Daily British Whig (1850), 9 Nov 1912, p. 14

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PAGE FOURTEEN TE __---- $325.00 PIANO $100.00 CASH GIVEN AWAY In this Great Puzzle Contes VALUE $325.00 1st Prize MAGNIFICENT UPRIGHT PIANO AND STOOL TO MATCH. VALUE $325.00 [i 3 xiew any business day from 9 (5% at Oc (actor tn... $25.00 Is Cish 3rd Prize... Prize 15.00 In Cash Bik to 91h, 5 Prizes of $5 Each, 10.00 In Cash 25.00 In Cash aad 25 Prizes of $1.00 Each, 25.00 Ia Cash $100.00 ; * CONDITIONS Thix contest is absolutely free. Yon are not " 5 a a eont of your money or buy a Thy ed fo Children under 12 years of wil t it io ren iy Of age will tot be peri ted 0 eraployee of oum or relation of ree wi N Sapipyee of cum employee will be The prizes in thix contest will be awarded 10 correct answers according to handwriting snd general ficathess, Be neal and you may win a good px Sieing will be dorie by three gentlemen having ab. ULE Y nocon nection with this fir "heir docs Jit Le aceeprcn a ma s firm. Their docision r simple condition to be fulfilled which we Ask ol all Contestants. Ax noon as your Priveiin recsived, we will write advising yo if it is correct and telling yon of this eondition, DO NOT DELAY. GET YOUR ANSWER IN TO-DAY. NATIONAL PRODUCTS LIMITED y RENTLAWCES SARERF ARAIGAN ckahewatnsa$ ---- The jumbled letters given above represent the ne of Four fireat ( an Rivers, To hely olye them we have underlined the fimt leter in each name. The firstis St. Swrence' Now guess the rest and wend us In your solution of all four names in your ver atest und best handwriting GET OUR PRICES for Tin, Lead, Zine, Babbitt Solder, Sheet Lead, Lead Pipe, THE CANADA METAL CO, Limited, Factories--TORONTO, MONTREAL, WINNIPEG, Who - ay Work find a nourishing stimulant is absolutely necessary to build up the fogsed out body and restore the unstrung nerves, - O'Reefe's "Special Extra Mild" Ale--because "of its sound food value and tonic properties--is the logical food-beverage for home use. . Brewed in Canada's model Brewery for those to whom Health is wealth. Those who work hardy. | 288 E. BEAUPRE, LOCAL DISTRIBUTOR, 'PHONE 313 ' THE PATLY BRITISH WHY SATURDAY, LEAD SMELTING WORK: OF THE SMELTING Willi Mean a Great Deal to Kingsto --ihe Plant at Out Twenty Tons of Pig Day. . Lead . An industry; which has sprung inte being very quickly, and became no sma facior 1a our iadastrial life, bs Kings ton, +s the North America: Smelling compan. Wilh the mcorporating of this con pany a short tine ago a new cha ter opened in the hitherto rather tra gic story of the smelter business i Aingston. The old smoke stack tha: bad stood so long as a monument o failure began to do business snd sinc the y the smelter opened about ; month ago the old stack has wave the tay of industry continuously. . The plant operating now is Ing oui about twemty tons of 'pig lead a day. Jt comprises several wey comstrucied buildings and includes sev eral furnaces and brick flues over 6 leet in length, for the treatment o the fumes from the furnaces. The property belonging" wo the sompany or which the smelter is built comprise: shout seven acres and the industry is thus allowed plenty of room for ex pansion. The preseit prospects in dicate the demand of an extensio: next summen. It is expected to ade another building which will contain a more complete refining plant 1 meet the demand of enlarged opera tion. : The works are provided with a long water front which will, when the low er harbor is dredged, afford then tram portation by water. At presen the company has its own siding running into the works. he plant, ae it stands, is proba bly worth from $90,000 to $100,000. Ihe company has its own mines a Path Road, which will, when the ( N.R. is completed through there, an the concentratigy mill is finished, b capal lp of produ ing 490 tons a day This Gught to be in operation in a hout six weeks. Development wor, is goidg on rapidly and a large quan tity of ore will be waiting for shi ment when the railroad ready to reeeive it, Meanwhile the works are operatin, on lead silver ore from British Colum bia, United States and Quebec. Th raw ore is gumped from the cars int. concrete bins, which front ghe fu nas. The raw ore, coal coke un bye-products and iron ore which 1 used rw a flux in the smelting oper i atic, are stored in these bins. | The raw ore is treated in the Scotd | Hearth furnaces, of which there ar { two. These extract