HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Blyth Standard, 1908-01-30, Page 6Steel
Side•Walls
for Modern Homes
Par swims wood, piaster or Mee(abesuty•-
makhesperfectlnny r.heme—nay folorsoheme—
mekn the Mini IDEALLY unitary—awes protection
tame fire —Ihem are come o the reasons why YOUR
liouso—why my modern buildissanywheroshoeld have
PEDLAR. ART WAiLB
Corr little—lad lalefisitely, f.H. a sealou the
whole tab in print and gonna. 'ib. book b tree. 803
The PEDLAR People V.
Oshawa Menten! Otuwa Toronto London Winnipeg,
Driving a Good Bargain.
The barber's entail eon was in the
habit of, playing e.rotuid hie father's shop
and he was always keenly interoeted in
the patrons. Many a stray penny found
its way into the little chubby hand, and
sticks of gum were dropped in quite as
though by accident. Judge Williams
drifted into the shop the other after -
1100n for a haircut. The lad re-o€:nize!
the fact that the Judge was a. new pa-
tron, and -so was more than ordinarily
interested in him. He hung at the foot
of the chair and looked musingly at the
Judge's bald head. Then he walked slow
ly to the back of the chair and survey-
ed the scanty fringe of hair from that
point of vantage. ,He could contain him-
self no longer and burst out incredul-
ously; "Father, do --you—get a quar-
ter for cutting that?"—Lippinoott'e
Magazine,
•
The drowning season is noir fairly op-
(med. '1'hc leo is iron porous. 'I',[,e no
undue risks
.The dreadful holocaust. at Bp-1;own,
Pit, where w many persons lost their
1[v ii by, fire in a theatre, l0 tmutlter of
tilcrae 1rtgiedies which occur from time
b1( Alma, and which seem to be beyond
Oitapower of iron to prevent'
The United States census figures show
that there has been n progressively more
lapid' increase to insanity, than in popu-
hation-in the United States, There were
40,4992 inmates of asylums in 1580; 74,028
in 1800, and 150,1.51 in .1900, says the
Philadelphia Record. These figures, how-
ever, may 011-y prove that the State is
looking better after those thus afflicted,
The Japanese Government is to hold
a grand exhibition in -the eity`of Tokio
in 1912. 1t will be open from ;April 1 to
October 31, hlelusiVe, of that year. Tho
site of the exhibition will comprise about
202 acres. -'710 dareign.governments and
peoples are invited, to participMe in
this exhibition. All articles imported
from foreigl `countries for the sole pur-
pose of exhibition and not used for com-
me'cialpurposes in that col1 ntl v, and all
materials for the braidings of foreign goys
ern1u0nts, or special exhibition. build-
ings and decorations thereof, will all
be admitted flee of duty. All aboard for
Tokio.
4_O
Should thetermite help of a hotel be
giveii'(91 exclusive use of a parlor to
entertain their gentlemen friends? The
London girls answered the question in
the, affirmative. One of the proprietors
thouglltdifferently, with the result that
twenty-five girls are 1o'1:019 for jobs.
This is a question, note; that requires
more than the say-so of any one hotel
prop,rietor.. It is a question that might
well- he discussed by our young 111011'S
rale There is a big principle at stake,
as uj t yas the girl's comfort and coniven-
ioac f, l „ga11001 entertain her bead
iu tlit;,,parlor, where is the hotel_ girl to
eltertrpjn hint?
]luring the recent panic in the United
Slate$ hoarding of currency reached the
enormous extent of $276,000,000, accord-
ing to a computation made by the Na -
thine? city tank of 'yeti York, Now
that the,ra plc is over Lilo tide has 11)10.
