Daily British Whig (1850), 30 Jun 1906, p. 11

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andruff, itch ed, and kept onie baldness, t upon the US cannot by nd wholesomg of d. ] carries out f the sw * stops itch V, Writes gn d only abso eg Herpicid manutact ay .» Windsor, Ont. t and Princess Ste . - ee eee e---------- -- ACE urnace ery ent ? cut of the ws a few hat make h a great them are ced-doors, on, well ash pan, fire-pot, pan, sect- how it is ized cas- and pipe t explains any more » s" special for it. ONS HN, ---------- The on's remeay known > sciz=nce manhood is" RESTORE, discovered by Dx ule try b: e Dr. "which has the high 'his 'reatment haa cu J the best known suffering from discascs lost naahaod exhausts e results of abuse, (his red. The headache, pire k and failing memory, orst cases in from one ake the honest offer & testim 8 wore FIVE day's of rules for Seaith, et have been i pri sd d German are models of strength 2341, Montres> HAMILTON THE DAILY WHIG, SATURDAY, JUNE 30. ' "The Perfect Food" perfect breakfast is im- possible without it and it's A just as good three times a day. It gives you real nourishment and renewed vitality. For Malta-Vita is rich in nutrition--every nutritive element®of the best white wheat and finest barley malt extract. The malt extract, mixed with the flaked wheat, converts the starch of the wheat into maltose, or malt sugar, makes it easy for even the weakest stomach to digest Hand adds a pleasing taste 'which cannot be found in grain 'foods sweetened with sugar, glucose or. syrups. Try Malta-Vita. with cream or fruit. All grocers, now 10C at Waggons, Buggies As: there has not been much of the beautiful snow this season, Waggons will be more used. If you dre in need of a Wagcon or Bugey of any special design, ft will be to your interest to -call on Jas. Laturney The Carriage Maker 390 Princess Street, Kingston ae An Honest Guarantee We guarantee our milk to be ABSOLUTELY pure; putup in sterilized bottles It is the best. Try it. Kingston Milk Depot Cor, Brock and Bagot Sts. 'Phone 567. TO HISTRAJESTY. THE KING Sir John Power & Son' Lea. ESTABLISHED AD. 1791 THREESWALLOWS IRISH WHISKEY Famous for aver a . century for its delicacy of flavor. Of highest standard of Purity. Rt is especially fecommended by the Medical Profession or account of its peculiar "DRYNESS" Wilson's FLY PADS ONE PACKET HAS ACTUALLY KILLED A BUSHEL OF FLIES Bold by all Druggists and General Stores » and by 'mail, 5 TEN CENTS PER PACKET FROM | ARCHDALE WILSON, : HAMILTON, ONT, Made in England, but ¢ Joc for colors. 15c for black, Any man should be able to manage a business according to directions, but UO man can manage a woman that way, Latite Leomponotus herculeancus, Weak Kidneys y : Bright's Disease and Diabetes Use Dr. Shoop's Restorative to Cure the Cause, If You Suffer From These Symptoms. Here are the symptoms of Kidney complaints: Urine laden with sediment, brick dust in urine, highly colored urine, greasy froth or blood in it, stringy mucous in urine, unusual de- sire to urinate, pain tn passing water, pain in the back and over the kidneys, hot, dry and itching skin, hair A dry and brittle, pain ful joints, legs feel heavy, sleepl ity, irregular 8 of eyesight, / hearing, waxy / the other in JN Caine worse than Kidney medi- are practically acting as cathartios They excite the kid \§ tion, they cause over-\g otic edies are them ¥ selves the frequent Don't serious kidney disease. doctor the kidneys themselves, for you will only barm them. power. nerves Their ouly strength is nerve Dr. Shoop's Restorative vitalizes the that operate the Kidneys. Sold by "ALL DRUGGISTS." GARPENTER ANTS. Show Zeal and Considerablé-Con- 2 structive Skill. Ants are capable carpenters, and can saw wood as well as a man in pro- portion to their size and limited strength. The Pennsylvania carpenter- sub- spegies Pennsylvanicus) construct gal- ler'es, chambers, and halls out of solid wood, and work like Trojans at the task, their tiny bodies 'quivering with the excitement of the labor. Dr. McCook, president of the Entomological Society, has devoted much time to the st «y of i ener getie insects, and tills us, in Harper's Magazine, how they. work and how they clear away the resulting "saw: dust' from time to time so as to con: ceal their whereabouts from enemies. American Simple Tailor-Made / The bolero jacket, with its short, natty