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The Herald, 1913-11-21, Page 7400m:owe rf ..a YLIMITED moraREAL 11011,00.10 :i rENG ANS WEIRD DISCOVERY MAD- ELETONS FOUND ON AN ABANDONED SHIP. Ill-fated Sailing Ship Wap Sighted In . a RA'oky Cave.• A weird story of the 'sea has been iefiy cabled from New Zealand. is the story of the finding of the fling ship' Marlborough with enty skeletons on beard. The Marlborough a Glasgow- ned barque, belonging to essrs. Leslie and Company, •sailed. em Lyttelton, New Zealand, with veral passengers and a crew of irty-three, under the command of apt. Hird, in January, 1890. She as homeward bound by the Cape orn route, and was .spoken in mid- ean in the Southern Pacific, after hich no other word of her was ver heard. In April of that year she was osted a,s m1ssing, and later on :was iven up as having been lost around e Horn, where the bones of many good ship and many a hundred ;amen lie. A Government cruiser arched the rocky and tortuous. f i casts of Patagonia, but no trace her was found. The Maribor- gh became just another of the ousand mysteries of the sea. A day or two ago another British fling ship arrived in Lyttelton ith the story that she had found e Marlborough and the skeletons twenty of her crew in one of the ky coves near Punta Arenas andy Point) in the Magellan ait. The Captain's Story. I. not ber 'era' clay agar smea its will pr alouldy. CITCHEN. RIGHT uf�ge 3 DUST RUST The captain is quoted as telling e story in the following words: "We were off the rocky coves ear Punta Arenas, keeping near ie land for. shelter. The coves are eep and silent, the sailing difficult aid dangerous. "We rounded a point into a deep left COTO. Before us, a mile or ore across the water, stood .a. sail- g vessel with the barest shreds of a•nvas fluttering in the breeze. "We signalled and hove to. No nswer came. We searched the stranger' with our glasses. Not a oul could we zee, not a movement f any sort. ."Masts and .yaards were . picked. ut in green—the green of decay. . "At last we came up. -There was to sign of life on board. After an nterval our first mate, with a mem- er of the crew, boarded her. The fight that met their gaze was thrill - ng. "Below the wheel lay the skele- on of a man. Treading warily on ie rotten deck, which cracked and aroke in plates as they walked, they encountered three skeletons in the atcl'lway. "In the messroom were the re- tains of ten .bodies, and six were ound, one alone, possibly that of he captain, on the bridge. "There was an uncanny stillness round and a dank smell of mould which made the flesh creep. A few !emnants of books were discovered n the captain's cabin and a rusty utlass. "Nothing more weird in the his- ry of the sea can ever have been een. The first mate examined the till faint letters on the bows, and fter much trouble read, 'li'Iarlbor- ough, Glasgow.' " Hundreds oi' Ships Pass There. Punta Arenas is a pretty large place as South American towns go. It has a population of several thou- sands, and, of course, the Magellan Strait is a great shipway traversed by hundreds of ships yearly, which take this way to avoid doubling the Horn with its furious. gales. The whole of the Magellan Strait, from, Cape Virgas, to Cape Pillar, is familiar td thousands of seamen, and, indented' and rockbound though it is, it eeems incredible that a ship could be concealed for nearly air quarter of acentury in that part "near" a place like Punta Aretas. Had the discovery been made among the desolate and multitudi- nous isles of the Cockburn Chan- nel or down about Cook Bay or Wee Cape Horn,—perhaps the ildest coasts in the . world—it would 'have been more credible. Indeed, shortly after the chip was lost there was a. report that the crew of a, passing ship .saw seamen signalling from an, island down that way which is 300 or .400 miles from PuArenas. Ulla _ Gabibieton — "Edison declares that four hours :sleep per night is enough for any man." Kidder -- "By Jove ! That is exactly what my baby thinks t" Vag m^'+aa.e.e 4 small ;orner nt it. larket, made. No tor in dished D1ated, railed SC'L)teV,9l' 3onton :atoon Sore Chest Cured in One Night Broke Up a Heavy Cold, Relieved Pain in the Side, Stopped an Irritating Cough. • "Anyone that goes through all that I suffered last winter