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The Brussels Post, 1913-3-20, Page 2
• �4Dt6 L Y YUI NOMTO U10TO INTERESTING BITS OF GOSSIP FROM .THE QUEEN OI'rv, Or, C. C. James Speaks of the High Cost of Living -Dr. Fro'Oman's Cure -Toronto suffrage ttes-Exhtbltic n Association City people,.uot infrequently, ere heard to declare that farmersare getting rich, that the present high goat of living must be resulting. In a sltuation in whrelt the farming communityas a whole is simply rolling in wealth. This view woe pnne- tmed by Dr. C. C, James, former Deputy MinisterofAgriculture for the Province of Ontario and now Advisory Expert for the Dominion Department of Agriculture, in his address to the Canadian Club. "I want to tell you," he saki emphati- cally, "that the. farmer is not getting 100 mach," In illustration he quoted the fact that a bag of potatoes which -costs 90o., 51.00 or 01,29 in Toronto, yields to the far- mer who grows them, probably in Carle- ton County, New Brunswick, not more than 30r., and the milk which °elle In Toronto for 10e. a quart yields the farmer probably only 4 1.2c. a quart. "The farmer who gets 41.2c. a quart is not getting too much," he said, 'but the city man who pays 10c. a quart is paying too =eh." Mr. James maintained that the system of distribution was all wrong, though, he said, there was no use calling the middle man hard names. because he was simply working -undor conditions as they exist and earning nn honest living. Mr, ,Tames was discussing the cost of livlug, and it was an attentive grotto of .260 city men he wee addressing. That' were vitally interested, because, as Mr. James pointed out, the present condition; have reached such a pass that for the classes of the community on fixed solar• lea, and this means the great body of teachers, elergymen, clerks and all other forme of unorganized workers, relief must come soon. Tho West Is Not Helping, Mr. James made a comment that was surprising to many of his audience in connection with the opening up of West. ern Canada. He demonstrated that as far as the cost of living in this country is concerned, the new population in the West le doing nothing to ameliorate condltione. 'While they are producers in ono sense of the word, the stuff they aro producing-- wheat, roducing-wheat, oats, flax -ie practically all for ex. port, so that as a matter of fact thein - creased population is simply adding to the consuming populatiou of the country. On the other hand, the rural population of Eastern Canada during the last ten Years had deedined by about 47,000 people, while the city or urban population of the country had increased by 110 less than - .1,260,000. In these figures, Mr. • James thought, lay one of the chief causes for the great advance in the cost of living in Canada. The consumers had Increased, the producers had declined in number. It was inevitable that the law of supply and demand should rule, Mr. James followed 'is up with the startling declaration that is opinionit would be better for the ameet, instead of spending thirty, or fifty million dollars for rail. open up new area in the North- ake a similar amount and spend roads in old Ontario and the portions of Eastern Canada. nneetion Mr. James pointed da, generally regarded as Country. is a largo im- uffs. British Columbia. s 916,000,000 worth of 9.11y, and little New (cultural province, was proposed being grant - +t of Agri- 6,ultural to be - see Ottawa nnritde nt Canadian SuffrngetU� se°king to inutuen.e Yh<, Aomini,>n Parlia- ment, by a contingent of United States women. The Toronto contingent could pot help but impress the eye. They wore red hate, long white- trailing gowns with it mg rtes wish bearing the word 'Odnnda;" and 'carried Union Janke, The delegation Included about a dozen' of the most no. Jive agitators in Toronto, Including Mrs, Flora Maodonafd Denison, President of the Canadian Suffrage Aaeoelation; Dr, Augusta -Stowe-0ullan, past president; Dr. dlargaret Johnston, One. Campbell Mau. Ivor, who alone of 'lbronto'o suffragettes believes In militant methods; lire. Hec- tor Prenter, the very active Secretary of the Association; Mrs. L. A. Hamilton, President of the Equal Franchise League and a very active social worker, and Mrs. ' 7l. L. Campbell, President of the Beaches' Progreso Club, All of these are ladles of ripe experience in women's .movements, and none belongs to the typeone would expect to be carried away by any vision. nry project, The enthusiastic Mrs. Ham- ilton proposes to organize a parade in Toronto next. Cabinet Ministers Lond a Hand. Tito Toronto Exhibition Association has only one meeting a year, but it manages tc throw around that gathering some of the glamor of national important.