West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 5 Oct 1906, p. 6

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* _7 unar comint BIC," gol: : A life insurance physician says the Tnoteh are more liable to accidents than re the English, for thirtyâ€"one out of ‘ery thousand deaths in Scotland are ie to accident, and only thirty in Engâ€" Remend. France suffers less from accidents G, Laan any other country of Europe, only iteen deaths in a thousand being due z... accident. In the United States the joportion is very high, thirtyâ€"nine in A thousand. restions ts "cieaner milk." Toâ€"day, it iys, thirtyâ€"one health inspectors are | «w pouring into the sewers death and <sease that a few years aco would have en sold and used as children‘s food. ow in the most crowded districts of e_ city mothers may purchase pure, rflk,nnd learn free of cost to: their babies. The Montâ€" W:hofiths should go to New and find out how it is done. *3 to the 1,000, says the New York un. In 1905 it was just 14.9 to the . lIn 1905, between June 10 and ept. 9, children under five to the numâ€" su of 4,086 were killed in New York by owel diseases. This year in the correâ€" ‘ouding period the deaths were 3,662. gflnt saved in 1905 the lives of twenty ne answer, the Sun say ants out of every thousand who in would have died? In 1906 what the infant mortality by 10 per it." in the heated months of the yvear? In 1881 the mortality among children nder five from diarrhoeal diseases was ware The Philadelphia Bulletin puts in a lea for the suppression of the yellow ovel and other pernicious literature, the ading of which by boys leads them ito evil ways. It gives an instance of ais sort of thing, where, acording to ae police, the members of a youthful and, under arrest, took an oath, _ of 'i'lich the following is ome of the auses: "Father or mother, wife or child swll not be sacred in my eyes if duty emands their death." A plan to poison certain man by sending a _ poisoned ‘amp which he was to wet with his mgue before using, was confessed by 1e leader. This idea, the Bulletin, says, as got from a recently published cheap _ A preacher in Westfield, Mase., forbado the sale of beer by one of the societies of his church and mutiny followed. Now the preacher has attached the property of twenty members of the congregation in suits for slander, and has brought ther suits for damages to the amount t $e0,000. Forty years ago, we are told, the Sioux «dians were unreclaimed savages. Their ime was a terror like that of the paches at a later date. Ten thousand wistian Indians are now attending the mvocation of the Episcopal church on ic Santee Reservation. Most of them :o Sioux and some of them have travelâ€" d 200 miles to attend the convention. 11 those from distant points are being itertained by the Santee Sioux. This ould lead to the conclusion that misâ€" ons to the Indians pay. mot a bad sort of fellowâ€"a mixture of genius, selfâ€"confidence and enthusiasm. Hoch, der Kaiser! It is said that recently a plot to kill the Kaiser was discovered and frustrated. Kill the Kaiser, indeed ! Why should anyâ€" one wish to harm him? He‘s needed to keep Europe awake. And after all}, he‘s The steel passenger coach cannot come oo soon. The Pennsylvania Railroad, it s reported, has placed an order for five mndred at a cost of $5,000,000. _ These till be stronger than most of the cars & present in use, and it is expected wilt e better able to stand the daily smash. [ they will, many lives may be saved. meventyâ€"two per cent. of the drugs sold in New York are adulterated. Adulâ€" teration of foods is bad, but the man who adulterates â€" medicines should be stood up against a wall and summarily cleven Jews got off in prison, Russian ideas of justice may be estiâ€" mated from the fact that a police officia} sonvicted of the coldâ€"blooded murder ot Chicago‘s street cars kill a man, or a woman, or a child every two days, and the slaughter goes on unchecked. A few hangings imight stop that sort of thing. some of the troops sent out by Unele Bam to make Cubans behave themseives might be profitably employed in sup pressing bhat race riot at Atlanta Ga., and preventing disgrace at home. General Funston is moving into Cuba. Uncle Sam naturally feels diffident about intervening, but once he really intervenes he may feel far more diffiâ€" dent about evacuating the island. We doubt not that there are some dis appointed lawyers in New York. A fight ever the Sage millions would have furâ€" mished some fat pickings. Seventyâ€"two with three