ed nl'the sntingah tits sof err York
espeyiAily aro doing -an '1'itarmous busi-
ness. In the eight business clays since
the'heginning of the NeW Pen the de-
posits had reached $30,000,000, Almost
331 the savings banks are now paying 4
per cent, interest, and persons of moder-
atemeans having investments fu indus-
trial and stock corporations paying thin
amount of ,interest or less, or ho <hn i-
dend, have sold their holdings and put
fine proceeds. in savings banks, 11'e may
311136' conclude that we have heard the
last of the financial panic of 1007,
There are something e 9000 physi-
cians in -practice in Canada, and there
are loud complaints in many localities
that' the' field' is overcrowded. Hardly a
rural village is to be found in which
there is not keen competition, owl tl:t
cities are swarming. In Ilamilton there
are perhaps 100 physicians, alma 450 ill
Toronto, and still they come. Tlic maxim
-t11at "There is always room at the top,"
is evidently receiving wide acceptance,
and hope "continues to spring exultant
fu the breasts' of the 2,000 -odd students,
who ere this year attending the medical.
schools of the country. There are said
to be now in training 050 new medicos
at 'Toronto University, 325 at Queen's,
425 at McGill, 100 at Halifax, 100 at
the Western (London), and 100 at Win-
nipeg.
The public will endorse'the 'tt )ion of
the directors of the Sovereign Bank in
deciding to 101,11'f ran business rnthr:
than curry on the same at a loss, to be
followed perhaps by disaster fn<tlut neer
future. The a 11,11 `of the associatad
banks -in taking over that bank's Inki-
ness -revels two things—ea.- ,le that Lilo
bank's uffui' fairlyaru,lngnat lupe
would othtte twoe!e,1 it, .1 0,1
et assured that the
ill be,:proleetec
he.passt.I., U[
;t, be, t,tf„^r
tn” affairs
on. The
t stormy
Sore rru jn Tank met
as ira'eviience that o u
3re:iit an wise U f:3.013 c
Sat 0nt1.)
HLili ],tg ell-'
if brief 'eoucl u.,l l cn
011,111)lg It we 1. trill. e ill. SC ors 4 ,,
other Canadian bank. Its goirgr 1 i tits;
xisite1ee, may DUI bo w immix,- c
1f it cheeks a tendency to maitip t bot,hs
'beyond any' speeial need.'110' 310t 3.3,lt.
?neither depositors nm note bohlu s need
.worry, and that the shareholders are in
no jeopardy iii' losing their holdings are
mtptteas for much congratulation.
moo
California's
First Gold
S KOZM d'b137'iidf t1Sl'i S`JZI3
A queellon that has long euezled coin col-
tectocv le the Ineautag of the Iota411 "CAL'
puuehmarked on a rare variety of the gold
quarter eagle of 1638. Tho answer has lust
been dlecovered.
Numlamanats have long Remodeled the coin
with California, which wee not a difficult
deduction from the letters "CAL" and the
date 148, and yet they have not been sure.
Some collectors Included it among the McN-
eer or private gold coins of Calttornia aid
even among the pattern or experimental is-
sues or the Vnited &etas Mint at Philadel-
phia.
.As a matter of fact the first .theory Is
correct, but besides being aseoctat.ed with
the' first California gold used at the mist
with Which to strike United States odes
this Quarter eagle le of intermit RD a 10
Minder of the fact that prominent Govern -
Meat oftlolale were sceptical all to the yel-
low metal beteg gold. This *centime 1s
shown by certain letters recently found
among Government documents.
In a letter to•Brlg•-Gan• R. Jones, Mili-
tant -General. 0! the United States Army, 04339
headquarters at Washington, dated September
le. 1646, Col, R, 11, Mogen, commanding the
041I,9ary department at Monterey, Cal., stet -
.4 that be was sending samples of goki re-
ealved from a dozen or ao persona, among
Whom was Capt. Sutter, In the ogre of Lieut.
I. Loeser, who on August 30, with the origin-
al of the letter, had Balled on the echoeuer
Lambaycana for Paytu, Peru, on 1110 way
around Cape Horn end thence to Washing-
ton.
In addition to these epeclmeue of gold, the
letter wait oil, the Lieutenant carried a tea
caddy containing 230 ounces 16 peenewelgbts
t arsine of gold. Title was purchased et
San Francesco by Col. Mason's orders, "and
is sent to you as a fair sample of the gold
obtained. from the mines of Sacramento. It
le a mixture ooming from the Varlinle parts
of the gold district."