° which it secures for the Big Show itself. For example, at the annual -meeting tide year no less than three Cabinet Ministers were to attendance. There onto the Honorable James Duff. who from his position as Min- ister of Agriculture takes a keen interest in all exhibitions, and who is an enthusi- astic member of the. Toronto Exhibition Association; then there was the Honor- able W, 11. Hearst, whose special interest is New Ontario, which always has a prom- inent exhibit at the fair, and the third Minister was the honorable Dr, Pyne, Minister of Education, whose interest to elicited on account of the educational lea. tures which the Fair seeks to introduce. Each was called upon to make a mecca, and responded with a few brief sentences of a congratulatory nature, delivered in characteristic style, Mr. Duff inclined to be flowery. Mr. Hearst forcible and down- right, and Dr. Pyne the dignified and suave gentleman. The Exhibition Association is made up of delegates from various bodies of it more or less representative character through- out the Province. Membership in the As- sociation carries with it as privileges the right to attend the annual meeting, to take part In the discussion there and to vote in the election for Board of Direc- tors, and to a pass or two for the Exhibi- tion. Tire Board of Directors, consisting of 16 members, is the inner circle. While the membership of the Association in- cludes a number from outside the city, the Directorships are pretty well confined to men with Toronto iutereets. Formerly there was in addition to the Directorate a system of committees through which it was sought to interest the various mem. bore of the Asaooiation, but this plan has been largely abandoned. Tho Inmost1r C ole. As a matter of fact, there Is an inner eirole within the inner circle, the inmost circle being the Executive Committee of about jive members. This is the real gov- erniug body of the Exhibition. The annual meeting this year was one of the largest in the history of the As- sociation, jibing one of the largo roams at the City Hall. President Kent, a man of few words, presided,. and General Man- ager Orr was at hie left hand to see that the wheels revolved smoothly. The elec- tion of Directors is always accompanied by a great deal of buttonholing. and, it is said, wire -pulling, and there is gener- ally a surprise In store for someone: This year it was for Mr. H. 10. Frankland, a former director who had some disagree. meat with the other members of the Board during the year just closed, and who this year wont down to defeat. After the voting adjournment was made to a restaurant, where an elaborate luncheon was served. Il M CURES COUGHS ns'.0 S ©CaHS 'I➢S Rai' WELBECE. Visit to Duke of Port - nous Estate. cotlntl'y estate of Hand, which has ith a royal visit, g the country ristocracy for tunnel which .>eck Park, a unsurpassed ous picture st'notable of n rooms at from a guar - solid clay and m the roof, it is get wide and 22 lit eighteen lustre umine the Van s, Rembrandts, Boy - ere, and other master - at cover the walls. Not justice has this gallery been "the largest and in every • the most magnificent private room in England." The riding school has a glees arcade with a straight run of a quarter of a mile. Then the glass houses, with which a former; Duke of Portland experimented with the effect of various colored glass on plants and flowers, are measured by the utile. The apricot house has a run of nearly a quarter of a mile, and its neighbors, devoted to the culture of various other fruits, are little shorter. Each of the numer- ous flower houses is a vista of