Ontario Community Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 7 Jun 1923, p. 6

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"Because timber reglons were burn ga down by campors, seitiers, pros "A great part of the forest destrucâ€" tion on tie numerous watersheds drained by the Ottawa has been unâ€" necessary. The axe has not taken one tree to ten killed by fire. in very few eases of careful logging does the Operation seriously affect the storage eapacity of the region, but when fire comes and the soil is swept bare, the *raun od" amounts to a torrent in sprlng-{ time and but little water is a\ra\ilalne1 at the smasons when the turbines most | require #. ; er reliable, is the statement of .\l‘x;‘ Robson Black, manager of the Canaâ€" dtan Forestry Association, in an interâ€" That unemployed workmen are walkâ€" Ing the streets of Ottawa and Hull toâ€" €day because forest firea set by thourhtâ€" less citizens have made the water powers of the Chaudiere mills no longâ€" Some Job. Teacherâ€""Now, Charies, you may go through the Old Testament and find the story of the man who showed such wonderful patience." "C6. ons Partilament for auth make whatever purchases it th public Interests call for. Som Investments have not been pr but such large earnings as han from the Suez Canal and the P?rsian Oil Company more tha all the losses in other ventures ing, asks Pari ment, proceeding of Charlesâ€""That‘s some Job!" ernment prome« by buying stcock in it boys," said the old man, . " curious sight. I reckon you have believed it if you hadn‘ would you ?" "Probably not," agreed the "Well," said the old man, see it." * ~V~ FoOung surveyors Loulsizsna swamp spied first thought was a hoop second glance t ey 5 snakes, each with the . its mouth, were strenuo swallow each other. strengthen t which is nr @i The da‘s gr posed â€" which British Governm'ont Buys 5 Ime way in which the Brit Two y uts ian the and squ have con States a; and mos ably pr This is b Of recent years United States inâ€" vestment in Canada has made great strides in overtaking British, and a favor®ts form of such investment has been in the purchase of bonds. As re «ently noted, the year 1922 set up a new record for American bond investâ€" ment in Canada, the total of Canadian bond sales in the United States being over $261,000,000. This centering of intere= upon the se mrities of the Fedâ€" eral Government, provinces, municiâ€" palities and corporations on the part of , investors all over the United States has been one of the most notable deâ€" velopments of recent years in Cane dian financial circles, and the greater absorption exhibited each year by the Republic is the clearest proof of the inâ€" srensin« Imunm nB Piewe Mhaii l l c oeoass a n a r investment Canadian Po. Forest Fires and Unemploymenf LC And Thereforeâ€" hat ; mnancial circl ption exhibite blic is the clea ‘ng favor of ( projt Forcst Protection. Caradian Federal Government Bonds © old man, "a mighty 1 reckon you wouldn‘t It if you hadn‘t seen 1t )ably the most po;terlul n preventing forest fires. es private busine resources. ral danger t th be s who m it. The governâ€" enly with its tredâ€" t for authority to hases it thinks the for. Some of the t been profitable, ngs as have come l and the Angloâ€" f more than cover um ‘est need to remind ‘eir livelihood, in no nds upon their care ho go into the woods 1 sport should conâ€" honorary fireâ€"wardâ€" se who never enter much by helping to ce of public opinion nDrisc Buys Stock. 16 British goy. d the boys. man, "I didn‘t zers, the chief of yÂ¥ all forest fires n agency, thereâ€" pped by carefulâ€" s, and the greater l each year by the est proof of the inâ€" anadian securities rees sttperior ) limit t tates of the | minion. hey are ex ss is United States than ed by any quantity paganda." searching for nonâ€"cxist destroyed twenty years‘s wood for one Ottawa cor acts of legalized vandal more to send skilled w tal | waters of the Ottawa, some of the | chief local industries have been forced to buy part of their puip from Eastern Quebec at double the price at which they could manufacture the same arâ€" ticle, and Ottawa employees are thereâ€" fore out of a job. \ "A pulp and paper mill is Just the agent of the forest. To kill a forest by careless acts with fire is a body blow at the security of water powers and | the raw material on which the mill exists and pays wages. Every rorest; fire must be paid for and we see who : actually does pay the price when workâ€"‘ men are turned loose. Prnaemant rwe | pectors and others in vernâ€" t and He knows much hold his tongue. i How Do You Fee!? | â€" "Bully," said the steak. "Punk," said the firecracker. "Rotten" satd the apple. "Fit," said