recently been counted. They varied from 93,694, down to 12,- - - I. t i 3 b I 6 f e• t 3 1 t 1 e 1 1 THE MOST NUTRITIOUS. Eppsl-s GRATEFUL-OOMFORTING. C 0 A BREAKFAST -SUPPER. C L S 111 ES removed or healed by one or twe spell. cations of Clleadine. it keeps the skIr soft and clear. Large Boxes 25e. Druggists ei Cileadlne Co., Toronto. +AO 2. APPP'.3,5•:. . ' i 50 Kink fol.., 20c. . , It la a fact that Selzer's vegetable and flower seeds are found in more gardens • , . yl and es more femme= al other — in America. There Is Tonto f or this. , We Own and operate over =Odor , the production of our choice seed& In .t.0 z „ order tee taduce Yore to try them •oiooi we Mahe the foll0Wing =wee, t. ‘ edenfe.,d offer: Fort20 Cents Postpaid 20 ktnors of rarest batons ro51sh20, (: 31201820K14214 pliVilalt ittoiOnfh 10 1".V9'rentlf1,,,' , 11L11.41401,1.0,1",. V, 05 gorgeously hematite/flower iota, 'f• 03141130 itind$ noidttifelyttlrnishing 'eii., hushOM Of Obarthing noWirett Iota and lots tit °wee veep lame . , tosetneit wlItt Our stle-nt rat Sine . falling all ationt Tdosipte • oat end Brorens ate teem. ogg ..- sedd at 600. a timed, etc., titi , • gee. in Canadian sumo, to . k JOHN A. SAUER ttEeD Cm. 0 Oros a Das —Oranges, Lemons, Fresh Fish of Ail Kinds 2acovagmegtos. TUE DAWSON CO ItitilliSSiON CO,, Limited, TORONTO. Shipments of Sutter, eggs, Poultry, HOW,- 004000 APploe, Potatoes, apil4tf44 TELEGRAPH USEJ TELEPHONE PARLOR w...s,rmaismsmombargemssiatwo, 4. Every /Wok— A Match + .Every !?latch— :g A " Lighter " 4,4 m-cpwc. 3argramav..-sr-wmils1=3Es.. 44444-74444+++++44+444-14 +++++4444+4.4-14,444014 W P. C. 1115 WIDE. "You say Miss Pielterton is ac- complished." "Why, I never met a reeve accom- plished girl. She knew just a little about every subject I introduced." Y -Z (wise head) has an advantage over other soap powders inasrauch xis It also acts as a disinfectant, On an average there are 950 ac- cidents in British mines and quar- ries in a year, causing a less of 1,000 lives. Stop% 411te Cough mad war/A5ff the Cold. Laxative Brome-Qttholue Tablets cure a °aid tn one day, No Lure, No Fay. PrMe 26 cents. The elephant beetle of Venezuela is the largest insect known. One has been found to weigh seven. ounces. 'goCliTEE A cueu IN ONE IAT. Take Laxative Brom° Quinine Tablets. Al druggists refund the money it it fails to cute. E. W. Grove's signature is on each box. We. Of Spain's surface only 87 per cent. is cultivated, 26 per cent. be- ing pasture and forest, and the rest wild and barren. mountain land. linard's ileheent Is the ; a,s1 The common house -fly usually pro- duces the note F in flying. To do so it must vibrate ies wings 835 times a second. The honey -bee sounds A, which means that its wing, vibra- tions are 440 to the second. alrd's lllhifflerIt Ilie heel Hair REVUE A FACTORY ON THE WATER. Taking the factory to the raw ma- terial, instead of bringing the mater- ial to the factory, is an innovation just put into operation on the Mis- sissippi River by a button maker, and it is a plan that, has many prac- tical advantages. This factory is a boat 42 feet long and 18 feet wide, fitted with all of the necessary ma- chinery for the manufacture of but- tons, and provided with a three - horse power engine for its work. The prineipal material nsed by this fac- tory is mussel shells, which are foun.d at nearly all points along the river, and one of the great expenses in conducting the business hereto- fore has been the cost of transport- ing •the shells, Now the factory has reversed the operation, and wile go tothe mussels. 'When a bed of the shells is found the boat will drop its anchor and go to work. When the bed is exhausted it will move on to a n,evs position. THE MOST POPULAR DENTiFill)E. xxc C3.116,,Xi"Sr 3ELUE"Ii5 "%f' CI)1EIEE Preserves the tooth. Swooteuto the ['math, Strengthena the gums 1 no:roma/its, Drams, Uniforms, Etc, EVERY TOWN CAN HAVE A BAND Lowest prices ever quoted. Fire catalogue, 500 illustrations, mailed free. Write us for =A thing in :Susie or litinsieel Instrument.. , WHALEY 110YOE 85 00., Limited, Toronto, Ont., and Winnipeg, Man "LESIMEN FOR "AUTOSPRAY" WANTED 1.11LOSIMCESNIMIONOM1•1111.0Clife 'Best compressed.air sprayer made. Sample machine free.-GAVeRS SM., Galt, Gat, ' .0 ALE FOR REAL ESTATE. WE WANT farm, city and town property in all psrtd or Canada. Send doneription and cash price. Bowerman n.nd Co.. Hamilton, Can. , FRENCH CLEANINEto For made up Goods, Suits in Cloth„ Velvet, Silk or Fora and all valuable house Hangings, nothing to equal it if done by the Berrien AMER10/151 MOM 00., Montreal. Dominion Line Steamship* Montreal to Liverpool. 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Address, American College of Sciences, Dept. N. S. II. 4120 Walnut St.?. Who. key F.r a Lame acid A Jame back rriea,115 that dull, aching pain over the small of the back, or the "catch" which takes you as you arise from stooping. That and all the symptoms of general debility and lost vitality which usually go with it 1 cure with my new appliance. Llarnbago,, Scia atica, Rheumatism—I conquer them all in a few days. Dr. MeLaughlin-Sir; In rogareterur Belt, fee Laing emelt, I rap eity this c-ei 14aovtal"Tibitirtstel "ileltierd Itee* bo "tr. ViLgrld back slitleP•rv.•1,7 4"1 g 441'4 tL;ow it. 'y Uti"SrlitY ytiarS o age, ri tun D.- 211°..A.01,14, Shennenville, Ont. Any rhan or woman Whe will secure me can have My applianod)and pay when cured I task no pay in advance. Dr. McLatighlires Electric Belt etY",kyee,aragkItik,(&igil„13Aepft,irdil,,g,aletigit,„;,,,Iiirgs ,./.+743ipm.de 01 20; /110 ern slip made, gees a Lyle hozat-h. fin tilieek, es While on teeep. 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