love- liness, and 100 yards of glass are devoted to M•aimaison carnations alone—a favored flower at Welbeck. The Abbey itself is not architectur- ally impressive, but it stands on the shore of a broad lake and over- looks a fine deep park studded with rare gardens until its limits reach the old oohs of Sherwood Forest, •World's Biggest Organ. The newr an which isto b oge placed in the great cathedral now in course 0 erection in Liv°o>',pool will probably be classed among the won- ders of the world, as it will be the largest organ in existence. The or- gan in the Sydney (Australia) town hall now has the distinction of standing first in point of sire, The Liverpool organ will take four years to construct, It will contain 216 draw -stops, speaking and mechani- cal, and the total number of pipes will reach the remarkable number of 10,567, It willoocllpy two special chambers, one on each side of the 01101lael, It is the gift of Mrs, James harrow of Waterloo, near Liverpool,' To have a Clear Horizon ,. at both ends of the day. A dish d �f st Toasties •for breakfast and again at the evening mealopens and Closes the day with a dash of sunshine. To series are bias of hard, White Indian Corn first oare- vvl e a fully Booked, then rolled thin and crinkl-y, and toasted to a etiz delicate, apP in g brown • Nob a hand touches the food in manufacture, and it is ready to serve direct from the package—to be eaten with cream or milk --and sugar, if dosircd, Post Toasties taste delici- ottsly good and are richly n•ourishng. *de 10, Pero Food Factories of Cabeelan Poston) Cereal CO., Ltd.'. Mandan's Ontatte, - _ .. sase.:a. "YOUR N:tMI', PLI',.tbi1it-" Ilere Are Sonic Little known Won- ' tiers of Nomencloture, "No," said hubby "I bar these foreign names. let's have some- thing the child won't be ashamed of, What's the matter with liam4 Bit of British staff, that;" Ales 1—but such is life !—William is a purely German flame, and means "defenditlg many." You've heard ofsWilhelm? Well, that's it! Very few of our Christian names are English. Sad, but true. Mere is a list : Thomas is Hebrew, and means "a twin," John is also to Jewish name—"the grace of the Lord." The following "English names," common and popular, are German: Robert (famous in counsel); Walter (a conqueror); Henry (rich lord) ; Herbert (bright lord); Frederic (rich peace); Charles (noble-ripir- ited) ; Francis (free) ; Archibald (bold observer). Ferdinand is Ger- man, too, and means "pure peace." French names are fewer. Guy, Lewis, Percival, Norman are exam- ples. Bible names are, of course, nearly all Jewish. To get nearer home, the following are Saxon names ; Alfred (all peace); Albert (all bright); Edward (happy keeper) ; Edwin (happy con- queror); Richard (powerful); Ralph (help),' Less popular Ones are Adol- phus, Cuthbert, Dunstan, Edgar, Edmund, Harold, Gilbert, Gerard, etc, -So far, you see, no English names, and there are still to come the lists of Latin and Greek names. These are Latin: Clement (mild - tempered); Cecil (clime -,sighted); Augustus (venerable, grand); An- thony (flourishing) ; Vincent, Paul Oliver, Maurice. Mark, Lionel, etc. Greek names are: Philip (lover of. horses); Peter (a rock) ; Eustace (standing firm); Alexander (helper of men); Andrew, George,, Chris- topher, Ernest, and many others. Hugh is Dutch. If you are really bent on having a good old British name for your son and heir, you most take one of the following: Arthur (strongman); Cadwallader (1), which means val- liant; Evan (same as John); Grif- fith (great faith) ; Llewellin (like a lion); Owen (well -descended) ; Mor- gan (a mariner); or Meredith. A small list 1 - If you are smitten with Horatio or Orlando—well, these aro Italian. w Old Folks;, ohs r`. Permanently Cured re,Arviti oral. 1,01.1% The National Securities Corporation, Limited, now offer to the public their 7% Profit Sharing Bonds, which mature is five years, with interest payable half -yearly on the lab of June and the -lstof December, • Tho National Securities Corporatist, Limited, sots es a holding company for several large and profitable manufacturing plants that have been built up by members of the Cor- poration in the past