length and chow sleeves, tail v favored model for. this two-pirce suit. "The skivt which it accompanies may be circular, gored or pleated, or a combination of two of these styles, and the length, to be extremely smart, should "be at 'least one and a hali inches clear of the ground, and two inches is none too much, That of the picture is a circular model' cut with a bias centre front seam. The bottom is finished with a deep facing, inset with a light-weight haircloth and bound with a velsa binding, which not only protects the edge of the skirt, but mikes a pretty finish. The jacket "which tops this smart skirt is extremely plain of cut, the French seam running over the bustling outlin ed on either side with a black pull braid, which contrasts well with the silky gray mohair, more of the braid trimming the fronts and the scalloped lower edge of the coat. Black velvet makes the turnover collar, and is in- set in the turnback cuffi of the mo- hair, inte Which is gathered the full puff dleeve" The velvet also mikes the high-ppinted girdle, supported with feather-bones. fhe fo drnfl He eter thch %, Blue elon buon NEW YORK LETTER THE NERVE OF A THEATRI, CAL MANAGER. Use of the Telephone Advancing-- New Wooden Pavement on Broadway Has Caused More Traffic. ; New York, Jung 30.--Nerve goes a grent way, sometimes with men as well as animals. William A. Brady, a noted theatrical mgnager, showed his nerve in a way that astonished be- holders at Brighton Beach the other night. He entered a cage containing two _lionesses, and remained there at least two minutes; while the animals --said by their keeper to be unusually vicious--snarled at him and crawled almost at his feet, More than a hun- dred persons saw the feat. "Bob" where the sun can get at me and the air circulate around me. 1 often brush my hair and air it yp there in the sunlight when I do not wish to wash it, and that keeps it clear a long while. In the winter, you would be surprised to know how hot the sun can be on.a flat roof of tin!" »n News of the revival of an old"rumor that William R. Hearst had bought the New York Press, was carried to him the other day. "There is no truth in it,"" he said. "I have troubles epough of my own. Just now 1 am busy getting my San Francisco paper properly on its feet again." g Henry L. Einstein, who owns the | Press, denied the rumor even more | emphatically when it first bobbed up several weeks ago. The rumor proba: bly resulted from the fact that the Press has been very friendly to Mr. t, gince the mayoralty cam- paign, devoting many columns to the charges that the city ownership can- didate had been robbed of the elec: tion. Lately the news columns of the McPherson, ' the trainer for Ferara's animal show, knows Brady. The latter strolled around the cage, which is in the open for a while, watching the lionesses. McPherson said to a bad temper." Brady at once said he would enter the cage. McPherson 'thought he was joking, but Brady laughed, took the trainer's revolver and keys, and then opened the door then opéned the seednd door, leads. directly 'intd' the apartment oc- cupied bv the lionesses. Brady fired his revolver several times and stood They crouched, snarled and growled, but made no attempt to spring. Me Pherson still wonders why the animals did not deprive 'the New Yorkers of a theatrical manager. Friends of Mr. Hearts assert that he has control of the democratic state committee. They say that Belmont has lost, control of it, having only about twenty of the. fifty members, while Hearst has thirty. It is claimed that of all those will vote for the suppres sion of Belmont on any question of organization that comes up. A most significant fact in this connection, as showing the strength of Hearst in the rural counties, 1s that neither the Tammany nor the Kings county mem bers of the committee are counted in this estimate of the Hearst majority. Hearst men assert that all but four of the up-state senate districts will send committeemen to the meeting who will not antagonize Hearst or consent to any action prejudived to his chances for the democratic nomination. ~ "Yes'm," said the white-gloved ne- gro who waves entrance to the Hoffman house, "'we ah jes' a lectle pushed fo' room jes now. We ah a leetle crowded. The new house, it won't be finished foj a yeah, maybe a lestle mo', 1 don' know and we aint got much addit'nal room. This house it don' hold