the tailor. "Corkâ€" in," said the bottle. "Fine," said the Judge. "First rate," sald the postmasâ€" ter. "Grate," said the coal. "Grand," said the piano. "Ripping," said the trousers. "All done up," said the shirt. ina |_ Indications of a continued rapid inâ€" crease in the number of big game ant. mals as a result of sanctuary condtâ€" tlions in Jasper National Park are conâ€" tained in recent reports from the superintendent. Guides grazing their packâ€"horses in the Buffalo Prairie reâ€" gion of the park are finding dificulty in securing suficient feed for their antâ€" mals owing to the exceptionally large numbers of elk, deer and caribou, grazâ€" ing in that section. As man as one bundred eik have beenr seen feeding there at one time, while sheep and goats are also reported numerous. Sprat and Wife. Jack Sprat could eat no fat, His wife could eat no lean But both could take a cheeri i states thau can be counteract; any quantity of immigration proâ€" n . ie Big Game Increase in Jasper Park, ; ne poppy spread her scarlet skirt, | _ The iris dropped her veil, The lilac donned hor purple plumes __And shimmied with the gale; The pink regalia rose displayed Her sprays of fragrant bloom, The little mignonetts uncorked Her vial of perfume. The valley lily strung her pearls, The bluebell filled her cup Of sapphire with the morning dew For thirsty bees to sup. "Hot weather‘s coming," said the fern "And though I‘m in the shade I‘ll need a breezo," and she unfurled Her fan of carven jade. "* notn could take a cheering dropâ€" And drain the glasses clean. «_ Many investors purchase such bonds« on the advice of their bankers or brokers. Others requiring personal satisfection and assurance have made it a point to visit Canada and investiâ€" gate conditions for themselves. It isi significant that many of these Xatter} are so impressed with all that they see and derive such assurance from thdrl Investigations that they thereafter inâ€"| sist on Canadian bonds and extend or | limit their investing field to the Doâ€"| there has been a determination â€" exâ€" tibited on the part of Canadian bond houses to see that matters are rectiâ€" fed,.and these minor defaults were adâ€" justed. The record behind municipal bonds is good. There is no long list of reâ€" pudiated debts such as one finds on the score of some Western and Southâ€" ern states. The same authority in disâ€" _cussing this phase of bond issue finds | a good deal of reason for commending | the record which municipalities . of | Carada have made when consideration | is given to the strain and stress | through which the Dominion had to’ pass as a partner in the war. It is pointed out that only a few small comâ€" munities of Western Canada had difâ€" fculties in meeting thoir bond obligaâ€" tions, and then only when crop trouâ€" bles have occurred. In these instances there has bean a Antarmbnakhnse mu Union. Despite the serious economic¢ upheaval of the war years and the post war adjuetment period, the proâ€" vinces have managed to maintain their record to keep true to debt obligations, and United States authorities comâ€" mend provincial bonds for the investâ€" ment of their countrymen. eeu vandallism will do e«killed workmen to the s in the Buffalo Prairie reâ€" : park are finding dificulty suflicient feed for their aniâ€" ; to the exceptionally large \elk, deer and caribou, grazâ€" section. As man as one k have beern seen feeding years suppiy of pulp. awa company. Such ‘aper mill is just the it. To kill a forest by h fire is a body blow of water powers and 1 on which the mill who knows when to The Fan. xistin Every forest we see who > when workâ€" Prosnectors th ali that they see surauce from their they thereafter inâ€" nds and extend or tho upper â€"Minna Irving minerals ce war. â€" It is few small comâ€" anada had difâ€" ir bond obligaâ€" hen crop trouâ€" these instances OTS IZ ETE ET 2CCREDIET ~] This signalized the commencement of commercial aeroplane construction in Canada, a relatively small beginning, which is, however, bound to develop with the diffused knowledge that Canaâ€" dians can procure their own domestiâ€" cally constructed machines, obviating the different tariffs, and one from which great developments are antict pated and are indeed assured. Even euch a beginning entails the extension of plant operations to the engagement of an additional two hundred persons or so, approximately oneâ€"third of whom | are skilled workers. l An Allâ€"Canadian Plane Soon. | A virtual specialization is being | made in the construction of what is | known as the "Viking" Amph’lbian‘? plane as being most excellently adapt-i ed to all the various uses to which a | plane is put in Canada. Its features | enable it to riseâ€"from or alight on land | ard water equally well, whilst a furâ€" |â€" ther development comprises the atâ€"|â€" tachment of skis, which permit of the nninterrupted use of the machine through the winter months. In its allâ€" | | Recently the Canadian Government Departmert _ of National â€" Defence placed an order with Canadian Vickers at Montreal for eight "Viking" Amphiâ€" bian planes, two of which were to be built in England and six in Canada. This signalized the commencement of The development of _ commercial aviation in Canada, the general use made of the plane by various governâ€" ment bodies as well as large private corporations, and the fact that the machine of the air is peculfarly adaptâ€" ed to Canadian conditions of wide spaces, great distances and unpeopled wastes, made it inevitable that sooner or later the Dominion enter itself into ;‘ the construction of its own gir maâ€" chines. IHitherto the aeroplanes used _ throughout Canada have roughly origâ€" | Inated almost equally in the Unltedt States and the British Isles, but now | Canada is to have her own plane, conâ€"| structed on Canadian soil, utlllzlng;‘ Canadian labor and built for the greatâ€"| er part from Canadian materials. | Use of Aircraft in Canada Exâ€" tending Rapidly as Value is | Proved in Many Directions. â€" PEPARTMENT OF DE FENCE ORDERS EIGHT. | BUILDING ARPLANES CAâ€"woallIndgton BETSY AND 1 arE Going J\'M--s.-u..-v, * C3 t N THE DOMNION «â€"AND THE WORST IS YET TO COME adian materials. anadian Government SUHMIRIEL af wins.. [ The Almighty, who gave the dog to oneâ€"third of whom | be the companion of our pleasures and our toils, hath invested him with a naâ€" Plane Soon. 'ture noble and incapable of deceit. He ization is being | forgets neither friend nor foe, rememâ€" iction of what is | bers with accuracy both benefit and inâ€" king" Amphibian | Jury. He hath a share of man‘s intelâ€" excellently adapt-; ligence, but no share of man‘s false nooe tn whink 01 hama hy = SS TO KiLL ANOTHER BEAR. â€"From the Detroit News Avoid the pleas;xre that holds the penalty of future pain. [,___f CVA I4ay DINDE an aAseassin‘ to slay a man, or a witness to take away his life by a false accusation, but you cannot make a dog tear his benefactor. â€"Sir Walter Scott. °* lNeels, and now the one quallt} which was missing, a Canadianâ€"built aeroplane, is to be supplied. Weratien dirtuinic lt 4(90 201037 | whilst a large portion of the northern territory will be for all time the aeroâ€" plane‘s territory. | _ The use of aircraft in Canada is exâ€" tending rapidly. Governments have proved their value in forest patrol, in fire fighting, in geological surveys, and a hundred other usos, Pulp and paper companies are every day discovering new values in their services. _ The country possesses an army of trained; experts to take charge of additions to her fleets, and now the one quality , which was missing "a Asus prerle .o e | fCund purposes it is most admirably ‘suvited to Canada‘s varied topographiâ€" | cal and climatie conditions, to stretchâ€" | es of prairie, lake and woodland, and | winter snows, ' At the presont time only the woods used in the construction are Canadian 'prm!ucts or the products of (‘.anadlan‘ labor, and It is found necessary to imâ€" port the metal used in building and the engines installed. Gradually, however, it is anticilpated that the necessity of importing metal parts will be eliminâ€"| ated, and that within a short time the complete construction, with the excep. tion of the engine, will be accomplishâ€" ed in Canada with Canadian products.‘ The use of a Canadianâ€"built engine is a | plan of the mors Aictant) Furdas z. ui round purposes it may bribe an â€"" CrCralt in Canada is ex. pidly. Governments have r value in forest patrol, in , in geological surveys, and JUNTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO The Dog. years to come, 1lt engine is a t future, and Oof a machine every respect When the air is moist enoug temperature of 63. degrees is sidered ideal for the human body. Only too oftem for happiness when its w are within ourselives. Two middleâ€"aged gentlemen paused ,on the bank of the pond to watch the : crowd of menry skaters circle round. "I‘d like to join them mighty well," said Mr. Rich to his companion. "I “haven't had a skate on my foot for more than twenty years, thoug5, and I expect I‘d look pretty silly," s "Well, I don‘t know," replied Mr. Little. _ "I haven‘t worn skates for: ”longer than that, but I believe I could | skate today just as well as I could [ when I was twenty years old." "Oh, come now," replied his friend. "You‘re an active enough man, but it‘s absurd to say that you could go out there and