Daily British Whig (1850), 19 May 1906, p. 9

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nen four great nation i ingston women Ah dy re two splendid Fain on good Necessary ey extra-saving of Course sual attraction to this sto x le money --wh;ch we ry i sed for the coming week vit | the later spring ship Find delight in what fol * specials :- ash Materials orite manufacturer of Shir! dren's Wear you owe special. Af feat ter his spri en made up he had 2 designs left. He could have ronto or Montreal stores t e possibly, but he didn't little to throw them our way. Madras Wash : I PW summer ti of a goed qual 06 L124, to-mor ¢ ard... } 9 rill be in our window from dorning. No "phone orders, LAW & SON - LE 'ou Should See 75,4.99, 599, 6.75,-750 LAW & SON -- PE Entire Factory e statement, knowing at the ow-a-days to but one retail ee at once the broad-minded least examine our assortment tation for having the finest the least by such examination four specials : Waists, finest sheer lawn, with tiful Swiss embroidered front dainty lace insertion and tucks oke; new elbow sleeves, lac med; (ime lace r; * oper i. Not our. hest ist onc of them. Monday, ] 5 . Waists,. fine lawn, 'in the latest lice style; wid ion front; insertion and vest; latest sleeves with d d cuffs; neat LAW & SON . Embroideries w's a generous wealth of hath design and exellent quality 10 pisce of ow lerics and ons this vear mor than ever Of course, it was a long wav for-such--aw » St. Gall, wrland--but by b from the foremost maker w g our patrons pleass and sans a, and thus, their (further pa: here. Prices now irom 3¢. to vard. enema tn the little tots and the Shoes for nt better for summer tha SHOE, STORE From $4.00 9? s in town. DAIL \ RITIS YEAR 73. -- KINGSTON, ONTARIO, 5 no eA Germar Lacing BERT Automabile Dewen_by Alcohol. Yi ZL / = hi I i > u In A An Alcohol Locomotive A Canstrucleon Iain Drawwng A Lisnt Plant -- a Ari Qlcokol Fem Ihde Pong A Thresher 2 JZ rau Press operated by Alcokol When Chairman" Payne, of the ways and means committee of the house of representatives recently . presented a favorable report upon the bill remov- ing the tax from denaturized alcohol, he made a brief general statement of the value of that product not only in the industrial fields, but to the household. * In Germany, said Mr. Payne,' the bulk of the denaturized alcohol is used for light, fuel and heat. For lighting, German consiimers use a lamp with a mantel which produces a strong, steady and clear light, lasting twice as long to the quantity of fuel consumed as kerosene. The Germans have also adopted gasoline engines to the use of Nehal. It is estimated by Mr. Payne that the actual cost of alcohol is something less than twelve cents ner gallon, and he assertatiat. 10 will produce ten per cot, more power than gasoline. Germany, France, Austria, Italy, Russia and other countries already ex- empt alcohol employed for industrial purnoses from taxation. The United States has wakened only recently to the rreat value and general usefulness of this commodity. Indeed, Germanv. was vractically drivin to remove the tax. It, does not yield petrolenm to anv ~reat extent, and the industries demanded a cheap and powerful = fuel, It does have the products from which alcohol is deriv- ed with the preatest economy. So thé EE ---------------------------------- You Melancholy Women ! Can't even sleep--restiess day and night-'hrooding over imagined trouble all the time. The disease isn't in the brain, but in the blood which is thin and innutritions. Do the right thing now and you'll be cured quickly. Just take Ferrozone; it 'turns everything You eat into nourishment, consequent- Iv, blood containing lots of iron and oxygen is formed. Ferrozone makes flesh, muscle, nerve--strengthens in a Week, cures very quickly. You'll live longer, feel brighter, be free from wel ancholy if vou use Ferrozone. Fifty cents buys this good tonic " & box of thifty chocolate coated tablets in every box) at all dealers. government made its bow to the inevi- table. - The American alcohol bill provides that 'such spirits, when rendered unfit for use as a beverage, mav be remov ed from distilling warchouses free of tax. Sulphuric ether, wood alcohol, me- thylic alcohol, wood naphtha or other substantes approved . by the commis- sioner of internal revenue and the see retary of. the treasury must be mixed withthe fluid to denaturize it. Although 'not mentioned specifically in'ithe bill, pyradin, picolin, benzine, wood vinegar, gasoline and acetone the last "of which is derived from the grease of sheen wool--as well as sever al other products, may be emploved for the same purpose. Thev do not in jue it as a lighting. or healing agen- cy. erman farmers," says a recent writer, "reap and thresh by aid of the spirit engine; it does the haul ing up to twenty horse-power, in the towns; large creameries run their churns with it; the housewife attaches it to her laundry, and it works the washing machine, as well as the sew- ing machine afterward. ~ "The small housekeeper two cents" worth of alcohol in her nickle plated, self-heating flatiron, and uses it over two hours without its losing heat. Alcohol cookers prepare food in many restaurants. To illustrate the varied uses of alco- hol power as employed in Germany, it is stated that in 1903 alone the fol lowing number of. engines were sup plied to the various industries from a single Berlin plant : puts Agricultural ... oi Pumping plants st Creamerics «. .. ...» +n 63 Electric licht plants ... ...... 