quarter of a century. Tho proceeds of these bonds aro to be used in still further developing these plants—in acquiring another long established manufacturing plant which has shown largo -profits for years—a-nd in purohasing well located timber lands. The Corporation now has a largo limit under option oontaining 1,000,000,000 feet of virgin timber, This latter should largely inercaas in value in the next few years, All profits beyond bond interest and etook dividends are to be divided equally between the Bondholders and rho Shareholders, and whatever profits are thus divided will be in ex•• aces of the 7% annual interest on the Bond. These Bonds are amply secured by investments of the Corporation in those n nufae- turing plants and in the value of lands, timber and mills which it controls, and will be fur- ther secured by the acquisition of other plants aaed timber limits, Tho Bonds are offered to the public in denomination° of $100, $500 and $1,000, and may be purchased either outright or by means of the periodic (payment plan, In the latter case, an initial payment of 10% of the face value of the Bond will be required. Bondholders may withdraw all or part of their investments, with interest, at any time after one year on sixty days notice. • Payments ehoulcl bo spade to the National Securities Corporation, Limited, either by cheque or money -order. Moro eomploto partleulars furnished on request NATIONAL SECURITIES CORPORATION LIMITED CONFEDERATION LIFE BLDG. TORONTO, - - ONT. ass PRINCEI2ROPOTI(IN. scientist, who surrendered great The fame of Prince Kropotkin estates .in Russia as the • result of has spread throughout the civilized his devotion to liberty • lives in a world and when he celebrated his simple manner, supporting Himself seventieth birthday recently he was by his writings. Has , best-known the recipient of congratulations work isFields, 1 Factories, and he Inas made but Workshops," from all quarters. many notable contributions to Prince Krop otkin's career reacts like a romance by Dumas. A mem- social science. ber of one of the most ancient and 'p noble houses in Russia, when a boy HOW TO ATTAIN EIGIITY. he belonged to the Tsar's corps of pages, but as he grow up his soul Frederic Harrison's Golden Rules revolted against serfdom, and the of Health. autocratic tyranny which the Rus siau people groaned. He joined the Five go]rieu, e9Itss of health welie h movement aimed at establishing gizmos', author, critic:- 'ice, ritic,i e, ex -professor, barrister, his - in, traveller, and amateur gar- sn his eighty-first birthday day, celebrated at his •'khurst, Kent, Eng - freedom and good government and the police became aws,e, ' a mysterious "Bore•• ing ,t.6 exe ` Borodiril���vasathey, ivthis e eh linable rel6- „avtience on the • to ascertain, and peasants and art- isans who were imprisoned or sent to the scaffold refused to divulge the secret,' In 1874 the savants of Russia as- sembled at the Geographical Soci- ety in St. Petersburg to hear the famous Prince Kropotkin recount the results of his explorations in Finland. As the lecturer was driv- ing from the meeting in a cab, he passed another conveyance from which an artisan called out "IVIr. Borodin." The Prince stopped his cab, and thus fell into the trap. The police hacl got him at last. . For two years he was confined in the terrible fortress of Peter and Paul, where he underwent fright- ful hardships. Then ca:nlo his dra- matic escape, followed by a flight across Finland to Sweden, gild then England. Since that time he has `never returned to Russia, but The Public Is 'Loud In Its Praise of tha Modern Direct Breathing Cure. Elderly people take cold easily. Unlike young folks, they recover slowly, if ever. That is why so many people past middle life die of pneumonia. Even though pneumonia does not develop and kill, coughs oertninly weaken all elderly peo- ple. Cough-gyrntts seldom do much good be. cause they upset digestion. Any druggist or doctor knows that a much more effec- tive treatment is "CATAR10000ZON);." whish heals and soothes the irritated war- rens of the throat. In using Catarrhozone Yon do not take medicine into the atomach-you elmplY breathe