months Lo York. A fight When a man talke about the necesâ€" a«ity of the divoree of religion and busiâ€" mees the chances are he is not acquaintâ€" ed with either. A man‘s vocabulary is measured by his dictionary, but his message depends on his heart. You do not have to throw prudence to the winds in order to prove that you seteer by principle. bended to heaven, You cannot separate society from sin by separating yourself from society. It is never safe to trust the man who ecarriee his virtues in the tip of his tongue. People will believe in the virtuwes of your character without the evidence of Distinction Without Much Difference. (Philadelphia Record.) Tommyâ€"Pop, what is the difference beâ€" tween a bachelor girl and an old maid? Tommy‘s Popâ€"The only difference, my sou. is whether we are talking about ber behind ber back or to her face. come to a standstill. Reverent reasonin it needs a dynamo. _ No man gets worthy riches unless he in private. eÂ¥ yY The funeral kind of religion is most ly dead. gonumotlmntobosg\fleby ing a guide book. m stands for the right will not Trains of lies are made up by ewitchâ€" ing the truth. $inne & . _ A little great man can always be filled with vanity. CA t ts vinegar. Dear Mother Fateâ€"A mustache cup But the English note is protected by none of these things. Its lettering and general design can be copied quite easily by the camera ,and a good plate reproduced on zinc for prlnm‘\g. It can be photographed on ston«, and the printing is ready at once If the forger can get paper of the right No forger can get the tracery done by hand, because no engraver could do it, and he cannot get the machine. If he had the machine it would take years to work out the sectet combination of figures, which make any particular design. ‘There are only three or four of these machines in tne world. Then for his design, in the shap* of portraits and architecture and scenery aod lettering, he would want a combinaâ€" tion of four or more engravers of high ability and bad character, which would be as hard to come by as the machine. It canâ€" uot be done. § After the design has been worked out on the machine in accordance with the secret code, which is kept by the proprietor locked in the safe, the machine does tae wWork itself, if the operator will go on turning the driving crank slowly and steadi‘y. The plan is taken out with numbers, which represent the wheels and tue code Of iigâ€" ures, showing the work which is to be done by each wheel!, and how it comes into play. But the operator cannot kuow that secret. The macuine simply goes on in its own way, and the least slackeaing or any of the parts will put it all out,. .A workman cannot repair the error, for he does not know the code, and the : whole work will be spoiled until the master comes along and resets the wheels and other parts in their proper order. Only a small part of the design is worked out by this delicate machineâ€"just enough to give a complete representation _ of the pattenn. _ ‘Then that portion is stamped on soft steel, which is hardened _ by another secret process, and made into a sort of di«, which is used to impress other plates of steel, till the full border is thus eomplete1, or a band made to go across the whole face or back of the note. In the best of the colored notes three or four tints are used, and generally you find that one of them is blue. It defies the camera. _ The different colors are put on with different plates, and each means a separate printing. ‘The result is that if you hold one of the notes up to the light you will find that the lines of the different colors run into and through one another; making it impossible to take a perféct copy, even if the camera could catch them all, which it cannot. E;T.ng'an public must have sources The steel plate itself is the work of mazy hands and many brains. _ When the main design has been decided upon, the parts of the picture have to be flvon over _ to several engravers, each of whom is skilled in one branch of his art, and could not exchange his part with any of the others. One is an architectural engraver, and with a fine needle be labors for weeks io the effort to convey to the metal a perfect picâ€" ture of a building. Anotber, with skill o f quite a different sort, makes portraits, a third draws scenery, while a fourth fashâ€" fons the letters. Still others contrive corâ€" ner pieces; and then there is the machine engraver, which is more wonderful still, for the machine does work so fine that no human hand can imitate it. ‘The complicated work of tracery which you see on the back and front of Seotch and foreign notes is so minute that the camera cannot effectively copy it . To reâ€" produce with photography on zime â€" it J$ necessary to employ acid, and the acid would eat away these fine lines. The work is done by & machine which is made on the principal of the pantograph. 