but fo'teen hundred pussons, you know, and we aint got but ten other houses rented beside this, bo'din houses, you know, together with a few apartment houses to be a legtle crowded till the house is fitished, Ma'am." The most valuable garden patch on Manhattan Island bonsists of two beds of lettuce and radishes, each twenty feet square, in the rear of a little one storey wooden house in West Hundred and Twenty-fourth street, half-way between Columbus and Amsterdam avenues. The 'house and garden in the rear are flanked on three sides by modern six-storey apart ment houses which all but shut out sun from the garden. The house only occupies half the frontage of the lot, which gives an excellent view of the garden from the street. The little new One eyes of many real estate men, who realize how much more valuable the ground could be made. Hundreds of real estate agents have pleaded with the old Irishman who has lived in that house for forty years, to"scll the pro- perty, but he always shows the would be purchasers his garden, and tells them that the care of it is one of the joys of his old age. He would be lonely without his garden, he says, There is nothing left to the real es tate men than to wait for the old man's déath in the hope of being able to make some deal with his heirs The use of the telephone is advance ing in all directions. A quiet restaur ant was opened in this city a little ago, more as an experiment than any upon each ' table. The tables, some thirty-five in all, are numbered con 8 cutively, and each has its special na yey. You enter hurriedly and want to be saved instantly. No waiter is in sight, You run over the bill of fare, s let your meal, pick up the phone and talk to an orderly in the kitchen "Hello, this is table No. 2. In a great steak with mushrooms. flower. A baked potato. Olives, ro maine salad. Small cup hot black coi- fee." "Af right, sir, No. 2, right along." Can you imagine any- thing more mor ing forward. Workers in a department store were driven almost She rushed in with her hair flying, | grabbed the first floor walker she saw | and proclaimed that she must catch a | train in less than an hour, Her list was at least a yard long, and it was hard to decipher the names of the articles. Last of all she wanted bright red maline braid and "tie wire." None | of the clerks knew what "tie wire," | was and she began questionine from | the stationery to the hardware dp | partment, In the latter place a clerk | asked what the wire was for. She hes- | itated, then confessed it was to make a frame for a hat--a hat intended to! shade her dear doggie when he fol-! lowed her trap. The braid was for the same purpose. But the store which boasts of its varied stock, was not | provided with wire for dogs' hats. | The girl failed of her purpose, and missed her train in the bargain. The number of uses to which New York roofs can be put iz daily in- creasing, or rather, some one is daily i discovering a new use. The latest is | for a shampoo. "I don't know what I thould do without my roof," exelaim- | ed a Westside woman. "It. saved me | many dollars every year as a hair | drying parlor. 1 shampoo my own | hair very ensily by a small spray | tached to the fancets of my bathtub, and then I go directly to my roof, him: | "'Bill, I never saw these brutes in such | &f the cage. He stood still for a while, | which | nonchalantly looking at the animals. | | four tons, and you into the ladies' | and a flat or two. Yes'm, we ah boun' | farmhouse almost brings tears to the | | the hausfrau, at ting elsc--where a telephone is placed | hurry. Order at once a small sirloin! Some scauli- | Coming | enticing ? We are surely | to insanity by a well | dressed young woman a few days ago..