West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 18 Aug 1904, p. 2

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"This is a deggone shame!" _ exâ€" claimed #bo man when he came home and found that his pet poodle had run away. Dodd‘s Kidney Pills cure the kidneys, and cured kidneys cure.dropsy, rheumaâ€" tism, heart disease and all other discases resulting from impure blod. "The first box did me so much good I felt like a new man and after taking five boxes 1 was completely eured." "I continued to grew wnable to work and was titute when to please a Dodd‘s Kidnevy Pills. abl that t! the doctd man take once to r that man that Dod sacred because it claims to run "especâ€" ially for the accommodation of pilgrims" and, above all, because at its opening a few years since it was formally blessed with all its belongings by Cardinal Tasâ€" chereau. Every Sunday the trains are crowded by devotees in search of the blessing of the good Saint Arine, who is credited with the miraculous power of healing, and on July 26 Saint Anne‘s day, the road cannot accommodate the enormous crowds which flock to her shrine. Think of riding on a holy railroad! But those who have traveled on it know that they must not expect the comforts of paradise. It may be called "holy," but it seems to be run, none the less, with an eye to dividends. The charges are high and the service poor. Why J. J. Perkins Owes his Life to Dodd‘s Kidney Pilis,. JUSTIFIED IN WHAT HE SAYS 1ew yea with all chereau. crowded blessing eredited healing. n It Runs Twenty Miles From Ste. Anne De Beaupre to Quebec. , too, for I could not hely feeling that they had indeed solved the great problem of perpetual motion; never needing or deâ€" giring rest apparently, and always stickâ€" ing to the ship to which they had taken & fancy in ca{)m or storm, whether flyâ€" ing before a gale or stagnation through many days of windlessnesss, as was comâ€" mon with the old sailing ships. I was glad to see how the sailors generally reâ€" garded them as birds of good omen, and im nowise to be meddled with. Indeed, in my day not a few seamen really looked upon them as the spirits of departed sailors, who never weary, flitted over the bright pure sea eternally. But then many . seamen thus regarded _ the albatros _ also, _ yet I never _ saw the same sincere reluctance to do them harm as was always evinced towards the ‘stormy petrel. Once I saw a man, a seeâ€" ond mate, wearying for something to do, catch one of the pretty creatures by means of a thicklyâ€"tarred roping twine attached to a bait of pork, which was hooked on to the end of a fishing line. ‘The little bird, fluttering over the meat and continually touching the water with its feet, as is its wont, got them entanglâ€" ed in the sticky twince .and was hauled in, all bedaggled, its bright vivacity gone and presently lay ranting and helpless in the grip of its silly tormentor. Fortuâ€" | nately the captain, coming on deck at an |‘ opportune moment, saw the shameful [ deed, and gave that second mate such a [ 3 wigging as I hope did him good. It was | the only time in my life that I ever reâ€" , joiced to see a subordinate on board ship I : receive a public reprimand.â€"F. F. Bullen, in New York Evening Post. [ Minard‘s Linament Cures Diptheria. "HOLY" RAILROAD IN CANADA Regarded by Sailors to be Birds of Good Omenâ€"Public Reprimand. How timidly on my first voyage did I ask the mate, a big, gruif Norwegian, what those pretty little birds were. %{ow eould I tel Ithat I was committing a seriâ€" ous breach of etiquette? He replied very frumy and unintelligibly, "Stern Pitter." ventured to say "What?" and was at once bidden to "shut up" and look out for myself, as if he had been insulted by my not understanding him. I took the hint and asked no more, nor did I learn that "these little birds" were stormy fletrels for a very long time, although ike other sailors, I of course knew them as Mother Carey‘s chickens.. But they were always a source of neverâ€"ending deâ€" light to me while at sea, and of wonder a V MOTHER CAREY‘S CHICKENS. Appearance, Durability, and Convenience Wash Basins Spittoons, years I was troubled with and at last became so bad tor who had been attending _up and said I was incurâ€" § .. Cte Pails, h Basins, @ 4 ‘ % Milk Pans, ittoons, [orssumes ) [ aocm ) Etc. FIBRE WARE friend I becoming For Sale by Dealers Everywhere. Superior to all others as regards