skate as well as you could when you were a boy!" "I think I could," persisted Mr. Lit tle mildly. . "I couldn‘t skate at all then, and I guess I could do quite as wall s alll es well now." "I am not sure," the Vboy re "Just a moment and I‘ll ask the ager of the fire department." A solemn looking man entered the Liverpool office, the employer stated. The boy asked him what he could do for him in the nature of insuranceâ€" fire, life, accident or automobile, "Can you insure the immortal soul?" the visitor asked gloomily. i _ < o "an % _ Here‘s An Office Boy With _ Bright Future. | Harry Brulaw, a 14â€"yearâ€"old Liverâ€" pool office boy, has a bright future ahead of bim, says a London despatch, He has been overwhelmed with offers of employment following his employâ€" er‘s report of him at an insurance conâ€" vention. 1 A. B. Luckhardt and J. B. Carter tested the effects of this gas as an anesthetic at the University of Chicago, finding that it renders human beings and aniâ€" mals _ unconscious pleasantly and causes no bad after effects of any kind so far as can be determined. ’ Florists‘ complaints that carnations ’curled up their petals and "went to sleep" when placed in some greenâ€" houses, led to the discovery of a new anesthetic. Investigating the drowsiâ€" ness of the flowers, it was discovered that it was caused by leaky fixtures permitting illuminating gas, which conâ€" tains 4 per cent. of ethylene, to escape. It was only recently, however, that Dr. A. B. Luckhardt and J. B. Carter tested the effects of this gas as an anesthetic ; Coh age ) eogciyls s & ! Fixing the Limit. & The Chorus Ladyâ€""Do your favor long engagements ?" The Screen Starâ€""It depends on circumstances. An engagement should last as long as the man‘s money holds out." Sleeping Flowers Give Clue ___ to New Anesthetic. ] The building will be 415 feet long ‘and 300 feet wide, with a floor space ‘ot 124,500 square feet, and in it, | through the medium of attractive disâ€" |plays and exhibits, visitors will have | an opportunity to learn in an engaging |and impressive way something of the fgx'cut natural resources of Canada, the |products of the soil, and the wide lrange of manufactured articles made | | within the Dominion, The resources |and products of each of the nine proâ€" ;vinces and the two territories will be | | displayed. The Canadian exhibit is to | | be financed, controlled and dAirantaA ne | mer, and all the details connected with | this great enterprise will be completed i when the Exhibition is opened to the I‘publ!c on April 20, 1924. He Had Held His Own _ The plans for Canada‘s participation in the British Empire Exhibition, to be held in London, England, from April 20 to October 31, 1924, are practically completed. The Dominion Governâ€" ment will erect its own buildingâ€"an imposing structure in Neoâ€"Grec archiâ€" tectureâ€"on a commanding site in Wembly Park, where the Exhibition is to be held. Work on the erection of‘ the building is to commence this sumâ€" Parents skould do some preâ€" liminary work before engaging a music teacher for the child. The first step of preparation should be in babyhood when the mother sings her child to sleep. This first pouring melody into the ear of the child creates an early love for music. Later on the parent should play little tuneful comâ€" positions for the child, also pieces in march or dance form to impress time and rhythm. All children enjoy this very much. moist enough a Canada at the Empire Exhibition factured articles made| Metropolis of t rinion. The resources Every part ¢ each of the nine proâ€"| will be represe two territories will be ; hibition, which} Canadian exhibit is to | attended by mi trolled and directed by ] all parts of the | t the world wellâ€"springs boy replied manâ€" So many uses are being found for mica that what was formerly an indusâ€" try with a very laige proportion of waste, is now one in which the ma. terial is almost completely utilized, nenuacus.. d MefRabdrindti: :1 | Owing to its resistance ! mica is used for spectacles worn by workmen in Indust fiying chips or sparks end eyes, and in observing pr melting and fusing in furng _small pleces of mica, former are now used for various When ground fine in oil, mic valuable lubricant, especialiy ing or journal boxes on locor railway cars, Grcund mi mixed with a flux, is also us ing to wallâ€"paper and other s a Silvery effect. | _ The general run of mine mica is of a small size. A very small percentage produces shoets of 4 by 6 inch surface, while fully fAfty per cent. will cut to | 1 by 3 inch sheets only. l'-‘ortunately. [a process of cementing the small | sheets enables the building up of |larger surfaces. This product is known |as "micanite" or mica board" and is mostly used in the electrica} industry for insulation. Mica is largely used in | the manufacture of boiler and steam pipe covering, its insulating proporties exceeding by far that of any other | known substance, Comparative tests have demonstrated that the less of ; heat from bare pipes has been reduced ,, by 90 per cent. when the pipes were | enclosed in mica covering. | Owing to its resistance to shast | sege 008 S ; In Canada, mica occurs pretty genâ€" 'erally. The most productive areas are 's!tuated along the lower St. Lawrence below Quebec,» north of the Ottawa near Mattawa, and in the townships of ‘Burgess in Leeds county, Lanark in | Lanark county, and Loughbomugh in lantennc county, also in a few areas ;ln British Columbia., The production | of 1922 amounted to 8,543 tons and . ; was valued at $129,280, | | Difflculties of Mining. | _ Mica mining is attended with many ; difficulties. _ For successful exploitaâ€". tion it is essential that the miners be | experienced in the mining of the maâ€"| terial, and be familiar with the special | conditions and problems it presents, | Many good mica deposits have been ; abandoned on account of the lack of : experience of the operators. | India is the largest producer of mica, providing over fifty per cent. of the world‘s supply. Canada produces about 25 per cent., and the United States and other countries the remainâ€" der. Mica is one of the most useful of minerals, the produciion and distribuâ€" tion of which is little known, says the Natural Resources Intelligence Serâ€" vice of the Department of the Interior, Canada. Of the many varieties, only three are of commercial importance, and of these but two are available in any quantityâ€"muscovite, or white mica, and the phlogopite, an amber| mica. The latter is the most lmport-’ ant of the Canadian micas. I Heatâ€"resisting Qualitiecs Renâ€" der it Effective Insulator and Lubricant. CANABA‘S MICA MOST USEFUL OF itR ts | Metropolis of the Empire. Every part of the British Empire will be represented at this great exâ€" ; hibition, which} it.is expecied, will be Ifattended by millions of visitors from ONTARIO, QUEREC A BRITISH COLUMBIA Wembly Park has been chosen &s the site of the Exhibition on account | of its remarkable accessibility from all | parts of London. It is fifteen minutes‘ |ride by the "iube" from Trafalgar |Square, the most central point in the _the Dominion Government. The est!â€" wom 'mted cost is $1,000,000. ) On the same site as the Canadian l(}ovornment building will be built two , mss | additional buildings, to be built by the _ In point of size an Canadian National Railways and the ding cake made for t Canadian Pacific Railway, each with and his bride has bec a floor space of approximately 10,000 times, |feet. In these buildings Canada‘s two _ The largest wedding | great transportation organizations will figured emonge the pJ show the attractions and resources Of Queen Victoria at her the country served by their railway a duplicate, except i lines. Plans for all three buildings size, of the cake which have been approved by both the Doâ€" ding breakfast when minion Government and the officlal married to the Prince architects for the Exhibition. When ; The Jubllee cake, completed these structures will be so| nearly two hundredwe prominently located as to be readily feet in height. It cost seen from any part of the spacious decorated with real f grounds set apart for the Exhibition. |flarrs Althonch â€" ma» "PDPTYINE processes of ing in furnaces, The mica, formerly wasted, spectacles or gné;les n in Industries where sparke endangeor the pecialiy for shaft. )n locomotiyes or nd mica, when also used in giyâ€" world 10us purposes, , mica forms a su bstanicel to shock " Eoggles es where i 0t Admin1,,. _ _V _ 19°AL physician "dld.not administer the antitoxin. With. in a couple of days the hospital dis 'conred the mistake in the lelogram and again communicated with the dog [tor, but the cbid had meantime died. | _A mistake in a telegram cost the | of a threeâ€"yearâ€"ol4 cild in Greenw | London, a few days AEO. _ The 1 | doetor suspected the little one | diphtheria, and sent it to the hosy ] for detailed examination. The hosy authorities tel: graphed : "Child pro positive"â€" that is to say, showed . dence of diphtheria â€"but when telegram reached the doctor it 7. "negative." uinCc 6 : PoBIUYO‘â€"â€" that is to say, showe dence of diphtheria ~but whe telegram reacho: the doctor it "negative." Con«quently. the local phys did, not administer the antitoxin, : in a couple of days the hosnita Aawaus d ul s I wk i4 15 -:l | _A British publication describes an | invention by which flies, rain, snow and cold air can