part of the loa | and ¥ive the bye-producte which i j weated in the blast furnace. Thi | operates day. and night the yea ! round 18 produms lead and slag which waste, and: matte, whicl contains souw lead, iron and sa phy Fhe matte iv then crushed an n a large reverbratory fur 'This measures [(ifty feet iy length by fourteen feet in width. Al the lead from she various furnace goes into the refining 'kettle i dra gliti- -blown----throngh--th { woiten lead, and the dross is separa | ted. From here it js syphoned o | into moulds which give 100 pound | bars ready for the maniet., The re fining kettle holds ubout thirty ton: and can be run off in about (wi: hours The smoke from all. the furnaces i mckgd by means of an elvotri fan through a system of flues an foreed thwough the bag house wher it is strained through woolen bag belore going up the stack. Ther are 320 of, these bugs each thirty feet lodg and owe snd a hali feet i diameter. The deposit on the sidey o thes is shaken into the chamber he low and the walls of the flues ar scraped at regular intervals and th soot whigh- contains a good: peresnt age of lead is put through the fur naces agaip da tary 1s i= » Applied it to the Actors. A new curtain whieh E. H. Sothern and Julia Marlowe lately brought int use during their engagement at/ th Manhattan Opera, House, New York has ocoasiondd a vast deal of contro versy. It is made of green velvet, anc splits in the centre. On either side o the curtain, there is worked 'in gold "S. & M.."" and along the top, the fol Jowing line : "Not 'of an age, but for all time." It is this line that caused the discus sion. One correspondent wrote to the New York Times : "When attending » performance at the Manhattan Opers House, last night, two ladies sitting benind me noticed this line on the cur tain and . one of them said: 'Don't you think it * impertinent that Mr Sothern and Miss Marlowe consider that they ave "Not of an age, hut for all time ? It is most incredible." ™ When\this letter was shown to Mr. Sothern, he expressed himself as thinking it "incredible," as the writer smd, that anybody stiending thei performances should make so ridicul ous a mistake. Almost any schoo! bos, whe has mufied his Shakaspeare wou recognige the line as an abbrey ation of one of the lines in Ben Johnson's Commendstory Verses written for the Fist Folio, of 1623. The complete line js: : tHe was not of an age, but for all time"? In order that this ridieulous mis thie . shall not be. repeated, Mr. Sothern and Miss Marlowe are goi to have the Tull line worked in the curtains and the name of Ben Johnson placed. after it. 4d : -- . Quarrelling is a Lost Art. The truth is that it is our normal mood in these days to desire to be amiable to wur feliowman, aod to leave a good impression on hi: mind. 'Juarreling, except in the unrestricted freeiom of the family circle, is almost a lost art; nobody gives a piece of his fmind to anybody except a very near relative. Lnlews you wre in a compar atively humble rank you may go through lite without oace ing the plain, unvarnished truth about your character, hy . ial friend. d Present Turn F@mple to use ahd vet NOVEMBER 9 E---- S---- Se ------ | Magical Effect of New Face Peeler (Woman's National J To maintain " vouth ul complexion, the i nothing 80 so effective a) ordinary mercoliged wax. which you an got al any drug stor Just ap- dy the wax at night a ou would vold eream; in the morning wash it off with warm water H you've never tried it you can't imagine the magi al effect of this harmless home treat: nent I'he mercolide wax cau ses the worn-out scarf of in minute particles, a little at a mms, and soon youn have entirely hed the ofiengive caticle. I'he fresh oung undees AN now in evidence is so healthy and\girlish looking, «o ree from an appearance: of artificial ty, vou wonder why vou had not enrd of this marvellous complexion wen ing secret long ago. To get rid of vour writikles, + formula that is wonderfully ve: 1 or. powdered saxolite, wived in} pint witch hazel ne face in this and you moly astonished at the y after the first trial HE CU. the here's effect- dis- Jathe will he results, ev- 8. CHIEF MAGISTRATE, ieresting Facts About President Elect Wilscn, He Is [6 years old. He has a charming and beautiful ife, and three charm ng daughters His daughters all } yk much more 'ke him than like t(L.ir mother hey are all grown and unmarried iv first name is "Thomas," but 1e_has