The Herald, 1914-03-13, Page 7a
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'OS OF HOUSEBREAKERS' RASH COVEREO
CHEST AND BACK
tel C'1 STEAL ONLY ONETYPE
I.
OF ARTICLE.
luetexy Thieves- Form- a Class
Apart From AU the
• Others.
Teo' thousand 'cigars, all of ex-
tent braslds; were. discovered in
le '.house of a handsome, white -
aired, well-dressed criminal who is
own tp t e'Freach police as Pore
oel (Father Christmas.
Eluding himself certain to be sen
need, the thief proudly confessed
at Tie had lived for years by steal -
g cigars, and that during the last
'teen years he had stolen at least
250,000. All his clothes were full
f secret pockets, and there seems
le doubt but that his confession
as no' more than the truth.
The tendency nowadays in all
cadet and industries is toward
p•e.cialiiation, and criminals have
-allowed the example of honest
en.
There is a. burgler—,still at large,
y iihc way -who takes nothing but
Id ,silver. He has ransacked over
hirty houses iro the West End of
London, most of them in aristocra-
is districts such as Queen's Gate
and Grosvenor Gardens..
kit Expert on Silver.
One of these houses was that of
:the Spanish Ambassador. Here
piles; of. silver were found collected
on a table, yet the only thing that
eras - missing was a silver vase of
,great age, and worth many times
"ts weight as precious metal. The
man must hays a very considerable
'knowledge of • old silver and its
Marks.' He never makes a mistake,
lend the police say that he must be
:making at least a couple of thou -
..and pounds a year.
- At Surrey Quarter Sessions a man
was sentenced for stealing bicycles.
So many were found on hie premises
that a large furniture van was re-
quired to bring them to the court.
This thief seems to have been a very
clever mechanic, for handle -bars,
name -plates and pedals were alter-
ed all around, making identification
a very dif•Igoult matter.. So far as
known, lie stole .xtotlting, but baoy-
cies.
Iitdzn; Rubber= 11Eatseaese-
Itching and Burning. Pimples Spread.
Clothing Irritated. Used Cuticura
Soap and Cuticura Ointment.
Well in Three Weeks.
fligh River, Alta. —"My baby was a
sufferer from an itching and a burning on
chest and back. The trouble began with a
fine small rash and got 'quite
a size. The pimples spread
until his whole chest and back
Were covered. Some of there
festered and on some the toe
looked clear. Re was fretful
and cross and was always
rubbing. His clothing, ir-
ritated hem« Tho. trouble
caused itching, burning and
loss of sleep. Els chest and
back grew worse and worse;
they were a .mass of Itching
Pimples. The trouble had
lasted two or three Beeks and we tried
remedies but{they failed.. Cuticura Soap
and Ointment afforded relief in about ton
days. I washed the ereptlon- with hot
water and Cuticura Soap four times a day,
then used the Cutieura Ointment and in
three weeks he was well again. He owes
it to Cuticura Soap and Ointment."
(Signed) Mrs. Alice Wolford, Nov. 1, 1912.
For red, rough, chapped and bleeding
bands. itching, burning palms, and painful
finger -ends with shapeless nails, a one-night
Cuticura treatment works wonders. Soak
hands, on retiring, in hot water and Cuticura,
Soap. Dry, anoint with Cuticura Ointment
and wear soft bandages or old, loose gloves
during the night. Cuticura Soap and Oint-
ment are sold by druggists and dealers every-
where. 1i'or a liberal free sample of each, with
32-p. book, send post -card to Potter Drug
& Chem. Corp., Dept. I), Boston, U. S. A.
}}y Ll IL�� t do0,f� sliiiW hire 7ialzieIl
1Ch1ai if,p- ai prey of ia: marl wr�Ilo
wag sentenced to a y'ear's imprison -
merit at the Guildhall. Twice be-
fore tete man had been convicted of
a similar offence, yet. the moment
he was 'out of prison he went back
to the same form of crime. Some of
• the mats weighed half a hundred
weight and were worth five pounds
apiece.
In July last a newly married cou-
ple went to live in a, house which
:they had purchased close -to Caven-
dish Square. • The hotiee was note -
:pis for •several beautiful Ad -am ma>n-
ftelpieces. Imagine their disgust
when they found that three of these
had been removed bodily.
This was London's first taste of
She unscrupulous -collector of an-
tique mantelpieces. A few weeks
later an unoccupied house in Mans-
field Street was siritilarly bereft of
its most Cherished piece of Adam
work, and on top of this three fine
Geotg+iait mantelpieces disappeared
• from a:.hou•se under repair in Lin-
coln's Iran Fields.
