THROUGH Our EXCHANGES.
Having GO stops and 8000 pipes, the organ at Haarlem (North Holland) is one of the largest in Europe.
Seventy-eight per cent, of the population of England and Wales is to bo found living in towns.
If you are a plug smoker, try GOLDEN’ EAGLE PLUG. Aromatic, cool, sweet, and satisfactory. It can’t be beaten. Try a plug—you’ll like it. x
A debtor complained in the Shoreditch Caunty Court that he was considerably handicapped, as he had a wife to keep.
Accidents on railways in the United States during the first three months months of 1912 were responsible for tho deaths of 2383 persons.
The discriminating plug smoker buys GOLDEN EAGLE PLUG. Ar'omatic, sweet and cool. It is the best of all brands, fry a plug—you’ll like it. x
Polish women are renowned for the beauty of their hands and feet. They place fineness of the hands above all ether charms.
Uiss Bertha A. Hutton, of Cleveland, Ohio, has been a school teacher since 1858 without missing a day of school time.
Gifts of £2O from the landlord were <ont to each of 83 families who were rendered homeless by a fire on his property at Chicago.
Every plug smoker should trv GOLDEN EAGLE PLUG. It cuts‘easily, lias a delightful fragrance and aroma, is cool and sweet, and it won’t burn tho tongue. / x
It is a strange fact that Africans never sneeze, neither do their descendants if they are pureblooded, althoT •,gh domiciled in other parts of the world.
In Siam the number of rooms in a house, of windows or doors in a room. ,'ven of rungs on a ladder, must always he odd. All even numbers are mnsidered unlucky. The Ottoman Government have installed a telephone system in Jerusalem for their own use, says the American Consul. There are 10 stations. The man tvho likes to cut his own tobacco will find there’s nothing to e-nial fragrant GOLDEN EAGLE PLUG. Syeet, cool and delicious. Try it. x In round numbers there are 1,015,000, persons, employed in coal mines in the United Kingdom. During the year 1011 they extracted coal equal to a tunned sft, high, sft. wide, and 93,000 miles long. , A North Canterbury lady writes:— “As I have given Tonking’s Linseed Emulsion a.good trial I think it only right that you should know what good it has done for me, and also my little sister who used to suffer with croup, but fom the first dose she got relief and now, since she has had it a few limesj she is as well ds : can be.” 1 TonJritvg’s Linseed Emulsion Is 6d, 2s 6d, Is Cd, from chemists and stores. x
.The, romance of a fortune that was I made out of revenge is recalled byj the death, of Mr E. S. Welles, the inventor of a world-famous rat poison. When Mr Welles and the man with whom ho then worked were living in poverty, and had only a single loaf of broad between them and starvation, this last morsel of food was eaten by vats. Welles swore vengeance, the “Express” relates, and set about discovering a means to rid the world of rats. After numerous experiments, ho began the manufacture of “Rough on Rats” in an old barn in Jersey City, and in four years be rose to affluence.
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Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXXVI, Issue 5, 12 May 1913, Page 8
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557THROUGH Our EXCHANGES. Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXXVI, Issue 5, 12 May 1913, Page 8
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