not used it for many years hey called him Tommy in college He is nearly blind in his right ve as the result of an accident ir outh. When reading he holds a aonocle in front of the damaged ye His favorite recreation is golf, but walks much. He never drinks ice water Sleeps from 9 to 12 hours out of very 21. Likes automobiling, and oeg to sleep in the motor. He is a shorthand and typewrit g expert, Writes all his speeches setures and books that way. He 3 the "Graham system' of short e ofter and. He ia 5 feet 10 inches tall, weigh: 77 pounds. He can run a ha!f milé at a good ace without losing his "wind." Dislikes military display. Except for a few thousand dol- | urs which he saved from his salary! 3 president of Prineeton, he ha. ! ) money or property Considers "13" his lucky er There are thirteen ! is name and in his t 1 a professor at Prin tected" its thirteenth president. 1 Likes to go to the theatre. Pre- | re comady or light opéra, 1 His best speeches are impromptu. He has enormous ears and a large outh, with large, irregular some- hat discolored teeth } num | ers in eenth yea: on he wan ' He was a good baseball and foot-! Wl player He ig Hi father ~indater-and when a young man. was % Presbyterian he isa Presbyterian, , When away from home he sends ram' every night, Other Vocations, "How many graduated from rd this June?" "Five hundred and ten." "All going into professional base- all, 1 s'pose?"' . "Not at all," retorted the dean eevighly, "That sort of taik is be- ming offensive, We have two men ho expect to be doctors and one an who is going into his father's ardware store." Yell- "and Vigorou: And Fit for Any Amount of Work as the Result of Using Dr. Chase's Nerue Food. Pv gh n ex, 0 failing memory, lack of power & concentfate the mind, irritability anc Worry over little things, that many ¢ man does not realize his danger un til on the verge of breakdown. Like the writer of the letter quote Below, you can call a halt to th wasting + iam. and restore vim an energy nervous system by uu: ing Dr. Chase's Nerve food. Th food cure has a wonderful re ers 15 ames r. J. Tt athes stree Brantford, Ont, w Fe very much run down in heaith an. was very much 4 iy i. finement at my on the ttouble, Chase's Food and hy the tim HD one box I felt a gres 1 had used improvemen The continded use © this préparation has and fi He wears eye glpeses all the time. | C. G Scotch _Irigh, | Now Feels Strong] Fharalleled. , 1012. WHICH IS GOING TO BE A BOON TO KINGSTON, During the Past Year 220 Men Have Been Employed--Negotin: tions are Pending for Farther Coniracts, Kingston with the position it holds asa lake and river port, and with the sphere of activity along marine lines | which augurs well with the building of | the new breakwater and bridge, and the carrying out of the proposed plans by the Dominion government for the harbor improvement, would not be complete without shipbuilding indus- tries. And at the present time, the ¢ ty has one w hiv "fills the bill" and | promises to keep pace with the Lime- stones City's advancement along these lines. We refer to the Kingston Ship- building company Steamers and vessels coming into this port, especially from up the lake, have a good view of the dock, yards and plant of the company, which, since its organization, in the spring of 1910, has been building vessels for the Canadian government and doing repair work. The repairs have in- creased at least 300 per cent. since the inception of the new company, It his doubly fulfilled the requirement called for by the city, when the by-law was passed in 1910. At the time of organization, the company took over the government dry dock, which was formerly operat- ed by the Public Works Department at Uttawa, dnd has built around it a shipbuilding plant, suitable for build- ing and repair work. Following out that plan, the company has erected on the west side of the dock a steel frame building, in which all the necessary machinery, ete., was installed. A por- tion of the cast side of the building has been taken up by oil furnances of the latest type, and by the bending elabs on which the various parts en- tering into the construction of vessels are, aiter being heated, wrought to the required forms and shapes. On the second floor of the building is located the mould loft, where all component parts of the vessels are laid out, and light wooden moulds taken off the same. The company has alse added to the pump house