into the throat, nose and lunge rich piney balsamic vapor, go full of heal- ing power that colds, catarrh and bron- chitic disappear almost instantly. "At sixty-eight years of ago I can tes- tify that. I am never troubled with coughs or coideJ writes J. E. Pilgrim, of King- ston. "They used to be the bain of my life, and that was before I used Catarrh - ozone, which was recommended to me by C. L. Prouse, druggist. To use Catarrh - ozone is just like being in an immense pine woods. Tito balsamic vapor of Ca- tarrhozone is like a tonic, it is so stimu- lating to the breathing organs, so' Booth. ing to sore smote, so fall of power t0 drive out eaide and congestion. I will always use and recommend Catarrhosone as a preventive and caro for coughs, colds, bronchitis, throat irritation and catarrh. (Signed) "J. E. PILGRIM." A Catarrhozone Inhaler in your Doe- ket or purse enables you to stop a cold with the first enMSe. Large size mete 5$00 and supplies' treatment for two Months; small stag, 60e.; trial site Mel all storekeepers and druggists, or Tho Catarrhosone Co., Buffalo, N, •Y.• and Kingston, Canada. r g DECORATED COFFINS. (''Cemation in Gay Cortins Latest Amusement of Bavarians. To be cremated in highly -decor- ated coffins, we are told, is the latest arnnse•.me11t of South Ger- mans, The brilliant colors of -•Egyp- tian tombs are thrown into the shade by the pictures painted upon the coffins of dead Bavarian citi- zens. The cause of this is the new law legalizing •cremation, The ere- maboriums have a regulu!tiorll that no metal may be used in coffin con- struction, Pegs must he employed instead of nails; and the elaborate brass or nickel work formerly in fashion. in Germany is against the. rules, The national craze for over - decoration has, therefore,found re- fuge in decorative painting. The coffins aro painted pale blue or green, and on this background ap- pear vivid oil -paintings of Swiss landscapes, pastoral scenes, and even portraits of the corpse and of his family. Prince Iteopotkin. the vengeance of Russian autocrats has pursued him, When he went to France after the Lyons' riots in 1882 he was sentenced to five years' imprisonment at the instigation of the Russian Government. But So strong was the resentment in Franco at this move that Prince Kropotkin was released at the end of three years• Other attempts have been made Iso lay hands on him, but he resides safely in England, This famous Dr. Morse's Indian Root ;i s are made according to a formula in use nearly a century ago among the Indians, and learned from them by Dr. Morse, Though repeated at- tempts have been tirade, by physi- cians and chemists, it has been found impossible to improve the fetor a or the pills. Dr, Morse's Indian; Root Pills area household remedy through- out trio world for Constippaation. and all Kidney and Liver troubled. They. act promptly and effectively( and' 40 tori dener, the other home at Ha ' land. 1'acoo, spirits, (1) Abstain from t " dreadful a little made dishes and allsue tt e things. I am satisfied with „ bit of mutton and rice pudd , (2) Rise from a meal with an a petite. I believe people eat too much, (3) Walk every day for two hours, This I am going to do as soon as I get through a pilo • of letters and telegrams from Florence and Rome. I am too old to play at tennis, and golf is too slow. (4) Sleep eight hours. People eannot sleep who smoke themselves black in the face, eat too mnclt, and have not walked enough. (5) Moro important than all—be content with what you have got. Take things quietly, HANGED BY THE NECK No death is more certain than the end that comes to every .offender treated by Putnam's Corn Extractor. Out comes the corn or warts, root and brands. Insist on "Putnam's" only, it's the best, free from acids and painless. Price 25o., at all deal- ers. CZA.REVITCII 04 TROUBLES. The Russian Crown Prince Has Strange Life. The Czarevitch can not look back upon the joys of early life in the way that most children born to a throne are in a position to do, Nor will ally of his European colleagues epvy the Crowe Prince of Russia. From the day of his birth the lit- tle Prince was put under the oar° of a Cossack