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  • LEFT PAGE Y, May 16, 1902 --- COASTING TRADE. The law of Canada with respect to the coasting trade, is to be amended. Hitherto any vessel of British register could obtain a license to trade between Canadian ports. This will no longer be the case. In future a foreign built British ship desiring to engage in the strictly Canadian trade will be required to be entered in the Department of Cus- toms and pay a duty of 25 per cent. This will stop a practice of which there has been great complaint on the Atlantic coast. Vessels are built in the United States and taken to Newfoundland, where the obtain a British register, and are then at liberty to do business in Canada. Vessel men naturally complain of this practice, and the government, in a belated way is doing its duty by put- ting a stop to it. --- A SEA MONSTER. Biggest ship in the World to be Chris- tened This Month. Berlin, Aug. 5.--Emperor William will attend the launching of the North Ger- man Lloyd steamer Kaiser Wilhelm II., at the Vulcan ship yard at Stettin, on August 12. The daughter of Dr. H. Wirgand, the director general of the line will christen the ship, which will be the largest and is designed to be the fastest in the world. Her length is to be 707 feet, her beam 71 1/4 feet, her depth 39 feet, and her draught 29 feet. She is to be of 39,000 horse power, 19,500 tons displacement, and will accommodate 1,- 000 cabin passengers. --- SPANKER, JIGGER, DRIVER AND PUSHER A seven-masted schooner was launched the other day in Massachusetts, the largest sailing vessel afloat. When ships were pro- vided with a maximum of three "sticks," called the fore, main and mizzen, these termsc were familiar to all. But when others were stepped new titles had to be devised for them. First came the "spank- er," next the "jigger," next the "driver," and the seventh mast on this latest craft is called the "pusher." These titles smack suggestively of some of the names bestow- ed on golf clubs. Just what verbal coinage will follow a further amplication of the schooner's rigging must be left to the im- agination. -- Washington Star. --- TELEPHONE DECISION In Berlin a legal decision was recently rendered which is of interest to every business man in every country who uses a telephone. A merchant one day sent an order by telephone to a business firm, and as the order was not carried out to his satisfac- tion he sued for damages, claiming that the person at the other end of the tele- phone to whom he had given his order was responsible for the loss. The Court, however, decided against him, and refused to award any damages, on the ground that, as a rule, the person who goes first to a telephone and asks to be put in connection with another person must bear the consequences of any loss which may be the result of such a conversation. The Court admitted that the person to whom an order might be sent in this way might not catch all the words, or might fail to understand their full im- port, but insisted that it would be con- trary to all the principles of law to hold him responsible on that account. --- Diphtheria. Dr. Gauthier of St. Paul, Minn., tells in the Chicago Medi- cal Review of his success in an epidemic of diphtheria by the use of iodine. He has treated 200 cases with but two deaths, while before adopting this methond he lost one third of all his cases. The treatment is as follows: The patient is ordered tincture iodine in ten to twelve drop doses every hour, well diluted with water, so long as the fever lasts subsequently reducing to ten drops every two, and finally every three hours. Local applications are made use of at the same time. These latter should be made by the physician at least twice a day. For internal use the decolorized tincture is used. Bread and starchy articles of diet are used in abundance. --- A CURE FOR DIPHTHERIA. -- We have just received a receipt for the cure of diphtheria from a physician, who says that, out of one thousand nine hundred cases in which it has been used, not a single patient has been lost. The treat- ment consists in thoroughly swabbing the back of the mouth and throat with a wash made thus: Of table salt two drachms; black pepper, golden seal, nitrate of potash, alum, one drachm each. Mix and pulverize, put into a teacup half full of water, stir well and then fill up with good vinegar. Use every half-hour, one, two, and four hours, as recovery progresses. The patient may swallow a little each time. Apply one ounce each of spirits of turpentine, sweet oil and aqua ammonia, mixed, every hour to the whole of the throat, and to the breast bone every four hours, keeping flannel on the parts. -- N. Y. Tribune. --- [sideways] The partaking of a slice of pineapple after a meal, says the Lancet, is quite in accord- ance