desâ€" tried e o2 un 10 0 ic (A Nee rnmite | introduced a "headline" into its "Births, Il\larriaj_n-s and Deaths," deeming that "Betrothals" ought to rank with equal 'impnrtanco. VUpon this journalistie deâ€" parture the Westminster has amusing comment. It cites "iratches, Matches and Dispatches" as the wellâ€"known variant on "Births, Marriages and Deaths," and concludes that the appropriate word for "Detrothals" will clearly be "Catches." There is a possiomuty of further extenâ€" sion to suit that class of betrothals which are dissoived. The announcement is familiarâ€""The marriage arranged beâ€" tween Miss â€"â€"â€" and Mr. ____ will not take place," for which I would sugâ€" gest a suitable tit‘eâ€""Keratches." J TULLT N. /m5, foOr cach rickshaw, the | extra shilling being a gratuity thrown |in for good service. 1 know that it ’ purchased so many blessings on my honâ€" orable head as cannot yet be quite exâ€" ’ hausted. And having made our farewells at the railway station the coolies startâ€" ] ed back at once for their village.â€"London Mail. To mark its new lease antermricn. tha Dinae 1. JAPAN‘S HUMAN HORSES. The feats of which the Japanese rickâ€" shawmen are capable are almost incrediâ€" ble. I remember some years ago being driven ashore in the Inland Sea during a tiphcon. It was far beyond the treaty limits which then existed, and foreigners were not allowed to travel outside those limits without special passports. _ But the mayor of the nearest fishing village was kindness itself. He promised to supâ€" ply the best rickshawmen _ which the neighborhood could produce, so as to take us to a railway station some forty miles away. And he kept his word, for the disâ€" tance was covered in les sthan six hours, including a halt for refreshments. Each rickshaw was drawn by two men, tanâ€" dem wise, the usual fashion when long distances have to be covered. The leadâ€" ers in each went through the whole disâ€" tance, while the wheelers, so to speak, were changed half way. The road was over a great part of the distance little: better than a mountain track, and it was raining most of the time, but there‘ was never a break in our progress exâ€" cept to alloy the coolies to take off or put on their clothes. They prefer runâ€" ning in nothing but a loincloth, and do so whenever they get safely beyond the eve of the police, who have orders strictâ€" ly to administer the law against nudity. The fare paid for this prolonged jourâ€" ney was, if I remember rightly, about | three shillings for eceach rickshaw, the | extra shilling being a gratuity thrown in for good service. I know that itl purchased so many blessings an my han. \Shi * | Shiloh‘s & : \ Consumption | The Lung Cure Tonic t £ | It in sfleasant to take, will cure them quickly and has no unpleasant after effects. ‘ At all druggists, 25¢c, 50c and $1.00 & bottle. . e USE of the stockholders. * * **The only efâ€" fective protection for minority â€"stockâ€" holders is in publicity. The majority must rule. , "The courts will not enjoin the carryâ€" ing out of a business policy conceived in good faith, even though ‘ it may be probable that such policy will prove to have been unwise, but, if it is apparen» that the scheme of the majority of the stockholders is founded upon a plan to oppress the minority of the stockholders or to operate as a fraud upon their, and not to further the interests of the corporation, but to accomplish unfair advantages and benefits to those in conâ€" trol, then the Court of Equity will promptly use its power to restrain the accomplishment of. such iniquity." This decision was notable as being an action by a court of law to prevent the carrying out of a business polity adoptâ€" ed by men in control of §« | dgoration, but which was opposed by n"?ninority‘ of the stockholders. * * * "The only efâ€" ‘ _ The decision by Justice of the Supreme Court in Walter 8. Johnston against & Southern Railway contai lowing clause: p dinetemnain n ininltredsindlly snn â€" ucisad To the minority stockholders of the Hamilton, Grimsby & Beamsville Elecâ€" tric Railway, who have objected to the method of the transfer of that concern to Grand Trunk control, a paragraph from the Wall Street Journal will be of interest. It deals with the rights of minâ€" ority shareholders. The paragraph â€" in question reads: Migard‘s Linament jCures Colds, etc A croupy cough is a dangerous thing for the little folks in