Goa, Jones upon receipt of the tea caddy
evidently turned It over to the Secretory of
War. William I,. Marcy, who sent It to the
Director of the Mint at Phlladelpbla In care
of Lieut. -Col. Cooper, who born a letter to
the Dtreotor dated December 8, 11638. In
this letter the Secretary elated that the tea
Middy wee Ouppoeed to contain 230 ounces 16
Pennyweights 9 grains "o! what Is presum-
ed to be gold."
This metal, he wrote, had lust been for-
warded from different localities in Celffer-
tat, and doubt wee expressed by /leveret per-
sona ae to Its actuot9?' being the precl0ue
metal. In the event that the metal proved
to bo gold, Secretary Marcy requested the:
"the two mediae ordered by Congress"—
what these were Is not et present known,
but they probably had to do with the Meet -
Oen war—be struck in It, that a pound of the
Pu70 metal be returned by Co. Cooper, and,
that the remainder, with the exception of
one or two smell bare, be coined and cent:
with the bare to the department.
He said that tie many persona m1gbt de-
sire to procure a specimen of coin made from
Cellforea gold by exchanging otbet coin foe'
1t ho would suggest that the metal be made,
Into quarter eagles, with a distinguishing
mark on each, 1f any variation from the
ordinary Issues of the mint would be proper
and could be conveniently made.
Jame*. Rosa Snowden. Director of the Mint,
at Philadelphia, on December 12, 1613, wrote.
to Mr. Mercy acknowledging the receipt o!V
the gold,'whlch he said had been deposited
m the name or the War Department. He
further said tient a portion would be reserved
for the medals and the rest coined, oublece
to hie order. The gold In the caddy atter
refining amounted to 211 ounces 48 penny-
weights of gold, of a fiaeueao of .804;§, and
was valued at, ¢9,610.10.
It 1s emir to inter that the distinguishing
mark plated .upon the coins, in accordance
with the suggestion of the Secretary of
War, was the lettere "GAL." A change
In the design of a United States coin can-
not bo accomplished quickly, and therefore
it le reasonable to suppose that the Direc-
tor resorted to the simple expedleat of punch -
marking the three lettere on the quarter
'ogles struck from this first lot of Callfor-
nia'gold. -
It the Director followed out the plan out-
lined by hum in his letter 1t is probable
that the number of quarter eagles bearing
tale mark was between 1,000 and 1,200.
It may seem odd, in view of subsequent
events and of the feet that for a long time
after the date of the letter of rho Secretary
of War California was the greatest gold
Producing region la the world, to think
that' persons high In ellthorlty should re-
gard with suaplcion the Bret gold from Cali-
fornia, and yet many of the samples spoken
of by • Cola Mason did prove to be utterly in-
nocent of the presence of the precious metal.
The mint assayer's, Eokfeldt and Dubloe, In
whose .bands all the first samples of Cali-
fornia gold wore placed for assay and valu-
ation. orated In one of their reports that
"the drat sample of ore was sent to us by
an officer an the ariny during the Mexican
Aar,' and in - advance of the wonderful,
rumors, but so perfectly exempt was this'
considerable Invoice' of stones from anything-
like precious mets? that we might be for
given for havlag joined in the general In-
credulity by erhleb so many have been de-
ceived and ;some belated. Other epeclmeos
have since been forwarded for 'examination
by the Hon. Secretary of the Interior, most
of which were equally unproductive, dieprov-
tng et least the common impression that
everything to the gold region Is gangue for
sold."
While •It 1s possible that' a thousand and
more of the guerter eagles In question were
originally coined, st111 It 10 lkely that few
aro now In existence. Collectors do not con-
sider their 'aeries complete unlace their cobl-
tett contain a specimen of this variety, and
se much its 130 Woe this year paid .for a
specimen In uncirculated condition.
0mmoir DRIEVRIMIDZIWIDADDIR
DON'T -
Keep Hens
Make `f hens •
Keep. You !
Get twice the eggs at 'b the 0001 wltb
feed at 10e a bushel, as used and en-
dorsed by beet breeders. Unequalled for
layers and growing chicks, No man too
poor to teed It and no man rich enough
to buy better. No.tlme to lose., "Do it
now" and win out. Send stamp to -day
for partlouiare' to Brant Poultry Yards.