In •eaeh case the theft was ac-
complished by men attired as work-
men, who drove up boldly and en-
tered the house without any pre-
tence of concealment.
then to. feel the splendid tat bodies rft
of the birds,: and wo do ?Dining bet aGU E
talk of whet a f'esz•st v, r er'e`to have
when they are cooked . The dogs.•
are .-doing their best, tivereon
Illarclies at the rear of the Hyledge,
singing at the top of his voice, aod
even T' feel a little better. •
PARDONED M k"A'fiR 52 -•¥EA S.
Insists He is Innocent of..Murdcr of
Which l e -Was Convicted.
• An old warrior who fought under
Garibaldi has been granted a royal
pardon in Italy for a murder he is
alleged to have eoanhnitted, and is
now free lifter. fifty-two years of
prison life. Hd is Corp. Vincenzo
horn lou,
"The cause of my misfortune,"
he says, "was a, Bourbon spy, who
passed into the service of Italy af-
ter I left Garibaldi in. 1861. He d•e-
n.ori rived me' as having evaded my
regular conscript service. We 'had
high words and ho hit me with his
gun, knocking out several teeth.
In anger I unluckily exclaimed,
'When my recruiting days are over
I'll come back and shoot you.'
Somehow or other that man actually
was riddled with gunshot shortly
after my. return from military .ser-
vice in 1863.
"Twenty days later I was arrest-
ed, tried and condemned to death,
though the truth is I was an inno-
cent victim of a tantalizingcoin•ci-.
dente."
When the president of the Assize
Court asked him if he had any-
thing to say after his trial he said:
"Gentlemen of the jury, I've fired
thousands -of shots on behalf of out
country. Forgive me, then, this'
solitary shot which the prosecution
says I fired on my own account,"
WELCOME GEESE.
Of Interest
To . Every Woman
HOW IDOIXID'S :KIDNEY P:ILLS.
C(REI) MRS. le,8`•
Cli.
Pembroke Wonsan Suffered for Fifa
Oen Years Before She: Found
Quick Relief :and a Complete
Cure, .
Pembroke, Ont., March 9..ea(Spe-
Gia1),—(7f peculiar interest to *o -
Amen is the story of the euro of Mrs:.
Mo,rile Lance, well •known a4ta hula-
1y respected•bore.'.':'Let Mrs Lance
tell' thatstoryin her own words,
"For ,about fifteen years I wee a
very sick woman," she 'ear, "My
sleep was broken . and tinrefreslling
and I had a bitter taste in my
month in the morning. I was often
dizzy and #lashes of light floated bo=
fere my eyes. My limbs were heavy
and I had a dragging across the
loins,
"At last rheumatism was added
to ';my troubles, and I also suffered
frim lumbago, dropsy and gravel.
Ix felt that my kidneys were the
cause of 'all My troubles, and decid-
ed to try Dodd's Kidney Pills.
From almost the first they did me
good, and after taking twelve boxes
I din again a well woman."
Women who suffer should learn
that the cause of their troubles is
bad kidneys. Having learned that,
the rest is easy. Thousands of Can-
adians will tell you out of their own
experience that D•odd's Kidney Pills
al ways• cure bad kidneys.
Captain Mikkelsen Tells of His De-
light on Seeing Thenl. !#
Noah in his -ark could not have
been more delighted over the re-
turn of the dove than were the
members o'f Ejnar Mikkelsen', par-
ty, in the desert of Greenland ice,
-with the sight of a flock of wild
geese. In "Lost in the Arctic"
Captain Mikkelsen tells Of their
need of food, of the fatigue of a
long sledge journey, and of his own
illness. He had become so weak
that he was obliged to ride on the
sledge. - Consequently, their pro-
gress 'was very slow.
We drive on between a lot of little
islands or banks of glacial ice. Sod-
denly Iverson makes a snatch at
:the sledge, -causing the dogs to halt
artani.sltm.ent:o...and whispered
sagely;' °'Look 1" look 1" 1} ltat'h'
that?" He points to something that
looks like h lot of round stones, and
I can scarcely believe my eyes. It
is a big hook of geese, -sitting there
sound asleep. They have riot heard
us. In a few seconds Iverson is on
his way towards them. I; of course,
remain whore I am on the sledgr'.
He takes aim, fires, and the whole
flock rises. Stop as minute ! Isn't
there one on the ground? I snatch
up the glass. Not one, but two are
left upon the field, and after fol-
lowing the shrieking flock a little
way, Iverson returns, beaming with
joy, a big fat goose in either hand.
We are delighted, and drive off
southward in the best of spirits.