will appreciate the value of a remedy that .cures like Nerviline cured me. These are the opening words of the solemn declar- ation of E. P. Von Hayden, the well- known violinist, "My work kept me out late at night, and playing in cold, drafty places brought on a severe cold that settled on my chest. I had a harsh, racking cough and severe pains darted through my sides and settled in my shoulders. I used • different lini-• menta, but none broke up my cold .till =I' used Nervi - line. I rubbed it on my neck, chest, and shoulders, nv'rning and night, and all the pain disappeared. Realizing that such a heavy cold had run down my system, I took Ferrozono at meals, and was completely built up and strengthened. Since using Nerviline I have no more colds or pleurisy, and enjoy perfect health." It's because Nerviline contains the purest and most healing medicinal principles, because it has the power of sinking through the pores to the kernel of the pain—these are the rea- sons why it breaks up colds, cures lumbago, stiffness, neuralgia, sciatica, and rheumatism. Refuse any substi- tute your dealer may suggest—insist on Nerviline only. Large family size bottles, 50c.; trial si_ a, 25c.; all deal- ers, or The Catarrhozone Co., Buffalo, N.Y., and Kingston, Ont. TITLED WOMEN OWN SHOPS. Lady Saokvillo's Venture in Lamp Shade Business. Lady Sackville, the heroine of a recent famous lawsuit, is one of the several leaders in the world of the "upper ten" in London who have taken to running stores. Lady Sackville is interested itt lamp shade business, Whatever the reason may be, it is generally known that many of the scions of the aristocracy in Eng- land are at the present time the principal backers of Vaariours bust nesses. The general opinion here is that no harm' would be ,done if these amateii.r storekeepers would ob- serve •the strict .rule of the retail game, but they do not, They 'r fish their goods upon peo- ple whether they want them or not, making the question of patronage personal. They write "touching" letters. They use their titles as influences.. A man well-known in London's smartest set complains :—"It is a particular bore when one goes to a store run by 'real ladies' to find oneself taken in hand not by an understudy in the shape of an as- sistant, but by the grande dame who owns the establishment, and to be told what is the proper thing to buy, without any regard to in- dividual tastes or idiosyncrasies. One lady makes it a ,practice to ad- vance upon the timid male pur- chaser, like a ship in full sail, with the perfectly superfluous informa- tion; '1 am Lady 'So -and -So.' He at once feels himself cornered, pays a large sum in order to get clear of tthe whole thing, and makes a dash for freedem. "There are even more question- able tactics employed. Thus :— Ladies have taken, wither just be- fore Christmas, or on hearing of a coming marriage, to write round to thefriends of some popular man or woman suggesting that at the es- tablishm,ent from which the letter is penned can be purchased exactly the gift that is suitable. In the case of an engaged couple some trouble is taken to ascertain their tastes; these are mentioned. in the touting letter, whieh is usually writ- ten in a free and gasy conversa- tional style." He adds that society leaders in London (some with handles to NE RVILINE CURES CH EST COLDS ED. 7. ISSUE 47—'13. r their naanes) are ready to sum among other things Wines, garden seats, eigarett, sun dials, dinner -table needs, hoti furniture, millinery, lame shade paper for .ser'vant's attics,.. white- wash for the baseiuent, "Once upon a time," he says "an earl's sou kept ,e cash ,bztii;� cher store!' o GOT BALO IN PLACES Itchy. When Brushed, pan- drufrA3j Over. Nair Came Out in Great. Bunches.' Cuticura Soap alnd Cuticura Ointment Cured ,dead in Three Weeks, 16 Hallam St., Toronto, Ont,— "About 'two years ago the dandreif began. My head ft�+e works and scans formed on 15 which madoit baidin places. It was very itchy and gave me a tendency to scratch it which Made it worse. I always had to wear ray hat whether in the house at work or out. When- ever I brushed my hair it sent the dandruff all over. The haircame out in great bunches until I was nearly bald and when it was at its worst it came out roots end all. al