with physiological imdications, since, though it may not be generally known, fresh pineapple juice contains a remark- ably active digestive principle similar to pepsin. This principle has been termed "bromelin" and so powerful is its action upon proteids that it will digest as much as 1,000 times its weight within a few hours. Pineapple, it may be added, con- tains much indigestible matter of the nature of woody fibre, but it is quite pos- sible that the decidedly digestive properties of the juice compensate for this fact. --- An easy polish for the daily rubbing of the dining table is an emultion made from two parts of table oil to one part of vine- gar. This applied with a soft cloth or flan- nel and rubbed afterward with a dry one, will be found effisient in removing all or- dinary stains. --- BENZOATE OF SODA FOR DIPHTHERIA. -- Prof. Klebs, of Prague announces that the benzoate of soda is the best antiseptic in all infectious diseases. It acts, as the experiments of the author show, very powerfully. It is claimed that a daily dose of from 30 to 50 grammes to a full-grown man will render the poison of diph- theria inoperative. The benzoate is prepared by dissolving crystallized benzoic acid in water, neutralizing at a slight heat with a solution of caustic soda, drying, and then allowing the sollution to crystalize over sulphuric acid under a bell glass. Large doses do not appear to be absolutely necessary. Good results may be ob- tained by the daily administration of about 12 grammes. --- A Cure for Sciatica. A cure for neuralgia and sciatica--and as I am told, an unfailing one-- is too val- uable not to be recorded. An English officer, who served with distinction in the war with Napoleon, was once laid up in a small village in France with a severe attack of sciatica. It so happened that at that time a tin- man was being employed in the house where he lodged, and that this tinman, having been himself a soldier, took an interest in the officer's case, and gave him the cure which, in this instance succeeded immediately and forever, and which I am about to set down. It is at any rate so simple as to be worth a trial. Take a moderate-sized potato, rather large than small, and boil in one quart of water. Foment the part affected with the water in which the potato has been boiled as hot as it can be borne at night before going to bed; then crush the po- tato and put it on the affected part as a poultice. Wear this all night and in the morning heat the water, which should have been preserve, over again, and again foment the part with it as hot as can be borne. This treatment must be persevered with for several days. It oc- casionally requires to be continued for as much as two or three weeks, but in the shorter or longer time it has never yet failed to be successful. -- Vanity Fair. --- VICTORIA DAILY COLONIST, THURSDAY JANUARY 1 1903 RIGHT PAGE [handwritten text partly obscured by tipped in article, full transcription in next image] [image, subtitled] William Bouguereau in his studio. The Art of the Age. The Signs of the Zodiac--William Bouguereau. The Signs of the Zodiac. The design of the front cover of this issue is a pictorial re- presentation of Capricorn (the Goat), the sign of the zodiac which corre- sponds to the month of January, and it is our intention for the remaining eleven months of the present year to reproduce upon the cover of Pearson's Magazine pictures em- blematic of the other zodiacal signs. All will be drawn by Mr. Abbey Altson, R.B.A., with whose charming work in black and white the readers of this magazine are already familiar. The zodiac, as is well known, is an imaginary zone in the heavens, divided into twelve parts, and within this zone lie the paths of the sun, moon, and principal planets. Until one hundred years ago the old method of reckoning positions with the aid of the twelve zodiacal signs was in every day use by astronobers, and at the time when these signs first played an important part in astronomical observation each division coin- cided in position with an important con- stellation, and was named after it. The complete list of constellations, and, therefore, of zodiacal signs, is as follows: Capricornus, the Goat; Aquarius, the Water Bearer; Pisces, the Fishes; Aries, the Ram; Taurus, the Bull; Gemini, the Twins; Cancer, the Crab; Leo, the Lion; Virgo, the Virgin; Libra, the Balance; Scorpio, the Scorpion; Sagittarius, the Archer. This conincidence in names between the zodiacal signs and the constellation would have been quite satisfactory if the path of the sun relative to the stars had never varied from year to year, but, owing to what is called, in astronomical language, the precession of the equinoxes, the tropical year is rather less than
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