1t seems to consist of a multitude of wheels and eccentrics, and apparatus for guiding and checking the needle and sending it in new directions at all sorts of unexpected angles ZBG CUIYG® _ . _ _ C l in Europe. Some of it is of the most comâ€" plicated description, and in this fact lies its geeut satoigs .. .‘ n 02 o EL so, and the grest banks of the world come to the engravers and printers of London to have _ their notes or their plates made. ‘They turn out the most besautiful printing __Note printing is one of the highly skilled trades which still is a virtual monopoly of the city of London. It bas always been Skill of the cleverest forger. It is made at & small town near London, but so well has the secret been guarded that the most Skilâ€" ful note printers in the trade do not etand that, though they know more other secrots. ‘ white paper. ‘The great safeguard lics in the quality of the paper and the quality of the printing and the watermark on the The Bank of England note is the most easily forged of all, ror t is the simplest, eonsisting as it does of black printing on & zo be the only reliable remedy for all L of M in children. $y e nnaite Ei mmaam & is euned Aerele poan and all degiers ht imadkcie aolf "=â€" _ _ WC ‘To make the actual paper is beyond Your little ones are a constant care in SHIL O H Fall and Winter weather. Thg{‘mll <atch cold. Do you know about Shiloh‘s Qâ€"-c-' Cure, the Lung Tonic, and what it has done for so many 2 It is said Down on Penslope‘s Lip. SENTENCE SERMONS. is good, arnd so is a motor, but n dAvnama. dead heart wants to be deadâ€" 1d be in every household. may be the dbest underâ€" of the The steamer Arctic, under command of Capt. Bernier, sailed from Sorel, Que., on Saturday the His clothes ain‘t quite as good as ming, But I don‘t care for that; His mother makes his face just shine, An‘. I lent him a hat. F An‘ every morning just by rule y When nine o‘clock it comes, He takes my hand and goes to school, ‘Cuz him an‘ me is chums. 4 Nobody better tease me, too, No matter if he‘s small, ‘Cuz I‘m a friend, for tried and true, An‘ that‘s the reason all ‘The boys don‘t dare to tease him, cus I just wait till he comes, An‘ he walkes close by me, he does, Cuz me and him is chums. + rHe fell an‘ hurt himself one day _ The summer before last, An‘ that‘s what makes him limp that way, An‘ don‘t grow very fast. So when I get a piece of pie, t _ Or maybe nuts or plums, I always give him some, ‘cuz I w Get Jotsan‘â€"him and me is chums. P An‘ when it‘s apple time, we go, An‘ I climb all the trees, *‘Cuz he can‘t climbâ€"he‘s hurt, you know, But he gets all he sees Come droppin5 down, and my! he‘d glad, An‘ when the twilight comes He says what a fine time he had Get lots an‘â€"him and me is chums. s But my! his mother‘s awful queer; ‘Cuz w‘en we‘re home again, Bhe wipes her eyeâ€"a great, big tear, An‘ saysâ€"‘"God bless you, Ben! The Lord will bless you all your days One disease of thinness in children is scrofula; in edults, consumption. Both have poor blood ; both need more fat. These diseases thrive on leanâ€" ness. Fat is the best means of overcoming them; cod liver oil makes the best and healthiest fat and _ SCOTT‘S is the easiest and most effective form of cod liver oil. Here‘s a natural ordee of things that shows why Scott‘s Emulsion is of so much value in all cases of scrofula and consumption. More fat, more weight, more nourishâ€" ment, that‘s why. E EMU LSION ‘Toronto, Ont. 50c.and$1.00 s oou on ue e e e ty When the great Judgment comes,." But I say I don‘t need no praise, ‘Cuz me and bhim is chums. â€"D.. M. in the Gl‘asggw Weekly Herald FOR BOTH Send for free sample. SCOTT & BOWNE, Chemists He lives across the street from US, ; An‘ ain‘t as big as me; His mother takes in washin‘, ‘cus They‘re poor as they car be. But every night he brings his slate, An‘ then 1 do his sums, An‘ help him get his lessons straight, ‘Cuz bim an me is chums. Minard‘s Liniment Relieves Neuralgia, Young Chap, Is This You? (St. Catharines Starâ€"Journal.) St. Catharines, like every other city, has some young fellows that are getting themâ€" selves in shape to spend a useless life. They skip school as often as possible and leave