tried—which made it worse than be. fore. I tried several things after that but they were no good. After nine months tiko ilia I had hardly any hair left when one day I. happened to see tho advertisement of Cuticura Soap and Ointment in the paper. I.straightway sent for a sample. After first washing with the Cuticura Soap I applied some Cuticura Ointment and I could feel a great relter. After finishing the sample I went and got a cake of Cuticura Soap and a box of'Calawa Ointment. In throe. weeks <:;hey had cured my head." (Signed) B. Horn, May 16, 1913. Cuticura Soap and Ointment do so mach for poor complexions, red, rough hands, and dry, thin and falling hair, and cost so little, that it is almost criminal not to use them. A single set is often sufficient, Sold every - Where. For liberal fee sample of each, with 32-p, book, send post -card to Potter Drug ,fit Chem. Corp., Dept. D. Boston, Tr, c A Mrs. Bessie Wakefield. Woman sentenced to be hanged at Weathersfield, Conn., with - James Plew, far the murder of her husband. No woman has , been hanged in that State since 1876. Now Treatment Now. Advocated For Bronjiit s 1s Having Wonderful Success, at.a is Making Most Remarkable Cures. For bronchitis a different form of treatment is now advocated. It con- sists of a scientifically devised vapor. that penetrates to the uttermost re- cesses of the lungs and bronchial tubes. Every'spot that is sore, every surface that is irritated fa at once bathed with soothing balsams_ and healing essences that make chronic. bronchitis au' impossibility. ' This treatment nos so itniversaliy employed to bronchitis, throat trou- bles,. colds, etc:, is called te6.1AItitH.1:- O2 QNh1 It nets just • as far ot,. ise!. Pixie Wood's acts, as a healing antisep- tic' remedy ntisep-tic:'remedy for all diseases- of the breatliing organs. Just think of it—a remedy that can bo carried wit.i the very air yen breathe to the seat of bronchial or ca- tarrhal inflammation. .A. remedy pow- erful enough to kill germ life and yet so healing that disease flees before it. Catarrhozone is truly a wonderful re- medy. In many lands it has wort its way, and is affording grand results to sufferers from colds, catarrh, throat weakness, asthma and bronchitis. There is no sufferer from a . grippy cold or any winter ill, that won't find a cure in Catarrhozone, which. is em- ployed by physicians, ministers, law- yers and public men throughout many foreign lands. Large size lasts two months and costs $1.00 and is guaran- teed; small size 50c., sample size 25c., all storekeepers and druggists, or The Catarrhozone Co., Buffalo, N.Y., and Kingston, Canada. A "LIGHTNING CALCULATOR." Patient in Asylum Cannot Read or Write—Solves Mental Problems. A doctor in an asylum at Nantes has discovered among his patients a "lightning calculator," who, al- though he can scarcely read and cannot write, solves mental arith- metic problems involving large numbers. Asked "How many seconds ere there in 39 years, 3 months, and 12 hours?" he gave the correct answer in 32 seconds. Explaining how he calculated the number of seconds in 30 years, he said : "I know by heart that there are. 31,536,,000 seconds in a year. I mul- tiply 30,000,000 by 30. That gives me 900,000,000. Then I multiply 1,- 500,000 by 30 and get 45,000,000; 30,- 000 by 30, which gives 900,000; and 6,000 by 30, giving 180,000. 1 add all these products and get 046,080,- 000 seconds in 30 years." This an- swer was given in 14 seconds. Better half a. loaf than .a broken down constitution due to overwork. Robert was about to have another birthday. In the past the fttn-niak- ing had, always been so hard and prolonged that it left him fatigued at night. So this ,year, before he went to bed the night' before, when he had said bis prayers, he began over again. His mother, surprised, asked him: "Why are you saying your prayers twice, Robert's' "Oh," replied Robert, "to-merro night I shall be too tired to sa thew as all!" The First. "Did you ever really love any girl before you met me 1" asked the beautiful one. "No," replied the titled foreign- er, "you're the first girl I have ever known who had money in her own right." Don't Have Rheumatism Get. GIN PILLS Now and be free of painall winter, Mr. Robert Wilson, of Hardfietd, N.B., says: "It affords me great pleasure to convey, not only to you but also, to all sufferers from Backache and silleuwatlsm, the great relief'I have obtained • from the use of. GIN PILLS. 