guard, who is held answerable with his life for the safety of his charge. The soldier never leaves the child; he sleeps in the ante -room of his bedchamber, The room is locked, but a series of bells would at a touch comtnuni= cate with the outside world, Two sentries parade in front of the bed- room door, and a few paces further on is another double guard, Little Alexis was four years o1d before his eyes fe]I on any. sight be- yond his own •small garden bounded by the wall of a courtyard. Ire dial not even play as other children do, for while he was digging in the Sand of running about with leis only companion, the soil of a lady-in- waiting, other children were acting as his ghosts and runnileg about in r part f thegardento dis- tract p r o s tract attention and make security doubly sure. His own Cossack guarded the Imperial child of Rus- sia, while a second Cossack guard simulated duty over the other little ones, An English tutor entered v,pon the eorvice-of the Czarevitch when he was seven years old, but all les- sons are done in the presence of the Cassaelc and of a lady-in-waiting, h'riedburg was the first place the littlo boy oars outside his own se C ltlawi11 ase the System eluded playground, Later, ho be- ��Cuy� Optioea-Contraot (put or call on 00 shares stack, 10,000 bushels wheat or 50 bales of cotton, affording unusual chanes for large profits without further outlay. REIMEL & CO Wall Street. YORK, 6 1V 1NEW 3 ,r� Fen your Field in the GOV- ERNMItN'I' Filth)) C'n0P ��r± x'02 � �'/ COMPETITION you cal nob 100trthe n do bettor then good i s our Catalogue. and Rag what we have to otfsr to SIC I:I) cat's. we have t splendid. stock and S IED �� D[VIIa C CRAM S ;l1) ll S MILLION S '.I'0 W E.tLTJI OF THE NATION. hmigra.nis Ano Retuning to the Old lioales to Earn a Living, The crusade for handicrafts has been stteeeasful in Sweden; as in no other land, Incidentally, it has added millions of dollars annually to, the economic prosperity of the nation. Into one formerly poverty- dtrieken farming village the revival of llonlc-mettle basketry is bringing $130,000 a year; in another, lace - making adds an equal amount; in the third parish, the old men, too old for toil in the fields, earn $20,- 000 a year by carving furniture, Homo crafts have saved many a farm from deselatiou and made it possible for the peasant population, in the face of industrial competi- tion, to remain in possession of their ancestral estates, Emigra- tion to America has materially nbateii, and many einigrants are returning to their old homes. Far from infringing upon machine in- dustries, arts and crafts have, on the other hand, compelled the fac- tory to produce more beautiful and durable objects, • But more important than exter- nal economic prosperity is the ex- uberance of Life and. Health, which their beautiful toil brings to the workmen in Sweden. If you doubt it, go into the North, to Dale- c'arlia; visit the parish of Mockf- jercl in summer and see a group of glad -eye dwomen gathered under the birch trees about a table deck- ed with pillows and bobbins and cloth- ril . of dclicette lace. Their e4 piles and bodice and apron —embroidered with a gay flower pattern, is in keeping with the per- ipetual s*ingtime of their moods. Or stop by the roadside in Verm- land and watch a gay family party, Stu bo glad to sono samples' i grandmother and grandchildren, E GEO. KEITH es SONS, 124 King St. net, d n s s nee r se in and scutchin flax an Toronto. Ont. aced Moi u.lnn t a breaking g story -telling and :Leo and frolic. Ifj'on are •la • Y0tt•': 'e auaast shower-fnces. Another evidertee of the return of youth to the nation is the revival of national dress. One Swedish princess requires peasant costume of all of her ladies-in-waiting at her summer court. The • artist Zorn, when at home. goes about in the blue knickerbockers and white lea- ther apron that are traditional to the men of Mora. 11 is not merely a fad for the few. There are vil- lages in Dalecarlia where, on the Sabbath, every. man, woman and — chill goes to church in a costume into which mother or wife has wov- en her OW51 intimate expression of the beautiful, and which symbolizes for the wearer the joy of worship, A. Gorgeous Spectacle sit -on the road home from they pies, old the'grounds of thempei•ia residence, and from the decks o the Standart his eyes greeted the Baltic. On one occasion Only was the son of the Czar at a military reception, and precautionary measures adopt- ed were of the .strictest kind. The Czar and Czarina have tried to pre- vent any possible risk of their child being poisoned, attacked or kid- napped. Re eats nothing until it luta been examined by his own spa - "taster," who makes trial of '• '' before it appears on the cia every table. 