it for good as soon as they can. They do not care to work and are more or less of a burâ€" den to their parents. It is a pity there is no law compelling them to do something. The young man who drops out of school early in the race, smokes cigarettes, loafs around the streets and runs with toughs, is ready to enter life‘s contests away in the rear, He has cut down his earning capacâ€" Ity to a small quantity. He will be badly bandicapped and the chances are he will be beaten in the race of business and of wage earning. No business man wants an employe of this sort and he is never likely to be either well off or live to be a good old age. If he were married his wife would have to take in washing to keep him, and he is most likely to fill a dishonest grave. \ Similar evidence is forthcoming from all anarters of the globe. Bileans cure constipation,. piles, headache. female ail ments and irrecularities, debility, indiâ€" gestion, liver chill, wind spasms anaeâ€" mia, and all disorders arising from liver and stomach derangement. _ All dealers and stores, at 50c a box, or post free from the Bilean Co.. Toronto, on receipt of price. Six boxes for $2.50. Mrs. Frances Greene, of Earl street, Kingston, (Ont.), says: "My liver was sluggish and out of order, and I had great trouble from constipation. Every movement of the bowels had to be foreed. _I doctored and tried all manâ€" ner of remedies, but nothing brought a permanent cure until I tried Bileans. They eured the constipation, ended the s«luggish,.tiredâ€"out "livery" feeling, and made me feel bright and buovant." From this it is seen that if the liver be corrected, the bile flow will be set right, that in turn will correct the intestines, and the constipation will be ended. This is exactly what Bileans do, and why they are so superior to ordinary medicine orâ€" purgatives. â€" These flush the bowels, but do not get to the cause of the evil (the liver), Bileans do. _ About eight women out of every ten 'sufln from constipation, . Certain porâ€" tions of the food we eat are useless as food and the work of the bowels is to expel those portions. Their work is aidâ€" ed by a secretion of the liverâ€"thé bile. ’“'hen this secretion fails, or is secreted in insufficient quantities, the bowels beâ€" come inactive and constipation results. Impurities which : should be expelled gather, and then note what happens! The blood comes in contact with this foul accumulation, is filled with poison, and the cireulation carries these poiâ€" sons all over the body. That is why constipated persons â€" have so â€" much headache, that dull, heavy feeling, bad‘ bf_eath, foul taste in the mouth, etc. . Why Bileans Are so Highly Beneâ€" CONSTIPATION AND ITS RESULTS. " CHUMS." Suiuittaie ’ Honey Production, _ According to statistics in the Hanâ€" _dels Museum, Germany leads in the production of honey among European eountrics, with 1,910,000 beehives, furâ€" nishing 20,000 tons of honey. Spain is next, with 1,690,000 hives and 19,000 tons of honey. Austriaâ€"Hungary is third, with 1,550,000 hives and 18,000 tons of honey. The other European States are far behind. France produces 10,000 tons, Holland 2,500, Belgium 2,000, Greece 1,â€" 400, and Russia and Denmark 900 tons each. In these statistics the effect of climatic conditions is noteworthy, espeâ€" cially when comparing Russia and Greece, The latter has only 30,000 bechives, yielding 1,400 tons of honey,while the forâ€" mer with 110,000 hives, produces only 900 tons. The Handels Museum states that "the news from America that special instituâ€" tions have recently been established in the United States to raise qusen bees for sale will be of interest to bee keepers. To provide a hive with a new queen is a problem of considerable difficulty, but on which good results depend very maâ€" terially. ‘The active Department of Agriâ€" culture of the United States has recently published a bulletin by Dr. Phillips which furnishes thorough information to bee keepers how they can themselves breed queen bees, as those for a‘o are very expensive." r;ctorj because I couldn‘t keep all my .eayes e “’.'l MThe promoters accordingly fought shy of bim. TORONTO Outfit which won the CHAMPIONSHIP OF THE WORLD against 21 American, British and Canadian manufacturers, after a two months‘ thorough trial. Made by GOOLD, SHAPLEY 2 MUIR CO. LIMITED, Brantford, Canada. "* IMPERIAL‘ PUMPING WINDMILL Argus was declining a job. ‘‘Nc," he exclaimed. "I couldn‘t be a diâ€" Crimsonbeakâ€"But men lHe so about fish that we can‘t tell whether he‘s telling