(Dept l.) Brentford, Canada,
Any Dude Will Do.
At a Canadian cantering place this
summer was a single lady, whom some
of the younger girls thought was tired
of single blessedness; and who determin-
ed -in a spirit of reckless jollity --to
spring a joke on her. So one of them
asked, "What ie .the difference between
a Yankee, a roaster and an old maid?"
She did not offer a guess, pod seemed
rather afraid they were engineering some
"plot," So the one who propounded the
riddle answered: "The Yankee says, Yan-
kee doodle -do; the rooster sags, Coek-n-
doodle do; and the old lady says, Any
dude'1l dei" There was a great eaplo-
abet of laughter, in which the single lady
hesitated to join; but in a minute she
burst out as heartily 09 any of them,
and exclaimed: "Send hien 011 quick, for
I'm' tired of teaching school("
MOH
Mange. Pralrle Scratches and every form of
contagious 1tob on human or aatnefle eared
in Se minutes by Woltord's Sanitary Lotion.
It never falls. Sold by druggists.
St Ge e's
Bakn
Polder
it o31y for the reams that it is whole
seine and healthful."
,Tile knowledge that you are 1101"
eating alum, lime, amtr<xtta and add to
your food—should count fora drake deal."
3T. GEORGE'S is made of ec,cop pure
Craw of Tarter." Try it.
Wndefor Pete ropy of our new Cooh-Boc,4,
National Drug & Chemical co. of
Canticle Limited, MoatreaL es
Smokestack Arsenic,
Thousands of tons of arsenic 'are wasted
annually In the fumes that pofrom the
stooks of the Groot smelters of ur the United
States, nye the United States Geological
Stervey, yet notwithstanding this waste, or
eghape because of ft, 8,000,000 p0unde of
tient° or arsenic compounds, coating about
76,000 . were Imported by us In 1900. In
at year our donuetie production of arsenic
as only one-sixth of the quantity Imported,
he value of only [63,460.
ante, lingtand, Germany, Portugal, Speln,
rkoy, Canada sed the United States are
,the principal arsenic producing countries.
In the United States, as oleo In England,
the great bulls of the arsenic produced L
from smelter furies. Engltalt smelters are
not allowed to pour arsenical fumes into the
air, forcing them to make money out of the
white arsenic saved. In the United States
only two smelters have plants for Raving Be
one at Anaconda, Mon., and the other at
Everett. Wash.
e o
Minard's Liniment Cures Colds, etc,
e• -u
Signing Pledge • Illegal.
The clegymanzreeorded complacently
the twenty-seventh New Year pledge
tolt1'sxcntg-
"ellent work, A glorious day," he
said. 'And yet do you 30110t0 that there
was once a. time when all this sort of
thing was criminal?"
"No I"
"Yes. It was 1n India, at the begin-
ning of the binglish occupation. Medical
meal believed in those days that a white
man could not Her in India without
drinking. They thought he needed half a
pint of whiskey, or its teell,elent, every
day, And they insisted o '4,' taking ung it.
Temperance 00eleties, total obsfitn-
ewe and the signing bf tlte'plodge were
things forbidden in India. Such Lhings
were thought injurious to the white
nap's health out there. IIence to go in
for them was to be arrested, fined, un'
prisolned, banished, -
"hut today in India total alystinenee
is encouraged, for it has been found that
the ibeteiner stands the hent far better
than does the man who drinks," --Fran
the Puilud0l),hio Bulled
A contemporary cafe 13101` the
son and )nein of th'r. Dyke of WestTnin-
ster will possibly 1 ave an income of
something Mile a sove etee n minute. The
duke's income ie etated'to-bo' £250,000
per annum, but when bile leavpe of his
property in Belgravia fall fee this in-
.eome will probably be at least doubled,
SOUNDPROOF ROOMS.
A Subterranean Refuge From Thund'
er In a Westchester House.