| i - 1 paper have been filled with local arti { eles and items from the various parts | of the state detailing the strength of | the Hearst boom for governor. The Press is running a decidedly free lance sort of a sheet, and speaks its mind freely on any subject, and same- | times displays considerable venom. It {is specially down on Senator Depew { and Senator Platt, commencing its campaign upon them long before the | i | | insurance investigation began, It | would like to see a reconstruction of the republican party, with a large number of "outs" to he filled with | "ine." and it has a full list of would be latter ones. It is estimated that | wooden pavement on Broadway has imcreased the capacity of that thor oughfare more than fifty per cent. The | tide of travel on it is greatly inereis ed, but the street is not as crowded as it used. to be. The teams travel fnster, and move along <0 much more easily than: before, that street was was kept on a trotting basis, instead the laying of a of the old slow and hard wav. Now trucks with heavy loads go trotting along, without any trouble to the horses. Where formerly the team had to pull heavily and slowly along, they now enn go on a trot. It is a mon sight nowadays = to sen trotting along with loads weighing nearly keeping pace with the trolley cars. 'As soon as they com teams | strike the wood pavement, they strike {a trot, while, as soon as the old block stone part of the street still rémain- | ing is totiched, the horses slow down to a walk, and the traces are kept as | tant and straining as if the load had suddenly been doubled. =OLD TIMER. Keep Children Well, Stomach and howel troubles kill thousands of little ones duri rg the hot weather. Diarrleoea, dy cholera © infantum sometimes ¢ without warning, and if prompt aid is not at hand the child may be be yond aid in a few hours. If you want tokeep your children heariy, rosy and full of life during the hot weather | give them an occasional dose of Baby's * Own Tablets. This medicine prevents illness and cures it when it comes unexpectedly, And the has the guarantee of mother a government analyst that this : medicine is abso- lutely safe. Mrs. W. J. Munro , Nin taluta, k., says : "For more than | three years Baby's Own Tablets is the only medicine 1 have given my chil dren, and 1 think the tablets fnvala | able for stomach and bowel troubles: Sold by all medicine dealers or hy mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Brockvill Ont. Keep the tablets in the house. -------- Household Service In Germany. Harper's Bazar girl engaged is by no means a girl g secured, as regards either domestic ser vice or matrimony, the other hand, the mistress of a prospective bride may feel reasonably secure when once an understanding has been reached. "Well, 1 er In Germany, on ge you, Hedwig, ] the close of the in terview, and as a pledge of good faith three marks | (seventy-five cents) given and received. By acceptance of this sum, Hedwig binds herself to ap- pear at the time and place agreed up on, and if she fails in fulfilment of the contract, after allowing to elapse without returned the money, she self liable to criminal Needloss to say, bre under such , says are twenty four hours having renders her prosecution, aches of s contract conditions are rave. Nestlé's Pood protects baby 47 {Riot colic, , cholera infantum jr e ills of the "second summer," Ph a say that Nestlé's Babies are so nourished that ot Weather can't affect them, 3 health son baby's font Kee Pod means bear Se (emu, tor 8 mete) THE LECBING, MILES CO, Limited, Montreal, ETT the public. HIGH-PRICED EGGS. A Cracked One Lost Value. It may be somewhat startling to housewives to learn that an ordinary crack in the shell of am egg,. recently reduced the estimated value of that particular egg $300, This was ngt an ordinary egg, Row: ever, but a specimen of that of the great auk. It constituted 'one of the chief treasures of the Scarborough Museuis; in England, and was valued at something like $1,200, Egos of the great-auk, a-bird plenti- ful enough a century ago. but now ex- tinct, are worth small fortunes. Only about eighty . of thé eggs are known to be in existence. The British Mu- seum possesses twelve, representing a value not far short of $25,000. It is related that in 1879 a shrewd Scotchman picked up two of these eggs at an auction sale. As their va- lue was not realized by those making the sale he secured them for $4. Some time_later he sold them for $2,400. Valuable as is the epg of the great auk, iLaannot compare with that of the aepyornis, or moa, which thrived in Madagascar some 200 years ago. The egg is about twelve inches in length, ann the number known to be in existence can be counted upon the fingers. $300 in There is one specimen preserved in the British museum, which was ob- tained in quite a romantic manner. It was picked up in 1897, floating in a bay off Madagascar. Its value is in- calculable, since it constitutes one of the most extraordinary relics of its type. It is impossible to estimate its