the truth or not. Proprietorâ€"Don‘t wory about that. We know how to make both ends meat. â€"Baltimore American, Yeastâ€"An English physician recently asâ€" serted that fishes are the only living things that do not have a taste for alcohol. Investigatorâ€"I have been in this sauâ€" sage factory from both end, and 1 don‘t eee what you are going to do with all that stuff and dirt on the floor." Thousands tell the same story of Hemâ€"Roid. the $1,000 Guaranteed Pile Cure. All drugzista® Orange raisers in Florida frequently resort to huge bonfires in order to avert the loss of crops through sudden frosts, and possibly steam heated orchards will become the proper caper in the course of a few years. MR. GLEASON OF GREENWOOD The experiments are designed to start the budding in the early spring and to protect the second product in the late fall. Through a system of underground steam pipes it is believed that two crops a season may be forced in the South of France and that the yield of the orâ€" chards will more than repay the cost of the fuel. The flames encompassed several orâ€" chards, and it was found that such of the trees as were not scorched by the flames put forth a second set of buds and were soon in full flower. Steam Heated Plants, The French Agricultural Department is working on a series of experiments suggested by a fire occurring in one of the rural districts, in which the greatâ€" er portion of a small town was con â€" sumed. .. About the same time an old foxhound man told me that he had observed closeâ€" ly for many years, and that his dogs had always more strength, vim and endurâ€" ance when he fed them on cornbread. He said that oatmeal, manufactured bisâ€" cuit and a mixture of meat and vegeâ€" tables were all inferior in results. He feeds the mature dogs on meat twice a week and on cornbread the rest of the time. . His puppies are raised almost entirely on corn mush and milk.â€"Joseph A. Graham, in June Outing. ~For a hundred years all of us have been told, and most of us have believed, that cornbread is not a good food for. dogs. It has been called "heating." Authorities have told us that it had too much of a tendency to, create fat, and not enou%n the direction of bone and muscle. ntly, however, one of the great bench show handlers and judges has stated publicly that after trying all sorts of combinations, he found that he could get his dogs into better condition v;vitl: cornbread than with any other WHAT TO FEED YOUR DOG IN SUKMâ€" Falls, Ont. Not on the Board. (N. Y. Sun.) Economy,. "Keb, sir, keb?" the flock of Grand Central cabbies called, with what is only their usual mechanical insistence, and were tremenmdously surprised, for, in spite of the annoyance of the creatures, it is believed by some that they mean no harmâ€"to have a pedestrian with a palmâ€"leaf fan turn on them and snap out: "No, I don‘t want a ‘keb‘ Can‘t you see that I‘m walking? If I didn‘t have to walk I‘d have had a cab hours ago, years ago, before you were born." Then she passed on. One of the cabbies stared, then said to another: "Knew it hot as that."â€"New York Evening Sun, The percapita figures make different ratings. Holding our own in the quantity of coffee drank "per head," we* became insignificant in tea,. were fourth in disâ€" tilled liquors and likewise in beer and eighth in wine.â€"New York World. Russia and Germany both drank more whiskey than we in 1904â€"the figures for the three countries are, in gaflom, 174,000,000, 124,300,000 and 121,000,000. We drank in 1900 about 103,.330,000 galâ€" lons of whiskey and brandy. France was the 1904 leader in wine, using 1,343,000,â€" 000 gallons, while we were a bad seventh with 43,300,000 gallons. Still, we advance. Ia 1900 our sufficiency in wine _ was reached at 23,425,000 gallons, Minard‘s Liniment for sale everywhere. I1 beerâ€"drinking Germany led the way with 1,783,000,000 gallons. Great Briâ€" tain was second with 1,501,000,000 galâ€" lons. The United States with 1,494,000,â€" 000 gallons was a promising thirdâ€"proâ€" mising because back in 1900 our thirst for malt liquors was satisfied with 1,â€" 198,602,104 gallons. pounds of coffee in 1904. Nearest to this quantity out of ten other nations came Germany with 397,,000,000 pounds. France used but 168,000,000. Great Britain was so buey leading the wo‘ld in teaâ€"drinkingâ€"she used up 256,000,â€" C00 pounds of leaves to Russia‘s 127,300,â€" 0)) and our own 109,000,000â€"that she eonsumed only 29,500,000 pounds of cofâ€" fee. Chicoryâ€"that is another story. _ The frieze, which is