summer time. The ferer that accompanies it is liable to cause serious illness. Give them Summer Croup Close Observer Has Never Found naman With One. Minority Sharcholders‘ Rights Some Headlines. _headline" into its “"Birth;, nd Deaths," deeming that ought to rank with equal VUpon this journalistic deâ€" Westminster â€" has amusing cites "iratches, Matches and as the wellâ€"known variant went through the whole disâ€" the wheelers, so to speak, d half way. The road was _ part of the distance little a mountain track, and it most of the time, but there FIND THE GRAY QUEUE. clearly be "Catches." uty of further extenâ€" t class of betrothals >d. The announcement marriage arranged beâ€" _by casual inspection. I have seen with gray ck queues. It may be, ends of the queue, inâ€" Justice Greenbaum t in the suit of gainst the Norfolk contained the folâ€" of journalistic l Unlocking his box. he arranges the contents on the shelf and his assistant stations himself just outside the openâ€" ing. _ Already the men have begun to line up, and as the harsh screech of the 6 o‘clock whistle breaks in above the rattle of machinery and clatter of fect. the first man of the line hands his check to the assistant, who calls the number takes the envelope which is passed out, ses that it bears the corresponding numâ€" ber and passes it to the man, and the next check is instantly handled in thel same way. w All is seystematic and orderly. and The pay stations are simply boxes built at convenient points, large enâ€" ough for the clerk, and containing a broad shelf for his money trays. _ A wire grating surrounds him, with an opâ€" enine (h‘wmph which he can pass oirt sYow Ee un io the envelopes | ceeds to make any reduction which llnay J be necessaryâ€"purchases made by workâ€" ! men, trustee writs and asignments, to $ noâ€"moneyâ€"down concerns have to be takâ€" 'on care ofâ€"and with much groaning of | spirit he calls an assistant to take out ! the required envelopes and help him to | mark the deductions on them, and again ‘ make the proper change. l It is 4 o‘clock by the time this is straightened out, and preparations must lnt onece be made for the final distribuâ€" tion of the pay. _ ‘There are sixteen pay stations at various points in this great plant, and the pay envelopes must be properly deposited in heavy tin boxes for transportation to these stations. A| clerk is in charge of each box, and it is now his duty to count the number ot envelopes it contains, and give & reâ€" ceipt to the paymaster. At a quarter of 6 when sharp and clear rings the paymasters voice, "Ready, boys !" the Loys seize their hats and a heavy tramping is heard in the corridor, a score of stalwart "lumpers" troop in, and as the paymaster calls out "Factory A," "Factory B," and so on, the box for each station is picked un and carried off by a "lumper," followed by the proper pay clerk and an assgistâ€" ant. _ As the last box leaves the office the paymaster drops into a chair. He can have a twenty minutes breathing spell now, the first for ten solid hours of intense care. A Big Task Done Weekly in Twenty Minutes. In a town which contains the chief plant of one of the biggest manufacturâ€" ing corporations of the country, every Friday at 8 a. m., a policeman emerges from the door of a bank closely guardâ€" ing three men who cross the sidewalk enter a carriage with bulky packages, and are driven rapidly away. _ When the office of the corporation is reached, three or four workmen come forward. and help the men in the carriage to carâ€" ry the packages to the paymaster‘s deâ€" y partment. _ There they dump bills, silâ€" ver dollars, halves, quarters and cents to the amount of $120,000 upon one of the tables. i c eriess Then every one gets busy. C | _ It is 8.15 o‘clock by the big office clock, and that great pile of mixed money must ’ be counted and verified to the last cent, Chi. / and then be distribuated into 10,000 enâ€" velopes in amourts of wide variation; and this must be accomplished by tw > ex. | o‘clock. markable fact that in five years, during which the sum of more than $20,000,000 has been paid out in wages, only once has a recount been required. Finding the account correct, he proâ€" Hastily munching â€"a sandwich, he counts over the money left, and thus verifies the correctness of the amounts put up. If there‘s an error, his trouâ€" bles have just begun; but it is a reâ€" But the paymaster is not