1' 11W CIIEI UCAL GIsrUST"' 'Ernest Welsh's In1-ention Throwh Projectiles Five Miles. - Ernest Welsh, of Hull, England, has invented a new chemical gun for which remarkable claims are made and which has undergono a Government test. The gun weighs three hundredweight, and is said to throw its projectiles, which ignite upon impact, to a distance of five miles. The mechanist, as briefly ex- plained by Mr. Welsh, consists in part of three generators whish man- ufacture three distinct gases. In the stopper there is a Small sponge saturated with a certain fluid 'which also gives off .a supply of exygen and hydrogen inside the cylinder. The cylinder rests on a plate, and by the setting into motion of a small electric motor situate- on'the right hand aide of the gun, the gases are exploded and 111e projectile is pre- pellecl through the muzzle. Mr,. Welsh safe that there is no recoil and there is no pressure on the outside of the cylinder, All pressure is felt forward. The na- ture of the gases is a secret, but Mr. Welsh says that the gun has been testedwith satisfactory re- sults to all who witnessed the de- monstration. . IS THE BEST FOB VOL% It keeps your "White Clothes" looking just lllto NOW. It does not Spot or Streak the clothes As thorn Is no settling. It, Is the "Ifandiest0lud" to iso, factIt Is Guaranteed to ive Perfect Setts ion or money Citeorruler matelots LOST' E v0 TRYli5 and Provo if "J-12 Blue is nttioip better for Yourself. than any other" Miss Axocentpacic- Theataco, Beleont, Mau, age lasts stoat ".1.15 Bin` Is milixcelient 6 months, as it Biro, Stlpertor to other blues as Good Blues,' Mrs, Prank J Size Washings, Moore, Conn, Ont, 'M auhnetnrod bq "1 -ft Blue is the host Irn.i lo,tlIwso,,' Blue levet used," Mro, W, lAshsr400n Co. Switzer, Dentition, Man. Moolroai. eon, church. Lh t•z,�i�sle has its own fashion—the coelc e .of ltattvik, the striped apron of ,.sancl,iaff. red braid in the hair of the Mora' ' s girl—while the connoisseur reeog- nizes at once the more subtle badges which distinguish maid from mother, and wife from widow. 'The effect is unlike anything in Europe —mare varied than the gala cos- tume of Brittany, more deeorativp than the dress of the Bavarian pea- sant—almost Asiatic in its richness: Yet the total disregard for modern 1. fashions_aud Parisian modes does not impress one as retrograde or ridiculous even in up-to-date Sive- den,where the telephone service is the best and clearest in the world, The knickerbockers of the men are :1 more comfortable than trousers, and cannot the farmer's daughter ring the telephone and ride her bi- cycle to market in a scarlet bodice - and in a dainty, white ombroiclered kerchief,—The Craftsman. ip DI.iCMIST DSILWASHIN G. Devi.ee in Paris R:ns Cnpaeity of 14,009 an dour, In one of the institutions of Par' there is in operation it dish -w, ing machine, which has a e, of 14,000 dishes an hour, - said to do the work in satisfactory Manner dishes thoroughly ished; so that no is necessary exec from the baskets fus t to remove them absolutely neccset While it is nob dishes at 11111 inst' 1'y to do so, the ly washed by a r•uteob aro rough - them in a large b ,who places which is a part of drat of metal, This basket is 1 to reachine. weight oounterbala ed until its other basket e 'ins that of an- Vvhieh are undergo raiding dishes operation. W.hoo ng the washing remelted, the latte this point is frost the water a/ basket is raised into . > t11.cl , plunges x o i' t, a one the eleansin9 tr -r-01)19 other"basketis b oho .n pol" +attention Patron--t>Wh with my eggs I" the dlelay, s1r ; la110 '> AI