Daily British Whig (1850), 4 Feb 1911, p. 9

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T i "YEAR 78-NO. 29. A PURE PRODUCT OF A PERFECT PROCESS Baker's Breakfast Is absolutely pure, healthful nd makes a most delicious drink Get the genuine with our trade-mark on the package 43 Highest Awards in Europe and America Walter Baker &@ Co. Ltd. Established 1780 Dorchester, Mass. Dail 3 ends ro A" Sr ona Boon ant Mas em-- -- ~Asaya-Neurall-- THE NEW REMEDY FOR Nervous Since the tissues receive their tqpe from the nerve centres, lustrous eyes, aclear complexion and sym- metrical figurecanonlybe preserv- ed by maintaining full nerve vig- or. When the mirror warns, ¢ |THINGS THEATRICAL NOTES ON PLAYS, PLAYERS AND PLAYHOUSES, Paris Interested. in "Le Miracle"-- New York is Crying Out for More Playwrights. ¥ Robert Drouet is appearing in vaude- ville in "A Couple of Cocktails." Mrs. Langtry will this month ap pear in a sketch at the London Hip- podrome, Theodore son will appear in Cross." More now playwrights and fewer ac- tors seerns to be New York's ery just at present. lew Fields' latest musical play, "The Hen Pecks," began its career"in Al bany, Thursday. 2 Maud .Allan is to be seen next month in London in some new dances with music by Dehussy, William Faversham will present his latest success, "The Faun," in Lon- don, England, next spring. Lebar's opera, "The Count of Lux embourg," will be the next produe- | tion by George Fdwardes at Daly's. "Navy Blue," in which Clifton Cin ford is soon to appear, is a touched- up version of his™ former "Captain Careless," George Grossmith, jr., and Edward Payne nave been amusing London with a burlesque of the dancing of Paviovs and Mordkin. "Our World,"" with Doris Keane and Vincent Serrano in the east, was a new play which Frank McKee produced in Atlantic City last week. The Shuherts are suing David Bel asco for $450,000, in connection with the business methods of the manager of David Belasco and Blanche Bates, George Alexander will next week produce his new A. E. W. Mason play erititled, "The Witness for the De : fence,' Geraid du Maurier"s next play at Wyndham's with the provisional title, I "Mr. Jarvis," is a drama of political intrigue in the reign of good Queen { Anne. "Sire," by Henri Lavedan, in which Otis Skinner appeared last week in New York, is declared to he a nonde- script mixture of romance and farce, dealing with the lost Dauphin. The new piece due at the London Gayety next month is based by George Grossmith on "'L'Amorcage," by the author of the ditties of studio and street, which made the early fame of Yvette Guilbert, Chicago on Monday saw the pre miers of "The Warning," the new play by Arthur Jerome Eddy, who wrote "The Great John Ganton.'" George Fawoett, Josephine Victor, and Vir ginin Kline are in the caste. Roberts and Orrin John. "To Serve the Ht Asa vA-NBURALY isTequired. It feeds the nerves, induces sleep, quickens the dppetite, aids diges- , and restores the sparkling radiance of full nerve vitality. 50 per bottle. Local agent, 1. T. BEST. T. J. HOAG. Revillon Freres ESTABLISHED 1728 The largest dealers in Purs and Skins in the world, We pay the HIGHEST MARKET PRICE for all kinds of Raw Furs and Skins Honest assortment. Quick returns Ask for our PRICE LIST» IT'S FREE OFFICE AND STOREROOMS 134 and 136 McGill St. Montreal, Wi PAY RXPRNSS CHARGES, 4 ent Americans in vy - Paris is manifesting much interest in | "Le Miracle,"' the new five-act opery by MM. Gheusi and Miranve, with score by M. Georges Hue. The opera is » compromise between modern lyric drama and the old clgssic methods of Moyerbeer. The music is in 5 measure suggestive of Wagner's 'Rienzi." By way of Sonth America, Paris has | imported a new dance which apparent- ly is destined to become extremely popular. It is called the "Argentine Largo." Its rhythm is described as 1 # cakewalk played adazio. There is 5 combination in it of syncopation with + slow, languorous melody that i