through work yet. He has much yet to do, and not a superfluous minute to do it in. Hastily munching â€"a sandwich, he counts over the money left, and thus verifies the correctness of the amounts Quick work. this Four men counted out 10,000 pay amounts i hours. _ ‘That means nearly ten minute, and the amounts vary frc or $3 to $£20 and $25, and call f. kinds of chance. lief, a stretching of tired arms stamping of cramped feet pro« end. Silently and swiftly the sixteen m>n rush the work along with an occasionâ€" al brief pause to test a coin or pass a doubtful bill over to the chief for inspecâ€" tion, while now and then comes a sharp call for "More fives!" or "Nickles here!" Gradually the great piles of money diâ€" minish and the trays of filled envelopes pile up until at 2 or 2.30 a howl of reâ€" To return to the tables. The first man at each of these seizes an envelope, rapidly counts out the money it calls for and passes both to his rightâ€"hand neighbor, who in turn counts it and passes it to the next man. He also counts it and passes it on to the fourth man, who packs it into the envelope, Thus each amount is counted thrce times, and the possibility of error alâ€" most eliminated. ‘ Two days before pay day checks are distributed to the hands, showing the amounts due to cach, and any error, if promptly reported, is corrected the same day. The computation of these amounts has occupied a force of two dozen or more clerks the whole preceding week. Much of the factory work is done by the piece, which entails an immense amount of work in collating and figuring. In front of the first man at each table are placed a pile of bills, with sima.l change, and a tray containing rows of pay envelopes. _ The hands in this facâ€" tory are all numbered, and the envelâ€" opes bear on the outside the printed number and the amount due to that man. At the other tables more coins or bills of various denominations are being counted. _ As each bag or package is completed, the paymaster heaves a sign of relief. _ The first stretch is passed; the amount is correct, and they can now get to the real work of the day. There are four polished tables, each accomodating four clerks. _ The payâ€" master, who holds a memorandum of the contents of each of the money packages, throws a heavy bag of coin on the table. Instantly it is untied and eight hands pull piles of coin towards them, and the counting begins. Coats and waistcoats are thrown asid» ghirt sleeves rolled up, and sixte>n clerks jump to their places knowing that the next six hours will demand a closeâ€" nesss of attention and nimbleness of acâ€" tion rarely called for in ordinary bus ness. FAYING OFF 10,000 HANDS. 1g of tired arms, and the amped feet proclaim the into a chair. He minutes breathing for ten solid hours nearly ten each ts vary from $2 and call for all and in five proâ€" PR "TF Mugginsâ€"Who was that fellow was quarreling with last night? Serappsâ€"Oh, that was a membe the Toronto Basebal} Team. He s at me several times. Mugginsâ€"Did he hit you? Serappsâ€"No, of course not. Premier Balfour has his pleasant salâ€" lies with members of Paliament now and then. John Morley took him to task some weeks ago for lax attendance in the House of Commons. Mr. Balfour deâ€" nied that there was any disinclination on his part to attend the sittings or to lisâ€" ten to the debates. On the contrary, he declared, some of the moments of greatâ€" est repose that he could snatch from a somewhat strenuous and lzborious offiâ€" cial career were those spent on the treaâ€" sury bench listening to his oratorical friends. ONTARIO ARCHIveESs TORONTO of tobacco ash, to be rest from which it was taken Ash ought ot be a valuable asset in the economy of things. Remembering that a ton of tobaceco leaf would yield four hundredweight of ash, which represents valuable mineral constituents withdraws from the soil, which have to be replaced by abundant manuring, the Lancet points out that there would seem to be a fortune in store for the individual who cowld deâ€" vise a successful means for the collectinn Makers of feeble jokes are prone to remark that a cigar or a pipe of tobaceo only ends in smoke. They forget the ash, however; and, calculating that the conâ€" sumption of tobacco is about 40,000 tons a year in the United Kingdom, it is esâ€" timated that about $,000 tons of ash are annually committed to the winds, or disâ€" sipated in some way or other. Snakes have but poor eyesight, and light fish have no eyelids. _ Their eyes are covered with a thin, transparent scale, which is even open, in sun and shade, at noon and midnight, in an awful, neverâ€"winking stare. We cannot imagine how sleep can ever come to such creatures.