placed immediateâ€" ly below the cornice, is generally of a groster depth than that common in Euâ€" ropean countries and often measures as much as fifteen or sixteen inches. The best papers represent in these friezes landscapes, seascapes, borders of flowers, garlands, etc. The ceilings of houses are also covered with paper with a simple pattern on a light colored ground. | It is believed that these papers would find a good opening in the country, beâ€" cause in certain towns, like Shanghai, Hankow and Tientsin, they would be used not only in the houses built for Europeans but also in those of the Chiâ€" nese of the weaithy class who follow Euâ€" ropean customs and habits. The papers used in China are varied in colors, ualities, patterns and prices, It is &erefore advisable to send the greatest possible variety of samples, and papers representing landscapes, scenes and picâ€" tures of Teniers, tapestry, etc., would probably sell best. i4# Wall Papers in China. The use of colored papers for house decoration, which was scarcely known in China until quite recently, is now beâ€" coming general. Minard‘s Liniment Cures Burns, etc. Another offered the loan of a horse he bestrode, which offer the sleepy farmâ€" er accepted. After riding all night he found himself at daylight next morning riding his own horse.â€"Liverpool Post. "Toward Hâ€"â€"," replied one of the farmers. The irate farmer hurried to his clothes, and, hastening to the door, asked: "Which way has he gone ?" At midnight the farmer was disturbed by a voice shouting: "Your horse is stolent" A farmer living near the town of Derâ€" by having got himself disliked on account of his quarrelsome habits, the other farâ€" mers decided one night to cool him down a bit. Drinks of the Nations. The United States drank 9( 50c. each boxâ€"6 for $2.50. Used with Mira Pulood ‘Tonic and 'l;:bld-“:uu a qu:.lae-e.‘ Canade, Limited, HA:hoaâ€"Tmnlo. about Deacon S&mith now than L did then.â€"Chicago News. "I was troubled with [Icking P iles," writes one man whose address we wfll%mflk on request "[ used ol the salves and remedies Imrhadfi Then [ used Mira Ointmentâ€"and obtained more relief from it than all the others. 1 recommend it to all afficted with this complaint," _ _ __________ _ Jones â€"I suppose you know more about that horse you got of Deacon Smith last week than when you made the trade? _Brownâ€"Yes, and I\know a lot more 4P ues :.....u':a“.:f 23.“:.’.'%‘.:."!' ITCHING PILES ts wok infi sainrbg i rece rdeneh 4y She Didn‘t Want a Cab. ‘Free Gifts of Toilet Soaps TRADE MARK REGISTERED, SAVE SUNLIGHT SOAP COUPONS Got His Horse. Use SUNLIGHT SOAP and GET ‘The Coupons are the same as cash because they can b every day. Read circular in every package, or write us for Premium List. A gift is of little value if it consists of something you have no use for In exchange for Sunlight for which you have to pay out money every week. Users of SUNLIGHT for nothing. drank 964,000,000 1904. Nearest to ten other nations Lever Brothers Limited, Toronto, Canada We would never ;suepect how nice some people are if they didn"t tell us. (Chicago Chronicle.) President Roosevelt did a graceful tihng wher he suspended the customs inspection regulations in favor of Mr. Bryan, but we may very well doubt whether the action was as advisable as @miable. It is not a good thing to mullify any law, even momentarily. That involves special privilege, and special privilege is axactly what is burting this country toâ€"day. (ags 9 District Agent Wanted For tickets, and further particulars, call on or write Robt. 8. Lewis, Passenâ€" ger Agent, 10 King street east, Toronto. Tickets onlg $0.00 to New York and reâ€" turn, from Suspension Bridge, via Leâ€" high Valley Railroad, Thursday, October 4th. Tickets good 10 days. Good on regular express trains leaving Suspenâ€" eion Bridge 3.50 and 7:15 a. m., 7.15 and 8.43 p. m. FALL EXCRUSION TO NEW YORK. ues ty io cooet e Aeoerereace : 14 WE WANT YOUR subscription. If you send your na subscription at one dollar, we will mail von Ina ... THE CANADA FIRST MAGAZINE, now adian MONTHLY Magazine. Devoted to CAX BTORIES. The magazine of the Canardian Pr. ance of this year. FIBRE WARE uns ly turned over. At the end of this time the liquor is filtered and decanted into white glass bottles, which are filled to about twothirds and after being very lightly corked are placed in an inclined position, care being taken that the branâ€" dy does not touch the stopper. By this means the largest possible surface is €xâ€" posed to the action of the air and