52 Wood working machiner; 15 Flour. mills ... ant 40 Bakeries oo... 8 Motor trucks ... ... 20 Boats. oi i shies ee wie 0 In all, 1,01¥ alcohol engines were sent out from that station during the year, the rest being used for general POWEr PUTPOSes. An immensely increased demand for some fuel that will take place of pet- \ roleum products has done much for this increase has development of the automobile. In London alone the starting of line of 500 motor lons of fuel a vear. Testifving before the turn attention' to alcohol. One reason been the rapid omnibusges recently means a consumption of 3,000,000 gal house commit- of ten hours' approximately ten gal- lons of gasoline. If there are 300,000 engines in this country running on this basis, it would mean a consump- tion of 3,000,000 gallons a day. In course of time the gasoline supply is liable to diminish, and the price in crease. We must look clsewhere for or 1904," continued Mr. Warnes, "there were about 3,000 alcohol en gines in Germany. Now there are ab out 6,000, and the number is rapidly growing. The number in other Euro pean countries where the tax has been removed is said to be in proportion. The fact is cited to show that aloohol «ngine has been found practicable and the fuel cheap." That 'engine makers have Leen con sidering a possible shortage in the supply of petroleum products was mentioned before the house committee by L.. RB. Grebbels, representing gas engine works in Cdlogne, Germany, «nd Philadelphia. The firm's Philadelphia plant turns out ahout 1,200 engines na year, ag: gregating about 20,000 horse-power. Of these, about 12,000 horsepower are operated by liquid fuel, gasoline, ete. consuming when run .on an average of eight hours a day, 6,000,000 pallons a vear. With the » of denaturized al- | chol, Mr, Goebbels estimated the out- | put of his plant would be easily doupl- ed. Nearly all farming onerations, es pecially the extensive ones of Western states in this country. demand an ade SATURDAY, MAY 19, 1906. Es ' PALE, FEEBLE GIRLS. A Great Responsibility Rests on Mothers of Growing Girls. A great and serious responsibility rests upon every mother whose daugh- ter is passing the threshold of girl: hood into woinanhood, She is at a' crisis, and if she is to be a healthy, happy woman, she must develop right- ly now. She must not be pale, sunken- eved, sallow, languid and bloodless at this time, She must have additional strength and rich, pure blood to help her to strong, healthy womanhood. There is only one absolutely certain way to get new rich, health-giving blood, and that is through the use of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. Every pill helps to make rich, life-giving blood, that brings strength to every organ in the body and the glow of health to pale, sallow cheeks. Thousands. of pale, anaemic girls in di parts of Canada have been made 'well and strong through the use of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. Mrs. Rachel Johnson, Hemford, N.S., says © "As a result of overstudy in schuol, the health of my. daughter, Ellen, became greatly impaired. She grew extremely nervous, was péle and thin, and suffered ¢ from most severe headaches. She had no appetite, and notwithstanding all we did for her in the way of wedical treatment, her suffering continied, and 1 began to feel that her condition was hopeless. Indeed 1 began to fear her mental powers were failing. One of my friends strongly urged me to try Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, and as 1 was willing to do anything that might help her 1 sent for a supply. After 'using the. pills for less than a month, we saw that her vigor was returning, and in less than three months her health was fully restored. Considering the faot that she had: been ill for two years, and that dootor's treatment did her not one particle of good, 1 think her cure speaks volumes for the wonder- ful merit of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills." The new blood which Dr. Williams' Pink Pills actyally make, is the whole secret of their great power to cure diseases. That is the reason these pills cure anaemia, heart palpitation, headaches, and