â€"C. W. Beebe, in N. YÂ¥. Evening Post. _ We can hardly imagine anything more terrible than the loss of our eyesight, and yet there are some creatures which have found life more pleasant in the darkness of caves and _ underground tunnels, or to roam only at night, when their eyes are «iseless, and by the lack of use these organs have degencrated to mere specks, and in some cases the skin has grown completely over them. Thus we find blind fishes and lizards in dark caves, and blind ants and moles all but blind in their dark subterranean homes, Curtain bats, too, have but tiny dots for eyes, and depend chiefly upon their acute hearing and some sense by which they can feel the vibrations in the air. _A horse, a bat, a mole, a monkey, a seal, all have a trace of the third eye, and when we put a finger on the "soft spot" of the head of a tiny baby, we realize the wonderful import of itâ€"that the softness is due to a near approach of this same third eye to the surface, striving as it has done in so many lower creatures to push its poor, imâ€" perfect lens to where the light can act upon it. But the old ways have given place to new, and the child‘s blue eyes look out at you and the world and see all that it necessary for its life and needs. 1 Madmen have such eyes, and great artists, and the nihilist must needs be of the essence of both. _ He is the proâ€" duct of a need and ar inspiration, the great need of the stricken Russian poor, the inspiration of new knowledge and freecdom seen from afar. In the lurking frenzy that inhabits there, like a genius or an obsession. there is that which redcems the whole unâ€" loveliness of the gross face and body, as though the soul ran riot while the flesh obeyed its laws. Madmen have such eves, and great Ah ! but you have »mot seen the eyeâ€" the eye that burns far back in the sockâ€" et, the poet‘s eye that sees Death ride by on a white horse among the careless guardsmen and ladics, the eye that is dull to the material and kindly only to visions. _To look at him one would say the fire of nihilism ran in a foul channel. He is meager, meanâ€"chested, little of stature, with low brows and a wide, loose mouth, a representative of a poor type, lacking in brawn and beauty, springing weedily from a profitless stock. There is someâ€" thing vapid in the bloodless pouch of the cheek and the bonelessness of the jaw ; nothing finishes with a click; the conâ€" tours are not definite. i Princesses, men in the uniform of duâ€" cal regiments, the splendor and wealth of the capital of Russia file along as though for his inspection, and his is the eye that weighs and appraises them all by the standard of the poor. At the edge of the puvement he stands in the uniform of a Russian university student, smoking a yellow cigarette, and the carriages ply past him throughout the hour of promenade. A Spirited Description of the Russian Revolutionist. The London Mail gives this spirited description of the nihilist : Minard‘s Linament Cures Garget in Cows. The largest number of hands paid at any one station falls a little short of eight hundred, and within twenty minâ€" utes from the time the first check is taken up the last man is paid, and the clerks are starting back to the office. Here they count over the checks they have received, add to them the envelopes they have not, for any cause, paid out, get the paymaster‘s initials to the last count, and at 6.30 all are out of the office, after a day of systematic expediâ€" eion which would be a recorder breaker if it was not of regular weekly occurâ€" rence. ¢ when a dozen or two men have passed | and the line has struck its gait the work j progresses so rapidly that the men do not halt in their progress. It becoinea’ a steady stream of men walking past the | station at a fair gait, and a stcady{ stream of money pasing into their hands | without error and without mischancee. i ASHES AS ASSETS. CLEVER RETORT Natural Result. THE THIRD EYE. L0O! TYE NIHILIS. eans for the collection bg- restored to the soil member of struck you "What kind of an animal is that that sits moping and dejected in the far corâ€" ner of the cage, shunned by all the othr animals, and never lifting its eyes ?" ‘"That," said the attendant at the zoo, "is the monkey tYvhoNbecame famous as the star guest at a Ne rt freak s ner."