the oxidation necessary to produce good brandy is materially hastened. The acâ€" tion of light plays an important part in the maturing of spirits, but bottles should not be exposed to the direct rays of the sun and should be kept in a sufâ€" ficiently cool place to avoid excessive evaporation. Minard‘s Liniment Cures Dandruff. Farmers and Dairymen od of Professor Martinotti fine shayâ€" ings of oak are placed in the cask with the new spirit and allowed to remain for one month, the cask bein occasionalâ€" Artificial Aging of Brandy. Ordinarily branuy, before being botâ€" tled, is aged by keeping for the requisâ€" ite length of time in small oaken casks, frim which it absorbs certain ethers and essential oils contained in the wood and necesary to its perfection, By the methâ€" Tub, Pail, Wash Basin or Mik Pan Emadrmmmmmmemmemmmememe _ ". + and CHEERFUL SOAPS can get their TOILET SOAPS You will find they give you satieâ€" - faction every time. THERE ISs NO SUBSTITUTE Insist on being supplied with EDDy‘s every time ;‘;"t'}(]’ln' ;et.:ne dollar, we will mail you ;h';'m;;-‘-:i: €EO W lormo‘: Address, Canada First Publishing Co, ‘Room 19, 43 Scott Streetâ€"â€"TORONTA 3 Soap Coupons you can Special Privilege an Evil To Secure Subscriptions on a Commission Basis. No one but a LIVE Agent need apply. E. B. EDDY‘S mshbeametbeymbewfardu & get something you need and use l ds t E. now in its second ear, to CANADIAN SUBJECT3 (Oswego ‘Times.) Private and reputable advices received in Washington from Cuba point toward a greatly increased necessity of intervention by this Government. The significant feature is the situation is that the Palma administration eanot secure the volunteers for the army, even by the offer of $2 per day, about double Tha Sinfleiinee ennebanica o . the you this morning?" "Man, I‘m fine!" said Saunders. "Ho ware the others, nurset" "Thevy‘re all dead!" happened to be an Aberdonian who had fo{l’owed the country motto, "Haud Booth." Eaunders found in the doctor a great sympathiser, but his recovery was slow business, "Man, doctor," said Saunâ€" dere, one day, "if I could hear a bit skirl 0‘ the bagpipes, I‘d be a‘ richt." The doctor had a set of pipes and that evenâ€" ing the pibroch was heard near the hosâ€" pital. Next morning the doctor found Haunders trying to persuade the head nurse that he was fit for déischarge. "Well, Saunders," he asked, "how are How It Worked. _ Saunders, a BHceot, was in an hospital, a very sick man,. Th ’one of the students at the University of Maryland, and he being so kind as to let me use it for a very bad sprain, which I obtained in training for foot races, and to say that it helped me would be putâ€" ting it very mildly, and I therefore ask if you would let me know of one of your agents that is closest to Baltimore so that I may obtain some of it. Thanking you in advance I remain,. Yours truly, W. C. MeCUEANX. 14 Stl Paul street, Care Oliver Typewriter COo, P. 8.â€"Kindly answer at onee. MINARD‘S LINIMENT in the hands of Baltimore, Md., Nov,. 11, 19903. Minard‘s Liniment Co., Limited, _ Nire,â€"I came across a bottle of your man asked him in the church: "Wut thou have this woman to be thy wedded wife?" the bridegroom anewered in a very solemm tone: "I renounce them all." The astonished minister said: "I think you are a fool," to which he replied: His Response, An ignorant fellow who was about to get married resoived to make himmelf perfect in the responses of the marmage wervice; but by mistake he committed "All this I steadfastly believe." to memory the office of baptism tor those of riper years; so when the olergyâ€" Bunlight Soap is better than other seape, but is best when used in the Sunlight waw. Buy Sunlight Boap «nd follow ways be used for children testiing. it sooth»s the child, soothes the gums, curas wiws cotie and is the best remedy for Dim > 15 for 10c; 50 for bc; 100 for B0c; all difâ€" ferent; 500 for $ essorted; 1,000 envelopes 50c and 60¢c; 1,00 foreign stamps 25¢. W, R. Adams, 401 Yonge stre«t, Toronto, Ont. ISSUE NO. 40, 1906 PICTURE POST CARDS Mre. Winsiow‘s Soothing tyrup sbould alâ€" ordgnary unskilled labor your name in now for one year‘s the magazine FREE for the balâ€" Invention the Box 4. Hamilton. Oanea. Magic Word. W hon the non en te: arose was «€onve leade: came “!‘1- 81 Wood pub Love €lam as the .c Insuranc Wa s D CAUSET Defau t] t m W t 1t H M When M men prod #stre« shots ria wit h W tra Desp M BFT driud Nal ati sand Dete New and pres ntion H t teys M on l

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