backaches, rheumatism, neuralgia, kidney troubles, and a host of other ailments due to bad blood and weak nerves. But be sure you have the genuine 'with the full name, "Dr, Williams'. Pink Pills for Pale People," on the wrapper around each box, If in doubt, write direct to the Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont, and the pills will he sent hy mail at 50c. a box or six boxes 25 £2.50. for PERSONALLY CONDUCTED. A Tour to Elks' Convention, Denver, Colo. quate and chean motive power. More and more machinery is taking the | plage of men and horses. To operate | this machinery in the most economical | and telline way the cheapest fuel must i be provided. : | It is not only the ' automobilist, | dashing, hither and thither in his mo | tor car, or the small manufacturer-- thousands in mumber--who demands cheaper fuel for his purposes. In a great part of the western coun- try wood is out of the auestion coal {is advancing in cost and oil mounts higher in' the money scale vear by vear. And vet fuel must be had. Testifying recently before the wavs and means committee, Representative Thomas F. Marshall, of North Dako ta, said: "Coming as I do from a | purely agricultural district. 1 am | preatly desirous that lecislation | should be such as will ~ive 'the farm- ers the greatest measure of ocod. The benefit to the farmer and all others who nronosetq vse almhol for nur poses of heat. Tight pad power will he meastured directly 1 the cost of de naturized alcohol. to Stamping The Tramp. has been exc { of Guardians, county Antrim, Ir land. At a recent meeting a letter from the master of Omagh Workhouse a visiting this workhouse is with a dating stamp, For some time the tramp question vising the Lisburn Board stated : "The clothing of all tramps stamped The effect is management, "there is little doubt but the amount of denaturized alcohol used for power and lighting purposes alone wonld far exceed the amount consum- ed for all dther purposes." "I helieve,"" continued Mr. Warnes, "that 100,000 stationery engines a vear would be a very conservative guess on the output of the factories of this eountry. r "The editor of a leading automobile journal informed me that there were about 25,000 engines manufactured for automobiles 'cach year. = This would make the total engine output about 125,000 annuallv. "Assuming that the encines now in operation will average eight horsepow- er, then each will consume in a day ET ------------------------------ When You Buy--Buy Right. ed the workhouse weekly, and now wi have not more than ten weekly. Dur ing the last four nights we had only four tramps." resolved that the tramps' clothing be also stamped. ¢ A Sharp Fight. nationalists occurred recently at An naghmore, County Tyrone. 1 he for new hall, and the nationalists wer branch Revolver establishing a Irish League fired, and a shots the leg. 8S and werd thrown, and a great many win dows were broken. A constable nes When you buy Ozone, buy "Solution of Ozone (the coupon. kind)." It is market. is sold a% a commercial product at reasonable rates, so that you get about twice as much as other brands. Also cach bottle con tains a coupon which entitles you to a package of "Celery King," the well known remedy which must always be taken with Ozone. 4 No other brand of Ozone gives vou an opportunity to -get the "'Cel King" free. We own "Celery King," and that is why we can give it with our Ozone. 3 "Solution of Ozome, (the coupon kind)" contains about twice as much alsa furnishes yon with "Celery King" for nothing. Insist on getting it from your druggist or write the Public Drug company, PBridgeburg, (int. who will see that you are sup- plied. the strongest and purest Ozone on the { t for your money as anv other kind. It: severely injured. i Photography By Telegraph. Moch interest has been manifested ix a lecture given by Dr. Kofn in Vien na, on the hew method pf photooraph jr a long distance. Recent experi ments have shown that a cabinet size twenty jporteait now requires from ts } minutes to thirty minutes for trans i mission over hundreds of miles. It i } not likely that the invention will of ten be us«d for personal photoertphs but it is equal applicable to the pro i duetion of signatures, sketches, ete | The system, which for public use, is expected to be of considerable service to the press and for the ends of justice. i i "For a violin hy ! dated 1695, £20 was given cent sale in London: while at a wn The Lisburn guardians A collision between Orangemen and mér were attending the ceremony of the laying the foundation stone of a holding a meeting for the purpose of of the United man attending cattle in an adjoining field recvived a bullet in other missiles was i= now available Petrus Guarmerius, ore by Via New York Central lines, twelve: day tour. AH expenses. i rate. Special train of Pullman -dfaw- ingroom and compartment sleepers, buffet, library and dining cars, will leave Utica, Syracuse, Rochester and Buffalo, Friday, July 13th. Experien- ced New York in charge. Option turning from Chicago, Cleveland to Buffulo. York Central agent tion and copy of itinerary. of lake trip re Help Near At Hand. Is what you want when happens at night. Can vou Nerviline ? No, for it stlande tmequal led in curing pain, internal or local. Earache, toothache, and neuralgia. disappear in a jiffy. Rub it on away flies the pain. Lubbock, the first England to have his photograph tak was "len. M. Daguerre, the inventor of the | established trading posts in the Lake art, came to London to patent his Superior ore regions as lopg ago as discovery, and paid an carly Visit to | 1816, Lord Avebury's father, The son was Next came the lumbermen, who i playing in the garden and was suc tee, J. CG. Warnes, representine the In- | (hat we have got rid of the tramp |oessiully photographed. ternational Harvester company, of | uicance. Before the stamp came into | "The Australians are the greatest Chicago, asserted that, with vroper | co an average of sixty tramps visit- | toa drinkers in per head, and in the only 1 lb. 2 oz. tract attention in any he invests in a gaudy vest, in constant pains of rheumatism, neuralgia, lum- | ship of" the Minnesota legislators. bago and kindred dis- | Quite the reverse. I story runs .| From Mis- eases. They would | that away back in 1857 the school give any money to get | guthorities, being in great need of ery to relief, but having trier | money, clamored for a share of the various remedies and | publio lands. : Comfort been disappointed they | "Certainly," replied the assembly- have; become aged and sceptical of will riot disappoint you, Rheumatic Bone Oil. It points. - As it's ' | straight to the sure and speedy cure. fort where thgre was misery, for which ers. 'This oil is for internal and nover failing remedy * {lame back, ete, it is also good croup, hronchitis, and quinsy. It I | the most remarkable remedy of and should be age «| The Tuck Bone Smith's Falls. Oil Co., Nicholas Lupot brought $20, | satisfied. jo | steamer arrives, Central representative Detroit or Ask any New for full informa- sickness possibly find the equal of and For cramps, vomiting or indigestion all you need is tem drops in sweetened "Siok or well youll find Polson's | 8iret have bun created by the no. Nerviline invaluable in your home. tural wealth - of the Jake Superior Get a large 25c. bottle to-day. wilderness. First came whe fur-traders, ' who scattered their trading posts along the lake shore and laid the Lord Avebury, otherwise Sir John | foundation of great fortunes hy tral- person in the world, annually consuming 73 lbs., per head, In Eng- land the consumption is about 63 lbs. United States When a silly maft is unable to at other manner: EEE T------ The world is full of people who are misery from the racking diseout- all remedies. Does this describe yohr case? If it does, let us tell you that there is a cure, for your trouble, a remedy that It is Tuok's ever disap- name implies it goes bone, of joint, tho seat of the disease, scatters the pois- onous acid, relaxes the stiffened joints, allays the inflammation and effects a It gives com- a fact We have hundreds of let ters from those who have been suffer- ex- ternal use and while it is a great and for rheumatism, for other kinds of inflammation such as bottle or sent by mail prepaid hy Limited Money refunded if not STEEL AND IRON THE ROMANCE OF THEM IN UNITED STATES. Eleven Years Ago There Was Not a Mill' Producing Hall a Million Tons a Year. Until eleven years 0, there was not an iron mine in the world that had produced half a million tons in a singly year. To-day there are fifteen mines on Lake Superior that produce from ome to three times as much. The Oriskany mine, in Virginia, was thought to he a record-breaker when its output was a thousand tons a day, but a Mesaba mine will turn out fifteen thousand tons a day for weeks 'together. Seventy steam shovels are now tearing at the earth and ore of the .Mesaba, and new records will probably be made before these words are printed. The cost of mining has -been- beaten down to as little as twelve cents a ton--a minimum un- imaginable even among the underpaid miners of Greece or Spain. The discovery of Lake Superior ore has changed the industrial map of the United States. It has o up a new. territory as large as France. It has shifted the centre of the iron and stdel trade from the Ohio river to the Great Lakes. It has built up eight railroads, more than a dozen busy towns, and the largest commercial fleet in the world. It feeds our fur: naces with the best and the chéapest ore, and does more than any other | one factor to give America the supremacy in iron and steel. All this in less then fifty