equipment a vertieal | engine directly connected to a genera- tor, which supplies the motive power for the plant. A prominent feature is the 1,000 cubic feet air compresser, from which pipe lines are laid to the] dry dock and the vessels in course of | construction. { Since it began operations the com-| pany has constructed the steamer Po- | lana for the Department of Agricul ! i | sure at 'Ottawa for quarantine service at Grosse Isle, while another of the | atiigator type. was dispatched in sec- ions to the Upper Ottawa Improve ment company, at Fraser's Mill. \t the present time the company has in course of construction two steamers for the Department of Marine and | Fisheries, namely the C. 6. 8. Belle chasse, lor survey and inspection work yon the St. Lawrence channel, and the | | | =. Dollard, as lighthouse and | buoy steamer in the same service. = Ihe first of these boats is almost completed, while work on the second | is well advanced. The--dev--dock- has- boon kept well oc- | éupied and there is little doubt that | this end of the business will material- | ly increase. | From all reports the workmanship of the company in connection with the repairs to boats, leaves nothing to be I, and it is to its eredit that these repairs have been executed with a minimum of delay. That the com- pany is growing is evident from the | fret that during its first year of op- eration, it had #n average force oi about fifty men, while its second twelve months of activity called ic the services of an average of 220 men Negotiations ara pending for the se curing of further contracts, and the prospeets of the company are decided- ly bright for the ensuing year. The officers are President; 8: Dy ment, Barrie; vice-president, H. A. Calvin, Garden Tsland; secretary, W. J, Fair, Kingston. desire Roosevelt a Great Reader. Lawreice Abbott, one of the edit of © Outlook, is firmly convinced that: Colonél Roosevelt is an extraor. dinary veader: Abbott says he ! prised the colonel in his room at Oys. ter Bay after his return from Chicago, perusing "Yale Book of American Verse" A "His reading is absolutely xiraor | dinary,"" said Abbott. "He remembers everything that he reads, and he reads with a rapidity which I believe is un- It so happened that 1 went to meet the Colonel in Khar toum om his return from the interior of Africh. Om the train to Cairo the | Colonel disappeared one day, and 1 | went fo look ior him in another com i | hors riment and found he had secreted himself from the other wembers the purty and was readin "History of Rationalism in Europe." "In Cniro, in one of the recoptions | given to Colonel Roosevelt, one of the ' native speakers mentioned the travels of Eben Batutu, the Marco Polo ot Africa. Calonel Roosevelt immedsstels interrupted the speaker and recited several pages of this work of which | the aver reader mever heard. 1 made inquiries of him, and found that hie had read the French translation. of the book many vears ago." : A Suggestion for the Girls. The Walkerton Telescope hands out this ome: Girls, if you are troubled w a Young man insists on 'every night and staying 'all hours, ask him to put down eleven ciphers 'and make twenty-three oi them. If be ean't do it. tell him to draw a short line down the right band side of the first, fifth and tenth, and another line up from the right-hand side of the fourth, seventh and wighth. 1i He doesn't go on see ing the result, nothing will start him except the toe of the old man's hoot ied energetionlly wherd it jx sup! posed to take most effect "It was King Midas, wass't it. who he touched i to } str: | ot f Lucky's 5 { SHPBULONG COMPANY § Am Willing To Prove -- rl I'Can Cure You To That End I Am Giving Away $10,000 ; Worth of Medicine In order to show beyond all doubt that | am in possession of a medicine that will cure kidney trouble, bladder trouble or rheumatism, I will this year give away ten thousand dollars' worth of this medicine, and anyone suffeg from these diseases can get a box of if absolutely free. All that is necessary 13 Wo send me your ad- dress. x I don't mean that you are to use a part of it or all of it and pay me if cured. mean that 1 will send you 3 box of this medicine absolutely free o the Uric Acid sufferers of the world, so I can show them where and how they may be cured. I will not expect payment for this free medi- cine, nor would ome it now or later if you sent it. It is free in the real meaning of the word. For twenty-five years--a quarter of a cen tury--I have been trying to convince the pub. lic that 1 have something genuine, something better than others have tor the cure of stub born, chronic rheumatism, for torturing kid- ney hackache, for annoying calls to urinate. But it is hard to convince people--they try a few things unsuccessfully and give all hope and refuse to listen to anyone thereafter, Happily, I am in a position new to demon strate to sufferers at my own expense that I have a medicine that cures these diseases. 