If Mrs, 1e1140 L. Rico is opposed to
110ietts, so also Ie Mr. Rice, at least when
he is playing chess. In the house on Riv-
erside Drive, sloop he has just sold titers
ie ono 1t010611600f 100m,
11 is hewn out of solid rock, under the
house, and its roof and entrances are so
arranged that no noise can reach the oc-
cupants. The 600411 was Unfit to gratify
Mr. Rice's chess habits, Every week for
00010' time the leading players of New
York met there,
There is another subterranean room in
a Westchester mansion, The idea wail to
create a room light and sound proof to
he used as a place of seclusion when
lightning flashed gni thunder roared and
the elements made things generally un-
pleasant for people who had nerves.
It le Bald that hardly a 0outd of the
heaviest thunder reaches the ears of any
occupant, Candles light it.—N, Y. bun.
ShilQ�
n + Use Shfloh's Cure
0 Sfor the worst cold,
theshorpest cough
Cure —try it on aguar-
anteo of your
money back if it
doesn't actually
CURE quicker
than anything you
ever tried. Safe to
take,--Tothing in
it to hart even a
baby. 34 years of
success commend
Shiloh's Cure -
25c„ 50c., Sl. 016
Cures
Coughs
and Colds
QUICKLY
��rrsta��ar
Packing for South American Trade.
A big firm in town, which manufac-
tures delicate instruments, received an
order a short timee ago for a quantity of
their instruments to be sent to South
American and packed in a certain mea-
ner.
erner. The packers of the firer thought
they 1:1100 best how to peek the can•
0101100111 of goods and aecordiugly ig-
nored the instructions sent on with the
order. A while later the firm received
a letter from South America asking why
the goods hod not been peeked as order-
ed. The letter went on to say that a
pack mule which had been loaded with
the valuable burden had fallen over the
edge- of a precipice and had rolled down
the side of the mountain and the instru-
ments were demolished.
The firm lied to make good the loss—
Boston Record.
Men should
4h look for this
Tag on
Chewing
Tobacco. It
guarantees the high quality cf
Black Watch
The Blg Black Ping.
2272
No Pay for Old Sermons,
"In the last analysis there is nothing
new that any of us can say," said Booker
T. Washington in Cambridge. "The doc-
trines of love, of punishment, of reward
and of the future life are as old as the
world.
"This reminds me of an old negro
whom I met in the hills down south at a
church where I 0008 heseeehing the audi-
ence to stand by their pastor and pay
him a salary. I spoke as eloquently as
I co-lld. 1 watched my audience and eaw
that, I had every one with me but this
old fellow in the rear, who kept mum-
bling to himself whenever I finished an
argument, Finally I called out to him,
and asked why he opposed paying a
salary to his ]yard -working minister,
"No, soh; no, suit; we shan't pay him
no More salary this year. He's giving
the same sermons he gave last year," he
said.—Boston Herald.
Minard's Liniment Cures Distemper.
Children Enjoy It
"I have used Coltefooto Expootorant
with the greatest satisfaction with my
children,- It is a wonderful cure for
colds and sore throat, i believe it sav-
ed the life of my little son, who Das
very sick from a protracted cold on his
lungs,"
MRS. 3NNIE BRAMBLh1R,
Orangeville, March 15, 1007.
"1 am greatly 9101300d with the gond
results we got from Coltsfoote Expec-
torant. I get great comfort with it for
1ny children,"
MRS. WALTER HAMMOND.
171 Argyle street Toronto,
Coltefoote Expectorant la the great-'
est home preparation for all throat and
chest troubles in rho world. No home
should be one hour without It, You
Can have free sample by sending name
to Dr, T. A. Slocum, Ltd., Toronto. All
good druggists keep it. Price, 260.
Send for free sample today,
New Drink In Georgia,
The first of the prohibition drinke
made its debut In Atlanta Wednesday
morning and it is understood that eel,
era! others are to follow, ' The new
drink, which looks like lager beer, emelle
like it and foams like it, is called "Jack
Frost.'
Soda founts which had 'Jack Frost" on
draught Wedneedny 8001) sold out their
supplies, for there were marry who were
curious to'eample the legal beer. The
drink le non-alcoholic, according to the
manufacturers, and is made, like other
soda fountain beverages, from the syrup,
With carbonated water added.