be kept from entering an open doorway, A motor fan is in. stalled under a grill in front of the | 4oor. The fan sucks the air downward 1l’rom the upper part of the doorway and forces it through a duet to a hood at the top of the entrance, where it | is dischargeq downward and completas the cycle, A quarterâ€"horseâ€"power moâ€" tor driving a sixteenâ€"inch fan provides a&a current of air that is unnoticed hy persons standing in the doorway, but that is most effective in keeping out Insects and cold air. aA ®hop in which the invention was tried reports that the door‘s standing open a1 the time so attracted people | that trade inâ€" creased by one third, _ oo 4 O "O2°_%, LAE CAKe aftreey. ed nearly twenty thousang people to the shop in which It was on view in Edinburgh, a squad of police being enâ€" gaged to keep the crowd movring. THD "LCARCC CewWos made for a Royal w« dding figured at the marriage of the Duke of A‘bany, A fountain playing in a sugrar eupola was the most corsperous feature King George‘s wedding cake attract. ed nearly twenty thousand narnie 4. _ _One of the United States‘ most son. | sational wedding cakes was that made for a member of the Morgan family, It consisted of a large | sugar egg, | adorned with ribbons and huge bunchâ€" 'el of smilax. . Halfway through the | breakfast the ©8E& split in two, reveal. [ ing the lithe form of a beautiful dancer, _A friend of the bride. | Studded With Diamonds. _ Even more startling was the cake which adorned the table at a wedding breakfast in Chicago. ‘The lowest tiep rested in a glass fishâ€"pond. The upper tlers were studded with diamonds ana other precious stones, the gift of the bride‘s father, Surmounting the cake was the model of a temple, from which, when the bride started to cut the cake, strains of a wedding march burst forth, ‘f At a wedding breakfast in Paris a sensation was cansed by the sudden @appearanse from the inside of the cake of a gorgeous peocock, which strutted up and down the table with its tail outâ€" spread. White doves which, after beâ€" ing released from inside the cake, enâ€" circled the guests, heads and then flew out of the windows were a feature of another wedding breakfast in the French capital. _ _ Jfor his wedding some yeans Rearâ€"Admiral A. H. Markham, the | ous Arctic explorer, designed a « surmounted by a sugar model of ship, HM.S. Alert, caught in an berg, while the various tiers were corated with models of UHfebuore, chore, ship‘s boats, lifebelts, and 0: appropriate items. | _ The wedding cake made ous architect consisted 0 tionery copy of his greatc wellâ€"known art gallery; w brated musician‘s design f; ding cake took the form « piano, successfully reprodue and other ingrodients, o keys, which scunded wheon t take in Telegram Costs Life of a Child. Another remarkable for the wedding of a ; PFoxhounds. It was de ver huntirg trophies while around the base sugar representation with hounds in ful ery A titled woman gave a t London firm an order for a cal« ing 120b. and standing 12ft, in its three tiers being adorne1 w toons of real ostrich feathers cake cost $1,750, A Doorless Doorway. | _The Jubllee cake, which wei | nearly two hundredwe‘icht, was 5; ‘feet in height. It cost £2,500, an: decorated with real flowers anj \|ARags. Althouch many years } elapsed since it was made, this , nificent example of the confect!~> @art has never been equalled. } Adorned With Ostrich Feathors Incidentaily, the smallest wo; cake was made m few years |a*~; the order of an eccontric peo; whose only son was about to be » ried. It was three inches hich. : weighed a quarter of a pouniâ€"n p fect wedding cake in miniature, . ing one hundred dollare. a duplicate, except in the matte» size, of the cake which graced the w ding breakfast when the Quoon ; married to the Prince Consort. The largest wedding cake ever » nguredhqmong the presents give; In point of size and cost, the wa« ding cake made for the Duse of y.,, and his bride has been eclipsed m»;, times. of the ; ; 3_ _ "* YempI®e, from which, bride started to cut the cake, f a wedding march burst ers being adorned eal ostrich feathe 1,750. remarkable cake v lding of a notoi : It was decorated § trophies in n d the base was ar seniation of a that is unnoticed hy in the doorway, but ctive in keeping out ir. _ A ®hop in which 8 tried reports that 8 openr all the time ople â€" that trade inâ€" most e!abomte cakes ild in Greenwich, AEO. _ The local to the hm:?!;; n The hospitaj * "CbIHE proves , showed evl: when the aibMle®. It was for a had life CTs W de #&0P60 by #C () M #1¢ COPE WITH DJ STORAGE be s traordinar th m t t1 Ast Two Crop Se Difficult Ones fo Grain Term

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