â€"Washington swv;vpo din passed| The Sunlight way of washâ€" :gg.mgg; ing requires little or nO ast the , rubbing. You should try hana'sfSunlight Soap. - § Fighting the Fireâ€"Fighter, At a fire in Erfurt, Germany, the members of the fire brigade quarreled with the Chief, and instead of attending to their duties, belabored him with the hose until he was senscless, Meanwhile, the fire had taken such hold that before it was got under control several houses were burnt to the ground, Minard‘s Linament Cures i I was cured of Faci [ anxarps Lrniexr One of the principal real estat lishments of New York is the Trust. The manager says: "Th tising mediums used by the Realt are the daily newspapers. _ Ot} diums have been tried and ab; and now all of this company‘s a ing goes to the dailies, Display tising only is usedâ€"nothing can way take its place. Our busin been built up by this advertisin 1 was cured of Chronic MINARD‘S LIXIMEXT. MINARD‘S LINIMEXT The women who made up this unusual Earty of shoppers buying burial goods efore death ensued, also examined burâ€" ial robes at several undertakers‘, but did not select one. It is said that it was at the solicitation of the dying woâ€" man that the unusual haste was made. At one of the undertaking shops visâ€" ited the women agreed on one casket, but did not then take it, stating as a reason for waiting that they wanted to make sure it would suit the dying woâ€" man.â€"Kansas City Journal. Buys Cofiin Before Death. While a young woman lay dying at an hospital yesterday afternoon her husâ€" band, his brother and several women friends of the family were busy in the task of selecting a casket. At supper time, while the woman was still several hours from dying, this unusual mission had been completed. The casket had been selected and put in readiness to reâ€" cc(ilve the body as soon as death occurâ€" red. Albert Co., NX Epringhill, N. & Bay of Islands. Plt(ll | great in the. USE JCSS iig@braime T00 )" !fist, it is stfll greater in the extended ‘ and continuous contraction of brain and nerves in useless fears; and the ; enery saved through dropping the fears and their accompanying â€" tension can _ bring in the same proportion a vigor unâ€" known beforeâ€"and, at the same time, afford protection against t«e very things we feared. xORA The fear of taking cold is so strong in many people that a draught of fresh air becomes a bugaboo to their conâ€" tracted, sensitive nerves. Draughts are imagined as existing everywhere, and the contraction which immediately folâ€" lows the sensation of a draught is the best means of preparing to catch a cold.J was cured of HOW NOT TO TAKE COLD. If you hold your fist as tight as you can hold it for fifteen minutes, the faâ€" tigue you will feel when it relaxes is a clear proof of the energy you have been wasting, and, if the waste is so great in the use less tightening of a DISPLAY ADVERTISING Fighting the Ostracised. ger says: "The adver Acute Bronchitis Facial Neuralgia by edaplre by the Realty Trust apers. _ Other meâ€" ied and abandoned, company‘s advertisâ€" GEO. TINGLEY WM. DANTIELS M. CAMPBEL, Rheumatism by Distemper. estate estabâ€" the Realty by 1wo superb pearls of world have disappeared from circula belonged to the late Princes: Bonaparte, were worn by h rings, and at her express re buried with her. Some day th recovered from her triple o« then they, too, will be dead. aiso die ASs If andu. .3 " Aretlo b-"Qâ€"--â€"----â€"--vâ€"â€".- EuCu®‘ J recommended medical .“MWM pm(-lon an nimars Jn em. ... 3. °0 CU0Ve PHUPCIY c108ed, Deatness is the result, and uniess the inflamâ€" mation can be taken out and this tuberestorâ€" ed to its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever ; nine cases out 0% ten are caused by Cuurrin, which is nothing but an inflamed condition ‘of the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Doliars for any case of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hall‘s Catarrh Cure. Kend for circulare, free, F. J, CHENXEY & CO., Toledo, O ba' local applications as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. Thereis only one way to cure deafness, and that is by comâ€" stitutional remedies, Deatness is caused by an inflamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. _ When this tube is inâ€" flamed you have a rumbling sound or imperâ€" fit.heufl‘ng.l_and when it is entirely closed. Deafness Cannot be Cured _ _There is a young woman in Philadelâ€" phia who realizes a snug little sum durâ€" ing the summer months by boarding birds for people who â€" close up their houses during the heated term and ye into the country. ‘The feathered pets must be cared for and the sum charged for looking after them is so small that the young caretaker has no trouble in getting all the birds she can properly attend to. She understands the habits of the little songsters thoroughly and knows exactly what to do for them in case of minor ailments, ha ving made a study of bird life. She has a large room in the house which serves the purpose of an aviary and there spends nearly all her time.‘ She is using the money she receives from the owners of her little charges in giving herself & professional education. â€" Philadelphia Record. mm"â€"h m" NINE MILLION AcRES Government Lands for Homesteaders. In western Nebraska near the Union Pacifi@ Railroad in section lots of 640 neres each, for almost nothing. The salâ€" ubrity of thesé lands is something re markable. _ Distance from railroad is three to thirty miles. There will be a fnnd rush of ilomeltuders. This is the ast distribution of free homes the Unitâ€" e1 States Government will ever make in Nebraska. Write for pamphlet telling how the lands can be acquired, when enâ€" try should be made, and other informaâ€" tion. Free on epplication to any Union Pacific egent. Bold b nru?-:-&'._?] Take finll'u amily ] The principle of the modern engineer is to successively pass steam through as many contrivances as possible in order to extract the greatest amount of heat. There are many plants of modern conâ€" struction, the writer having the refrigâ€" erating machinery of a large brewery in mind, where the capacity has been douâ€" bled by machinery which utilizes the exhaust steam of the oldâ€"time refrigerâ€" ating engines. The heating plant of the new Savoy hotel, on the Strand, London, is an example of what can be done in this direction. The steam exhaust of the engines furnishing power for the electric ligilting and elevator service is made to do all the heating of the building, this being the usual practice nowadays in ofâ€" fice limildingts. 'l’ge air circulated by the power fans in winter time is also hoated by being made to pass over stcam coils containing the exhaust steam. Most of the cooking is also done by means of exhaust steam, including grillers, hot closets, coffee urns, hot muilk urns and like the paradoxical satyr of the first reader, in addition to doing all the heatâ€" ing of the establishment, the waste steam is also utilized in the refrigeratâ€" ing plant. PEARLS AND OwWNER BURIED Exhaust Steam Made to Cook, Heat and Refrigerate. AND SKIRT SUPPORTER Always Ready, No Hooks to tear the hands, Nothing to be sewed on. Lady agents wanted everywhere, Send for our list of premiums«. W IP Steamers leave Hamilton 1 p.m,, Toronto 7.80 p.m., Bay of Quinte ports, Montreal and intermediate ports. Low rates on this line. Further information, apply to R. & O, agents, or write to H. FOSTER CHAFFEE, Western Passenger Agent, Toronto, Room 3, 23 Scott Street, Toronto, Ont. for Rochester, 1,000 Islands, Rapide, St. Lawrence, Montreal, Quebec, Murray Bay, Tadousac and Saguenay River. cloth samples. LADIES‘ {s« For Sale Cheap and on Easy Terms. Hamilton, Toronto, Montreal Line "'_';1?'.'..""'%%2’ for m&i l urerwin I gooths e C aoftens eures win : colic and is the best remedy cf'fl:m.... ISSUE NO. 84 J904. 1777 pearis of worldâ€"wide fame sappeared from circulation. They 1 to the late Princess Mathilde te, were worn by her as earâ€" nd at her express request were ith her. Some day they may be d from her triple coffins, but ‘y, too, will be dead. for pearls as if endowed with life. Mrs. Wissiow‘s HOTEL PROPERTY Apply to JOHN McCOY, nands. BOARDING BIRDS THK SOUTHCOTT SUIT CO., HOTEL ECONOMIES. IN FONTHILL, ONT., Pills for Constipation. 4.50 Fall Suits and up to 12.00, also _ Skirts and Vaists, Send for styles and J. A. DAGGETT, Steamers _ leave Toronto 3 p.m. daily Toronto and Hamilton, Ont. urns and the first the heatâ€" e _ waste efrigeratâ€" London, Can. shou! i ig. 1+ A Hint Japa St. ; Japa ensu« v the TH 0 t1 0 PRAIS Dan R

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