Even the old red nosed topers, who
found their favorite haunts eloeed New
Year'. morning, were casting about for
a substitute for the, amber fluid with
which they were wont to .regale them•
selvea, and they eagerly sampled the
new prohibition drink, -Atlanta Journal.
Odd Rules of life.
Galipaux, the actor, laughs at the old
precept of "corly to bed and early to
rise," says the London T. P, 0, flow can
a Ulan do these things if he is an actor?
And as to tate advice to avoid iheagree-
able emotions, you might as well toil a
roan who has dyspepsia that the best
way is to take no notice of it—or, worse
still, in acoidance with the teachings of
Christian Science, tell him he has not
got dy epepaia after all,
5u011 is Gal1paux's opinion; neverthe-
less, he believes in a certain regularity
of life.:113 has his table set for dinner
at seven o'clock. Even if he is not in
the house this dinner isserved as usual
He often finds the knowledge that the
meal will be served at that hour with-
out fail isan inducement to him to liar
ry home. when otherwise he would not
trouble himself to do so,
General Gallifet, who oven as far back
as . the early 0ixtfee received fearful
wounds, from which it seemed hopeless
to snppese that lie would recover, has
till the same elegant. figure and - the
same ;belling style es in youth. His
111100 aro "absolute sobriety, never read
the papers laugh at eolith, but have a
terror of foels.'l
Minard'a. Liniment Ceres Diphtheria.
CORR EDT POSITION.
Tom—What'd de matter?
Dick— Alothin'; we'e playin' anti).
mobile
Minard's Liniment Co., Limited:
Gentlemen, ----Last winter I received
great b'e'fit Erma- the 11>e- of-1fIN-
ARU 8 LINIM'blNT in a aovere attack
of La Grippe, and I have frequently
proved it to be very effective in cases of
Inflammation,
You ,
• W. A. HU'PC1IINSON,
Diamond Salesman's Secrets.
There ie bo line in which more care
must be exercised than in selling dta-
monde," remarked min of the oldest deal-
er. in Cleveland, "Far instance, we
don't dare allow a man a larger stone
than he can afford to buy.
"Even a diamond a coat or a carat
and a half in size looko like a mighty
email affali' to pay so much `rnone3' foie
and if a man comes in expecting to pay
375 for a. diamond he may get disgusted
and not buy at all if the salesman shows
hum something a little larger for 3200.
The salesman, if ho knows 1110 business,
will find to a certainty just how much a
customer is' willing to pay before he
shows him anything,
"Them it's better not to 0110w o color-
ed stone, such as a ruby or an emerald
or a bluish diamond in connection with
other diamonds. ' If you show some ens -
toners a colored stone and then put 1t
away and show him a good white dia-
mond he will declare that the diamond
is off color. It does not seem to be a
whim so much as the effect on the 0y00
of the color's in the stones. --Cleveland
Plain Dealer.
ENGLISH SPAVIN LINIMENT
Removes all hard, soft and calloused
Lampe and blemtehes from horses, blood
spavin, curbs, splints, ringbone, sweeney,
stifles, sprains, sore and swollen throat,
coughs, etc. Save $60 by use of ono
bottle. Warranted the most wonderful
Blemish Cure ever known. Sold by drag.
gists.
Electricity from Windmills.
The Danish Government has given
some attention to the natter of secur-
ing- electrical energy from windmills
in that country. Nearly shirty thousand
dollar% loam been OpprOprieted and an
experimental station established at As-
kce. A great deal of valuable' informa-
tion has been accumulated. Among oth-
er things it has been determined that
an arrangement of four wings ie the
most effective. A smaller number does
not fully utilize the wind power and a
greater number makes a confusion of
wind currents between the wings and
serves to retard their movement.
ere
Talk is cheap, if you don't use, a
'phone,
ISSUE NO, 5, 1908.
METEORITES.