mrticularly fascinating. Fremeh so iety is reporled to be "goiny wild" | over it, 4 "Le Viel Homme,' a play | fleorges de Porto Riche which was | written more than ten vears ago, has inst been produced with success at the Renaissance Theatre, Paris. or to-Riche is the author of "Amonre "Le Passe," and other plays. but nothing of his has been presente! for goveral vears. The nuthor received a tumultnons greeting when called | before the curtain, 1 "The Balkan Princess," which ran! for a considerable period at the Prince | of Wales theatre, London, has, from All accounts, "got over" in this, country, having been produced by the Messrs. Shubert ia New Haven and | thence transferred to Boston. Miss Louise Guuning sings the title role and her support 'includes Robert War wick, Herbert Corthell, May Boley: and | E | | Jokeph W. Herbert, Under the patronage of Prince and | Perindesa August Wilheln twa Americar artists appeared with | | syecoss recently in Berlin. They were Mrs. Francis MaslLean, $ the soprano ! ria donna of the Verlin Ren al Opera, and Mise Myrtle Fuelin, the | gifted pianist of Chicazo. The musi | eale was held &n the saloon of the | | : for the benefit of promin. | Rome. 'Among those | nresent wore John W. Garrett, the Ameri Chace d'Afiaires, other. : stall, Miss | Jeuse Benedict Carter, the wife of the Direc. | tor of the American c'nssical | his reeit Carrying His Own Fly Paper. A xeat near the radiator was th only one vacant in the waiting-room of the Union depot y vitish Wh VELVET THE FASHIONABLE AFTERNOON FABRIC, The woman of fastidious taste n dress does not don velvet in the morning, Some. fabrics are intended velvet is assuredly one of these materials, for ceremonious wear, and The chic little velvet calling only costume pictured is by Drecoll, and is built of royal blue velvet, with a thread-like hair stripe of white, effect at the back--a new notion in Ths skirt is broken by a slight drapery street costumes----and the little coat, ¢laborately trimmed with buttons, braid, and fur, is exceedingly smart. The hat is one of the roll-ba, just now. The brim facing is black, 'k sailors, which are fashionable the top of the hat being trimmed with a band and flat bow of the velyet. WHAT ROYAL TRIPS COST. which came out of the naval estimates, They Have Varied From $25,000 to $1,500,000. Although King George has traveled more extensively than any other roy- al personage, his bills have not run into a very large amount Thus the trip to Australia was estimated $708,000, which is not a large sum, taking everything into consideration --the chartering of a special steamer tor so long a time, the expenses of a naval escort and travelling charges. His little jaunt to Canada a year or two ago was done for the modest fig- ure of $10,000, but the tour to India in 1005 cost a larger sum, although the exact total has never been "pub lished, as a good deal of the expendi- ture came out of the royal purse. Parliament voted $100,000, while the cost of altering the Renown was barne by the naval estimates, and most of the ceremonial charges by In dia. The total probably came to about a million. This was not so much as that in enrred by King Edward's visit te India as Prince of Wales in 1875. This tour was arranged bw Sir Bartle Frene {who was kept busy for séven mouths making all the arrangements. Parlia- mint voted %2300,000 for the general expenses, which Sir Bartle said was anite inadequate, as the presents to native princes amounted to nearly that sum, and he asted for $500,000 This was not fortheoping, made the best of matters hy going to Lord 6 no i Northbrook, the viceroy, who induced the Indian treasury to grant another $50,000 to the present fund Peonls in England thought that the £300,000, together with the $250,000 was too much, and there was actually a meeting of protest. Even Mr. Faw- cett protested in the house of "com- mops but public opinion became re- gonciled when. it was seen that the Prince