1 don't ask them to spend any money to find out; I don't ask them to believe me, nor even to take the word of reliable people, but afl | ask is that they allow mie to send them the medicine at my own cost... That is surely fair, To this end I have set aside ten thousand dollars, which will be used to compound my medicine. Much of it is ready mow to be sent out, all of it fresh and standard. There will be enough for all sufferers, though there be thousands of them. And anyone who needs it can get some of it free. But in order that 1 shall know that you have a dis ease for which this medicine is intended, I ask you to send me some of your leading symptoms. If you have any of the symptoms in the list printed here you need my medicine and if you will write me I will gladly send you a box of it free with full directions for your use. Look the symptoms over, see which symptoms you have, then write me about as follows: "Dear Dr., I notice symp toms number'--here put down the numbers, ive your age, full Or and send it to me. So address is Dr. T. Frank Lynott, 587 Franklin Building, Toronto, Can The ten thousand dollars 1 am spend the compounding of my medicine is only a part of the money I am devoting to thi cause, for the package of.anedicine I send you will be fully prepaid at my expense. From any standpoint you view it, YOU incur ne expense or obligation. Just tell others who you know are suffering who sent you the medicine that cured you. I sm promising to give awiy ten tl dollars' worth of medicine, and I will promising to send any me a box of this me for B= charge, a gift from me to | i {lar it DR. T. FRANK LYNOTT who is giving sway $10,000 worth of medicine. I ean say further that this medicine has been vouched for accordin, every detail with al 1 stop rheumat'sm, it will stop pain ache, urinate; it will heal, soothe and strengthens You will be better in every way for having taken it. There is not an ingred: ure; not one but will benefi. ask is that you use it yoursel may be personally convinced. Owing to the large number of requests, 1 have had ten thousand mere copies of medical book up to date an symptoms, causes, effects a bladder and rheumatic diseases. All ifor the free medicine will f this grand illustrated i Rock the 1s st ever written on ean > for free to'law as compl) in requirements. It will backs , too frequent ire to will stop ient that can All that I 0 amt you rinted. This book is new contains complete descriptions, cures of ney, who write sent a (and general distribution i If you need medicine such as I Mave, if you are anxious to be cured and don's want to spend any money LOOKING for cures, write me. me hear from you today, Read the symptoms over and let ot These Are the Symptoms: FISTRLE= To pao Fide Sn Asks a on frequen re to he Burning or Shatiuetion Sf jfine, Pain or soreness in the . Prostatic trouble, ins or Ta Goneral d m or soreness bu the kidneys. Fain or swelliag o the Joints. Pain or swelling of (he muscles. Pain and soreness in nerves, Acute or chronic rhouma tan. > »d | A Boy and His Books Autumn brings together the boy and his books--a good combination, provided the boy is properly nourished with foods that build brain and muscle in well-balanced proportion. The food for growing boys and girls to study on; to play on; is SHREDDED WHEAT It contains all the body -building material in the whole wheat grain made digestible by steam-cooking, shredding and iy One or two biscuits with sliced peaches, served with milk or cream, make a com- plete, nouri'hing, wholesome meal. Being ready-cooked and ready-to-serve, a nourishing meal can Shredded Wheat in a *'jiffy" for children that are in a hurry to get off to school. Try it to-morrow. prepared with MADE IN CANADA The Canadian 3 Shredded Wheat Company, Limited Niagara Falls, Ont. Toronto Office: 49 Wellington Street East

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