1feel thankful to you. I recoxninend �PILLS to anyone suffering as 1 a box, s for $2.50. Sample free if• ME write National Drug and Chem ical Co. of Canada, Limited, -Toronto. IYI: Exe—"Ab, what a change tine little woman tan make in a man's life I" Mr. Wye—"Yes; and by George, what a heap of change she requires while doing it l" Minard's Liniment Cures colds, deo, Teacher --"If you had eight pen- nies and Billy had four, and you took his . and put them to yours, What would that make J" "Trou- ble." Minard's Liniment Cures Diphtheria. • Jones-"Canyou afford my daughter the luxugies to which she has been accustoaned 1" Suitor— "Not much longer. That's why I want to get married 1" Try Murine Eye Remedy 1f you • have Red, Weak, Watery Eyes or"Granulated Eyelids. Doesn't Smart -•-Soothes Eye Pain. Druggists Sell Murine Eye Remedy, Liquid, 25c50c. Murine Eye Salve in Aseptic Tubes, 25c, 50c. Eye Books Free by Mail. An bye Tome Good for Ail Urals 'hat Mood Caro StiUrisat Eye t5,ernedr Co,. Chicago Let the small boy make the noise o� the neighborhood and he cares not who does the work. Minard's Liniment Cures target to Cows. Fact and Fancy. If we'd look up more we'd see more sunshine, The rich Filipino's cigar is a foot long. A nlan'o got horse sense when he caan•say "nay." Mark Twain smoked 3,500 cigars a year.; Awfully simple girls are simply a lulls The face, to prevent wrinkles, should be wiped up—never down. CJ ha Italian government has a monopoly :of playing cards, whenee a revenue -,o£ $5,000,000. A Froman: can win a man's love ithoa`tt trying, bait alis can't keep hat way.: . razil has a tame house snake, giborja that kills rats. ulna:ion leads to peculation. all's best friend is a woman n. keep hila from malting a himself. lEST TEA nu *arm Only tt row Pounds and Aiwayti Sent to China's Royal Fancily. The best tea in all China, and therefore in all the world, grows on top of a small mountain in western Szeo'huan, called Ming Shan, and is cultivated by the priests of the Buddhist temple en its summit. Tra- dition says that a Chinese pilgrim brought the seeds from India cen- turies ago. There are only• a few pounds in each crop, and these have always gone as trilbute to Peking for the' use of the imperial house- hold. Who will get the precious tea now? Wil it be reserved for the family of the president of the republic, Or will it be scattered among those who are willing to pay a big price for such a luxury? . There is a saying in China, that to make a perfect cup of tea you must take .leaves from Ming Shan, and water from the Yangtze. No one supposed the actual turbid river -water to be meant, but no one could explain the proverb until De Rosthern, who wrote an inter- esting treatise on Chinese tea, solv- ed the problem, or thought 'he did. De Rosthern was once crossing the Yangtze near its mouth, at Chen -Kiang, when he saw some men in a boat dipping water into buck- ets. He inquired"why they did: that, and was told that at the bottom of the bay there was a spring, remem- bered since the time when the pre- sent river -bed was dry land, and that this spring -water was highly esteemed in cookery. Here, then, he concluded, he had found that special water of the Yangtze which, with Ming Shan leaves, made the best cup al tea in the world. A SAD TRAGEDY. It often happens—your sore corn is step- ped on. Why not use "Putnam's 'Corn Extractor." It cures in one day. Abso- lutely no pain with "Putnam's." Use no other, 25o. at all dealers. Either Bitten or Stung. An aged colored man was passing a fish store when he stopped to examine a huge turtle chained in the doorway as an advertisement. He had never .seen a, turtle be- fore and he prodded the strange creature. Suddenly he popped his finger into its mouth with a howl of pain. Alter the finger had stopped bleeding he gazed at it ruefully, then .eyed. the turtle apprehen- sively.. . "What's the matter, 'Rastus1" asked the fish dealer, . with a grin. "Nuffin', soh, nuffin'. Ale was jest wondering whether Ah had been bit or stung." 