was not merely having a holi- day at the country's expense. Pre at 1 5ents to native princes ate up the nice little sum of $200,000, which was real ly very small when we consider it was generally estimated that he received gifts worth pretty well $2,000,000, one Maharsish offering hm a jeweled sword, while English shopkeepers and manufacturers netted some $1,250,000 out of the presents sent from Eng- land. The total cost of the trip was considered over $1,500,000, Evervone remembers the spectacular trip of the kaiser to the holy land some ten or twelve years ago. As Messrs. Cook arrang that tour the exact cost has not been made public, although it is reported to have a- mounted to no more than $25,000. But the kaiser can be lavish when he likes, 'and his visit to Hohemberg a vear ago cost $175,000, althdugh he was only there one hour, Royal visits to foreign countries are usually borne by the king's own privy purse, although if he engaged in national business he grant in aid, Quality Goes With the Name. The Dunlop Bicycle Tire has all the virtnes that other tires possess, and a whole lot that they do not now, nor never can, possess. Made hy patented Doughty Process. A ther soft answer is apt to encourage book agent. of Prussia, | J may receive a' KINGSTON, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1911, 1 5 i BGips For Farmers BY UNCLE JOSH. "Pigs is pigs," and prices will still run high. : The acquaintance with other Oreed- ers is a great advantage. Keep an account. with your pgs this year and see just how you come out with them. It is simply throwing away feed, and so good money, to feed on iw ground. Have good, tight feeding floors, enough for all the porkers. Do you kmow that your pigs need salt as well as vour sheep gnd cattle' They do, and if you do not want them to root give them some lime mixed with their salt. Air slacked lime is the best. Make a flat plank box three feet square and six inches deep for the lime and salt. Did you ever notice that your pigs would eat all the coal ashes they cap get ? Why not let them have all your ashes ? They are worth nothing to you and the Pigs need them, The ashes will also help ty keep them from | rooting. Pigs root after something that their systems crave. A pig needs gritty stuf. Why not let them have such things ?--Farm and Dairy, Tips for Dairymen. An authority on dairying stated that there were three essentfals to success in dairying. Two of these es sentials were the man and the cow. "We should be ashamed of ourselves,' he said, 'because there are so many unprofitable cows in use in Ontario. There is nothing to prevent having an average production of 6,000 lbs. of milk per cow, or well on to doudle the present average production. "Do not sell your poor cow for dairy purposes, and do not attempt to make beef of them with an expen sive grain ration. Carry them through the winter as cheaply' as possible, and in spring let them make up what they will on grass, and turn of td the butcher. "How are we to improve our dairy herd ?"' he asked. "The first thing to do is to take one of the short courses in stock judging at the O.A.C,, or to attend one of the local short judging courses, and learn what is called for in the dairy animal. Next socure a bull with a well defined milking an cestry i behind him and proceed to build up. Be sure that the bull, besides hay: ing a milling ancestry behind, is not from a cow with a defective udder, because defective udders, like spavims and curbs, are apt to prove heredit- ary In looking' into the matter of milking record again, do n6t be sat isfied with a cow that has merely made a good record for 5, week, Ye. cause these great week records pre us ually made under hizh pressure. 