years. The old eaptain who brought down the first cargo of ore from Marquette to Lake Erie in 1853 is still hale and hearty, and may be seen any al- ternoon on the street of Ashtabula. Until 1861 very little ore was carried down the lakes. The la t vessels in. the trade Jers Jo undred-ton schooners, and the frei was three dollars a ton, aa times more than the present rate. that time a captain named Winslow made himself ridiculous among his mates by saying : "There are men.now alive who will live to sce the day when these wooden sailing vessels will be replaced by steamboats made of iron and steel." I¢ss than six years ago, Mr. Car negie stuck a pin in the map of Ohio, and said : "We will build a harbor of our own here, as the point where our ore ships and our ore railroad meet." The spot indicated the pin was no more than a swampy village. To-day it is the foremost harbor on the Great Lokes in point of tonnage, and 'in dopk squipment it has no equal in any country. Half a day alter an ore its cargo been transforred - into freight cars and is trunding southward on its jowney lo Pittsburg. Four miles of cars can be loaded and hauled out in one day. the eight railroads that earn! their dividends by carrying Lake Su- perior ore, four. are the property of the United States Steel Copporation. To haul the ore to the lake requires the use of about two hundred and fifty locomotives and eighteen thou- sand' cars. Those who hope to visit the great treasure-land of Minnesota need have no fear that they will be obliged to make the journey sitting on top of a loaded coal car or lum- ber truck. The ore railroads are first class in every respect. The first ore line, between Catasanfjua and Fogels- + | ville, in' Pennsylvania, built by, David Thomas fifty years ago, has paid dividends without misting a year since its first train was run. . These consecutive groups of million- licking with the Intians, Tt is an in- . | teresting fact tht John Jacob Astor . | made millions out of the Lake Su- perior forests. The iron ore, in fact, way be called a by-product of the exhausted timber lands. The public school system of Minne- sota has today more than sixteen million dollars in its treasury, accu: timber lands. Fifteon mines are now paying a royalty of twenty-five cents A ton to the schools. Every swing of the steam shovel's five-ton bucket puts a dollar and a quarter into the ser- vice of education. This arrangement is mot due. to the astute statesman: men, "We'll give you ten sections." When the school authorities received the official paper, they fouid to their disgust that the school lands were lo- ented in the remote, uninhabited wil- derness, in the extreme north-eastern part of the worthless, they thought. as if it had beeri at the bottom of Lake Superior. For more than twenty years this fool ing of the school authorities was one of the standing jokes' of the Minneso- ta politicians. The Lake the last and most wo world's mineral di perts say that eric. rate of consumption their best de- --the Mesaba, the richest of them all, - in less than twenty-five. But who can the in every home. Sold" by all medicine dealers at 50c. 4» tell 7 The immense recent finds in Ala- bedna and British Columbia show that July 31st, 1906 Messrs. Armour Limited, to advise all who kindly forwarded lists of nan the conditions of Contest, that th cutie contents, HE dest i 1 ening of March 19th, 4 records of Hist they have received, as} well as all lists, were destro; ne] we ask that all who bad sent in lists nt caomie paid wis Ji cal du Priest Tate Tomake » a foryisge [os the fire, and t ve competito o fair. and equal ae we have con sented to extend the Rdu Contest until July 3rst, 1906, We offer $200.00 in gold to the sending in the largest fists of letters used in spelling the four words Armour's Extract $100.00 in gold will bo given as the frst] $25.00 n god will bd given as th second $1000 in gold will be given as the prize. * $5.00 in gold will Le given to each of L hye, 3 nex $2.00 will twenty, given to each of the Une only fhe followling 12 letters :--A--M-0-U EXTO Fb, NO Tebret Wr APpens Ih te me Only such words be used as are found Wooaier's Intemational No persons, Armour Limite mulated by the leasing of its ore and | state. The Jand was as Superior jore mines are ul of the The ex- they' are practically all taken up, and that at the present posits will be exhausted in fifty years 17 FRONT ST. BAST, TORONTO "Does Your Stomach Bother You? rns Dr. Shoop's est . Through the Guaran We guarantee 'our milk to be ABSOLUTELY pure ; put sterilized bottles: It is the | Try it. Kingston Milk De 5. , | worlds to conquer. trouble us or our children, there may yet be many new ore The "ore famine," so freely predicted is not likely to 1 Haplainint. dota 96 be a chron it i SE

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