Strange Adventures of Wonderers
Through Celestial Space,
According to a prominent official en-
gaged in astrononliea.l work for the
Goverment at Washington, some of the
meteorites tltwt fall upon the earth pee -
sees a peculiar structure, indicating that
they have been more than once 111 n
molten condition. He concludes, 00 a re-
sult of hes etudiee of tide 013300 of
meteorites, that they 00000 originally
from a volkano situated in some distant
part of"tiptoe, but that before reaching
the earth they were subjected to greed
heat which metamorphosed their struc-
ture. To explain thine he suggests tihat
in tele course of their celeetal journey
they may have passed through e a
t
mosphero a a sun, or any have 'been
fused through the Budden 'birth of anew
and neighboring 'tar. The heat devel-
oped during their fell through our at-
mosphere is not sufficient to explafnithe
changes they have undergone.
BETTEk TBAN SPANXINCL
sonatas dose not ours children of bed-
wetting. There is k coaetltutlonal cause 'tor
tilt- trouble. Mn, M. Summers, Bot W. tr
Windsor, Ont., will send free to any mother
her suc0eeaful home treatment, with full
lastrudlone. Bend no money but write 'her
to -day 1t your children trouble you In' this
way. tient Panne the child, the chattels
are 1t can't help it. This treatmentalso
cures adults .and aged people troubled with
urine difficulties by day or night.
Eggs That England Eats.:
Each Londoner cote lees then an;egg
and a Half a oily:
English egg importation from Trance
have (bopped to value from .£1;600;000
to £800,000
Loudon oonaounas 800,000,000'o ' eggs.
weigh 50,000 tons and coat the,' eaters
£4,000,000, ,
Fifty per snt, of.tbe cage ,dte'lald
in Enggland, 16 par oeirt, are French- eggs
and 3K. per cent,: come from other ooun-
tiics... '
English fresh laid.egge now being- 2*
3d. to 20. Od. per dozen, The next beat
egg, the Calais variety, brings le; Bpi'. 24.
These are winter prime.
The price of eggs in Feiglend . 11 ad-
vanced greatly in ldte-y`aari, 1,, value
of last year's home product teas '• £,r2;
600,000 greater titan that oY twelve
years
1::aetyear England imported 4,266,000;
000 eggs from Russia Denmark, . Ger-
many,
ermany, Be1gtum, France, CNrnuda.and oth-
er owlntrlees, the total volae o1- with
was 187,080,187, '•
Bathe the Baby
with Mira skin soap. u cues chafing,
scalp irritation and an akin troubles.
•
TRADE NARK ,,R11110161110.
SKIN SOAP
is wonderfully soothing 00 account of its
antiseptic, healing properties. Grateful
to the neat delicate skin, fragrant and
refreshing. It is the beat toilet soap as
well as the best medicinal soap,
secs cake—at draggled/ or sept or wrist of
price. The Cbemtata Ca of Canada, i nutted
Hamilton. . 23
Special Classification In Germany.
The word p1Eioenbahnbetrlebstelegraph-
eninspektions-assistenten""would suggest
German honor were it not recognized in
the census of all the professions, trades
and occupations which were pursued in
the German Empire in June last. The
calling in question is that' of akeistant
inspector in the railway telegraph sur -
vice, and Is one of 16,010 different occu-
pations specialized by the census talcea
in that month. While 0omo of the call-
ings have naturally tens of thousands of
followers there are many cases in which
there are only a few, and ho some only
ono person in the whole kingdom is
earning his livelihood in some manner
which necessitates a special classification.
—London Chronicle,
Minard's Liniment Cures Gorget in Cows.
Effects of the Flurry.
"Of course you've heard about this !M-
andel flurry, -Mr, Snoblelgb?"
"Yee, Mitre It001130."
"Isn't 13 awful the way everyone to affect-
ed e"
Why what dlfferenoe can it make to
vou!"
What difference? Wily, -ane automobile
Father says CI can only. that I mustn't she
twenty -rive a day,
000;two0 than. lunch parties a week, that
that---ohnlyou y �hav3't -any to one aideaq�whattthisaall
means to me"'—C1ev elan lain Dealer.
Gossip comes . in . pieces, so , break it
gently.
LO MATCHES
Silent as
the Sphiro
19