1.00' tor a cow with a full year's record, or with a record made twice during the same milking period. It is the persistent milker that counts--not onc that does a big thing for 4 short time and then falls off." United States Production. Notwithstanding the somewhat in different methods of agrienlture par- sued in the United States, production per acre appears have been in- creasing of late rather than decreas ing. During the tem year period end ing with 1885 the average produftion of corn per aere in the United States declined by 2.3 per eent. In the te ear period ending with "5 the ne was 8.2 per cent. he toy vear period ending with 1705 on 1} other hanl, there was incronse of 7.7 per cent., and in the four vear period ending with 1909 the increase was 7.1 per cent. In wheat in the ten year period end ing with 1805 the gain in yield per acre was 3.3 per cent., and in the de cade ending with 1905 there was a gai of 6.3. per cent. For the four years | cade ending with 1905 there was a gain {of 96 per cent. in production per | i. t to n" acre. | These later gains, so far as comm is concerned, have not been in the purely. corn states, and in the com: | paratively new country, but advance { has been made as well in Vermont, { Massachusetts, Connecticut and New | STOMACH MISERY ENDED. | { Indigestion, Gas, Heartburn and | Sourness go in Five Minutes, {| Why not some now--this mo- | ment, and ever rid yourself of Stomach trouble and Indigestion? A | dieted ch gets the Slues and {grambles. Give it a good eat, then i take Pape's Diapepsin to start the di- { gestive juices working. There will be {no dyspepsia or belching of Gas or | sructations of undigested food ; po case At any drug g York. In wheat there has been of late a gain in Mame, New York, Pennsyl 'vania, West Virginia, South Carolina, Michigan, and others of the older | states. be! : -------- Promoting Agriculture. During the past year G. F. Marsh, a graduate of the OUmiario Agricultural College, was engaged in work as the agricultural representative of the Pennsylvania railroad. Mr. Marsh's ul tural improvement along : i raalway with 5 view @f providing more tradfic for the line. ln conuection with this work over two hundred addresses were given at Grange and other meet- ings in Pennsylvania and nearby | stales, As one result of what was done it | is expected that 500 mare cars of lime will be used this year along the Penn sylvania line. At all stations along the line plots of alfalfa were planted. The success of these demonstrations will mean much for the dairy districts of New York gnd Pennsylvania, as farmers there had been previously pay- ing $25 and $30 for bran and they now see they ean get from four to five tons of alfalfa per acre and that | this alfalfa is practically equal in| feeding value to bran. Produce and Prices. Kingston, Feb. 4.--The market clerk | veports the prices prevailing as fol lows : Carrots, 60c. per bag; turnips, 50c. to 60c. per bag; cabbage, Sc. each; onions, $1.50 per bag; pota- toes, 75c. to 85c. per bag; celery, Se. to Te. per head, John McKay, Brock street, reports as follows ; Ilides, No. 1, 80. per lb; bulla, over 60 lbs, >. por th.; horse hides, $3; deacon skins, Tbe. veal skins, 10c. per lb; lamb skins, Tbe. wool, washed, 20c. per lb.; wool, un- washed, 14c. per lb.; beeswax, 20c. per Ib.; ginseng, $6 per Ib. 3. MecFarlane, Brock street, re ports flour, feed and grain selling as follows : Oats, 40c.; local wheat, $l; buckwheat, 60c.; barley, 60c. to 65¢.; rye, 0c; peas, 90¢c. to $1; yellow 6be.; flour, bakers, $2.80 *, $2.80 to $3; Hungari- oatmeal and rolled oats, $4.50 per bbl; cornmeal, $1.80 to $2: bran, $21 per ton; shorts $32 $24; baled straw, $7; loose, $8; 2 Joose, $8 to $9; pressed, $10 to to $12. Moat--Beef (local), carcase, Tic. "to 8jc.; prime western , $10 pw» owt.; by carcase, cuts, 10c. to 18¢.; live hogs, 7c.'lb.; dressed hogs, 9e. to 10c.; pork, 10c. to 12e. by quarter, mutton, 10c.; lamb, 12¢. to l3e, qtr. veal, 7c. to 10c. Ib; ducks, $1 to $1.25 each: turkeys, 19¢. to 20c. Ib; fowl $i to $1.25 pair; chickens, $1 to $1.25.pr.. | butter, rolls, 23c. to 20/e.; prints, de. | to e.; eggs, fresh, Joc. to 40c.; pack ed, Sec. Deminion Fish Co aw follows Salmor fe. x Ib. skinned b,. white fish, 12 ie, Ib; Chinonk cipperad berring We doz; perch ealmon, 3c, Ih. 8c. 1h: halibut aaddock, 0c Th h.; red herrings, 20 150. a th: lake sea bass, 124c. 1b Just in Time. sports prides trout 12s. to Tigh he no, 200 ta | ib salmon Ae th Nl 'eo pike Altes mnt Yarmou Soe, dos » anlt rodfish 1210. » tual head Af hox mncl are horving = "H 8%. 