'Minard's Liniment Co., Limited. Gentlemen,—In July 1905 I was thrown from a road machine, injuring my hip and back badly and was obliged to use a crutch for 14 months. In Sept. 1506 Mr. Wm. Ontridge of Lachute urged me to try MINARD'S LINIMENT, whieh I did with tho most satiefantory results and today I am as wail as ever in my life. YOnre sinoereiy, his M.,I.TTHEW x BAINES. mark Between Girls. "He says he has never loved any girl but me." "Do you believe him?" "I am inclined to. His kisses are rather amateurish." Minard's Liniment Cures Distemper. His Sad Story. Tramp—Yes, lady, I loved a girl. She wouldn't 'hev me, and I be€'ame a wanderer. Woman—Poor chap 1 If she had married you all would have been well. Tramp—Oh, I dunno. Me friend in de road dere, is de feller wot got her ! REMEMBER! The ointment you put on your child's skin gets into the system just as surely as food the child eats. Don't let impure fats and mineral coloring natter (such as many of the cheap ointments contain) get into your child's blood! Zam- 13uk is purely herbal. No pois- onous coloring. Use it always. 50c. Bax at All Druggists and Stores. WITUTOMO , SAUCE .}a€NBtI MorrrREA5 Quality,flavour, and perfet cooking, combined. The ntaximutn of nourishment and palatability. Just heat — then serve minimum trouble encs CC,4t A Life Job. Caller—Snip & Co. have emlo ed me to collect the bill you ow them. Owens—You are to be congrat lated, sir, in securing a pereaane position. Liquid Sulphur is rapidly overcoming the old time pr judice of the doctors and profession nurses as a handy home remedy. LIQU SULPHUR is being used extensively i' many of the hospitals as a dieinfectani LIQUID SULPHUR is also a perfec anti•ecptic, and is used for cleansing cul and bruises, and as an aid for healiny. LIQUID SULPHUR taken according directions is an absolute cure for EC MIA, RHEUMATISM and kindred trout les. Price 50 Cents per bottle. For sal all druggiets, or remit direct to LIQUID SULPHUR, 158 Bay Street, Toronto. . _ Availability ill Prospect. "I fear I am not worthy of you.' "Never mind about that. Betwee:; mother and myself I imagine w can effect the necessary improve went." We imagine that a dumb barbe would be even more satisfactor; than a dumb waiter. ‘Jr., £-1L aeV e's ha d az Root Pills are just the right medicine for .tire children. When they are constipated —when their kidneys are out of order —when over -indulgence in some favorite food gives thein indigestion —Dr. Morse's Indian Root Pis will quickly and surely put them right. Purely vegetable, they neither sicken, weaken or gripe, like harsh purtives. Guard your children's health b� always keeping a box of Dr. Morse s Indian Root P>_Iis in the house, They 1< 1-Ttae!ta3 Rhes PrtaRairassIn EDUCATION. T7 LLIOTT'9 BUSINESS COLLEGE, Ti ib rento. Canada's Popular C•omme cial Schaal. Marruifieent Catalogue fre FARMS FOR SALT. 14. W. DAWSON, Ninety Colborne Stree! Toronto. YnU R'AN'T TO BUY OR SELL P Fruit, Stork, Grain, or Dairy yarn writs 11. W. D31'40011. Brampton, or 1 Colborne St., Taronte. 14, W. DAWSON, Colborne St., Taranto y9 i /h ACRES, MIDDLESEX COTTNTS iD soil mixed loam, 1 sera ttrnbeT 2 acres orchard, well watered. wire fence., 2 story brick house, ant-lrniidi-'re, we situated. € - e -to roe (inn !Trrket, mile;; to Fleetrie limb^w, Esau tcrntr Ann'y The Ret•tern Reil Estate lil'.ltango London, Ont. _~ ^ NEWSPAPER FORSALE. 190m TP..Y WV/517N'E'1'°n'W"I rM i Sale in rood Ontario tnn'n. Eae^llan opening l1i1, for man nnnr n Toronto. ZVilsa STAMPS A 4O COIH' ciTAMP COLLECTORS --HUNDRED blit ferent Foreign Stamps. Cataingal Album. only Seven Conte Marko Stam, Cain pr nv. Taranto. M$SCELLANI=CU' elANCEIL• TUMORS. LUNTPS, ETC internal and external. cured witl out /sin by our home treatment. Writ re before ton 1..e. Dr fl,1imen Medica re tee :t,,l 0"+ n %LT STONES, UIDNEY AND BLAC • der Stones, Kidney trrnhle. Gravel Lulhbagn and kindred eilme-ts pnsitivel cured with the new German roped "Sane,." price $1.50 A',rt},rr new rrmed for Diabetes.biellitus, and Pure cure, I "Ra net's An M.:Diabetes' Prire Beta fent drneeist' or direct The a'nnl Manufa tnrine Can -many of Canada Limite! T,,:,.-'tn,Q. bran HIGHEST PRICES FOR R aw Furs O 1,2:!? Wri O for List MC= W. 0. GOFFATT O';21LLIA, -- ON ARID Silver P,stahed azul Dark 64. - lteds Par sale. Ms"+ One Huniredpair M.nl: wait‘ •rbreeding . Graham Bras,l S ra'•hrny,0••t..