marketable price, for the simple rea- son that an egg of this bird has not been put up to auction within recent years. Eggs of the white booby are also highly prized by collectors. This bird was originally found on Fund Island, off Newfoundland, which was also the home of the great auk. It, too, is now extinct. The eggs are valued at $769, and upward, but this is a theoretical value, as none are ever now found for sale, Another bird long since extinct is the aptornis, which, not being provid- ed with wings hy nature, fell an easy prey to man. Eggs of the this species are valued at $1,000 and more each. Although the condor in limited num bers still nests among remote erags of tthe Andes, the species is rapidly pass ing away, and it has been some time Since its eggs have heen gathered In a few years, too, the eggs of the kiwi of New Zealand, will become as prized as many of those now so high ly valued. This bird, although not vet extinct, breeds so slowly that extine tion i= bound to occur soon. Although the remaining members of this family are under government protection, it scoms impossible to increase their numbers. ---- BALLOON RACE. Aeronauts' Ambitious to Make Passage of the Alps. One of the most remarkable bal- loonirig fenta this year Alps. Queen Margherita of Italy offered a handsome cup some time ago to the first man who crossed from Switzer- land to Italy in a balloon. Seven acronauts will attempt -the feat this summer, y The passage of the Alps has been at- tempted hy balloon many times be. that will be attempted will be the passage of the fore, but always unsugeessfully. The famous iss balloonist Spelterini nearly lost his life in one of his four attempig, Of the seven competitors in this year's race, M. Dumontet, the French: man, will ascend from Chamounis to cross Je Mont Blanc range. The oth- ere will ascend from various poi i re points Switzerland, E " re -------- Have no canal ag Positive eure for sick tousness, constination, side, a promot and headache, bil. i rain in the de. and oll liver troubles, Carter's Little Liver Pills. Try them. A woman never likes to send a tele: gram unless she ean send jt colluet; The Mooney Biscuit and Candy Company, Limited, Stratford, Canada, is the fastest growing business in the Dominios gta Started in 1903, more ovens were necessary in nine months. In' months, another wing was added to the original building, increasing space by 18,000 square feet. v : Building operations now under way will double the size of the Bakeries and Candy Manufactories, and: give a total floor space of from 150,000 to 200,000 square feet. The illustration in the upper shows the enlarged works when the addition is completed. "True to their policy, of adopting latest methods, the Mdoney Biscuit Candy Company, Limited, have had built and n freight cars. This company is the first in Carfada to adopt this economical and rapid system of shipments. ay Mooney's "Perfection Cream Sodas" --are now known all over Canada--and this new line of freight cars will still further keep the name constantly before Doubled in sis e in three years. AND NOW OPERATE PRIVATE FREIGHT CARS. left corner operate, their own privat ix bh "In the elder days of Art Builders wrought with greatest care 2 Each minute and unseen part-- * ) For the gods see everywhere." In ancient Roman mythology the goddess, Minerva, - was locked upon as the patroness of all arts and trades. Twelve years ago a reproduction 'of the statue of this goddess was selected as the registered trade-mark of The Minerva Manufacturing Com- pany, as indicative of the ideals of the management in the manu- facture of the now celebrated : NINERYA" SKIRTS AND UNDERWEAR It has been the constant study of the ement these garments as perfet as skilful w aa fo make methods can produce. " i - bear the closest scrutiny. Leading dry-goods stores everywi have these famous skirts and white and flanelete denis Ladies are invited to ask for them. Look for the label * . THE SMINERVA SIANUFACTURING Co. . .. TORONTO, Cinuda Minerva." Limited We Own and Offer SA EE be 5 per cent. 1st Mortgage Gold Bonds of Buffalo, Lockport and Rochester Railway Co. CARRYING 100 PER CENT. STOCK BONU Price and full particulars on application : Long Distance Phone Wood & Crof otherwise she can't use h 1 Raine sh a th words rm Bailli 5200-01-02 Members Toront,

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