1» te freak pickerel, An Arkanses yjodge had conv ened court at one of the on enit, when it was found that no y ink or paper had been provided, ar apon inquiry it that n county funds were available for th Parpose, The inde exclaimed somewhat force fully, then money from his own of about to hand it to the cl when a Liwver, a hizh-priced imported article brought on to defend a case of some importance, spoke wp in an aside plainly audible over the room. i "Well," with infinite contempt, "I've seen some pretty bad conditions | but this--well, this is the limit." i "Sou are' fined $5 for contempt, | sir 1 thundered the judge. "Hand | the mcne- to the clerk." When the eminent lawyer bad hum- bly complied the judge turned to the clerk. lA i "Now, Mr Clerk, go out and get | what pens; ink and paper the eourt may need and if there is any change left- over you may give it to the gentleman." Central Law Journal towns his a Wn, came out drew some He et was rk visti The Hatrack Brigand. New York Sun. "l made my first visit since Year's to one of the Long Acre res taurants last night," sard the man! who goes everywhere, 'and of course! the first person | met was the chief of the hatrack brigande. , * 'Well, Tommy," I asked, New Year's business here *' . " 'Sure, sir, wo had .a big crowd; | every table taken, an' a lot more! trvin' to get in, sir' i "'But I hear complaints that the New Year crowd was very much piker; noise, little coin.' * "Well, wir, now you mention it, that was a fault. Sure T felt it too We were busy all night but this hat- | rack took in $105 less this New Year| than last; bat still T did pretis » \ ! wall. i "If he did pretty well and was still! $105 short of last year | wonder _-- he'd call really good hatrack- New how was! Alleged "Undesirable Citizen." | {Watertown Standard C. H. Mann, a one-nrmed Canadian] who has been begging of the streets! Officer John Gilligan and Immigrant inspector , J. » A. Conaty, of Ogdens at once notified, and will apply to Washington for a deportation war pant, Mann haviog crossed over 1c Cape Vincent from Kingston shout two months ago. It is alleged he is an undesirable alien. The is often in. great need of several doses of his own | 1g a) Jaime coming from the merw.. » Sole of this city, was acrested, Monday, by PAGES 9 TO 14. @ SECOND PART CHRONIC CATARRH NOSE AND. THROAT: { At the Advice of Friends I Tried Peruna and the Results Have Beem Highly Satisfactory." -- So Writes Mr, Pilon, R. RAOUL PILON, 118 Rus Notre Dame, Lachine, P. Q., Osn., writes: "I write you a few'words to express to you my satisfaction at being cured. 1 was afflicted with catarch of the throat and nose and suffered much. 1 was greatly discouraged. 1 had & bad breath and a bad taste in my mouth in the morning. "1 took treatment for some time with- out obtaining relief. At the advice of friends tried the Peruna ang the re- sults have been highly satisfactory. Ai the end of feurmoaths I was cogplete: y Neglected catarrh becomes chron . Having developed into the chronie stage, & longer and more persiste:: treatment will be required to cure it than if the disease were treated at the onset, However, Pernona generally brings re Nef, whether the catarrh is acute o= chronic 1f you are wise yon will keoy Peruna on hand and take a few doses al the first appearance of a cold or cough, and thus per haps save yourself both suf- fering and expense, Peruna is recognized the world over as a standard remedy for eatarrh. A multitude of people have been benefited by it. 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