Iverson even stops every now and
Cemetery Thieves
form a <hlass- apart ' Their prey is
the artificial wreaths placed by
sorrowing relatives on the graves of
their loved ones. From. W-oodgrange
Pai•k.Unmetery sixty were taken in
one night, and 1,200 in a little over
a ,yen -i.' The City of London Ceme-
-tery ]:on -a. similar number within
,-seven months.
Some of these wreaths, including
their cases, cost ass much as five
pounds each. The question is how
the thieves dispose of •their. plunder.
Every • second-hand book shop
knows the book thief, The man
who steals books rarely interferes
with any other form of property.
Only .ayear ago one of these gentry
was sentenced at Peterborough to
three years' penal servitude .. for
stealing Old books to the value of
£1.00, the property of 'tete Dean and
Chapter of Peterborough` Cathe-
dral,
At Kew and other botanical ga,r-
rlens,watch is always kept for the
plant thief. One caught at 'Kew in
May, 1912, had two- small tins of
water fastened under his waistcoat
for the .piirpose of keeping his sto-
len cutttiegs. alive,
For Fickle
Appetites
est
To sties
and Cream
Hit the Spot!
Toothsome, crisp bits,
that have the natural
sweetness of white' Indian
Corn.
Thoroughly cooked —
rolled thin as paper—then
toasted to a delicate brown.
Easily the most delicious
flavor of any flake
aWn.
Toasties are convenient
—ready to serve direct
s.
�--
from package an easy
y
solution of the "what to
eat" problem.
—sold by Grocers.
Canadian' Post= Cereal Co., Ltcl.
Wrnileor. Ontario.
1I0W TO VST WATER.
'I'i o Shrills 'Ways Knowing Whe-
ther It •Is Pure.
Every one knows and admits the
necessity for: pure water. When
you are away from home, and are
pet ;sure of the character of the
water supply, it would not be a bad
idea to Make a few simple Toasts.
The results may prove that it was
decidedly worth while to take the
trouble. Here- are two tests that
you •can make very easily;
• Fill a tumbler with- water, drop
in a. equip of white sugar, cover it
with saucer, and let it stand over-
night on' the bricks'at the side of
the range, on the kitchen mantel-
piece, or, in'fact, anywhere where-
the
herethe temperature will nd't sink be=
low sixty degrees. If next morning -
the contents are clear, the water is
pure. If, on the other hand, the
liquid is cloudy, some source of
contamination' is indisputably
proved.
The second test is to drop a. few
grains of permanganate of potash
into a tumbler of water, cover, and
let },t stand for an hour. Ti the wa-
ter isstill of the bright rosy color
to which the chemical turned it, it
is perfectly safe for drinking; if it
is of a brownish -color, it is impure,
although the impurity may be of the
kind . that boiling will rob of its
power to harm..
Time for a Change.
Old Loxleigh--Marr;;'• my daugh-
ter ? Why, you are supported by
your lather.
Suitor—Yes, sir ; but my guv'nor
i; tired of supporting me, he says,
n114 I thought I'd get into another
family.
l.finard's Liniment Co., Limited.
Gentlemen'—Theo Dorais, a cus-
tomer of mine, was completely cured of
rbermatiem -after live years of suffering,
by the judicious use of MINARD'S LINI-
MENT.
The above facts can he veri•0ed by writ-
ing to him, to the Parish Priest or any of
his neighbors. A. COTE, Merchant.
St. Isidore, Qua, 12 May, '98.
Fond of Hers.
The two Women were discussing`
the fashions.
"Did You :qac your husband 'sea*,
fond of those clinging gowns:?"
"Yes, in -deed, -he -'likes, , bhte to
3,ii
7rf()Iti: ^lese for aleauij,fiz ' ar,s. , ,
Try Markle Eye Reined
If you have Rod, Weak, Watery Eyes
or Granulated Eyelids. Doesn't Smart
—Soothes Eye Pain. Druggists Sell
Marine Eye Remedy, Liquid, 25c, 50e:
Murine Eyo Salvo In Aseptic Tubers,
25e, 50c. Eye Books /tree by Dlail.
Si. Cs -0 Tondo Oeod far All Eyame that resod Cora
iideas'Ame Elea Rewedy Co.. Chiesa*
How difficult- to draw the line be-
tween genius and insanity.
Minaret's Lihiment Cures Dandruff.
Russian women are now hazing
small. de•,signs painted on their
faces.
Minard's Liniment Relieves Neuralgia.
FLASHES.
unfortunately the sweetness of
victory never lasts -as long as the
bitterness of defeat.
Fame proves that a man has to
be dead and buried, without being
buried in oblivion.
Perhaps money used to go farther
than it does now, but it didn't go
so- fast.
• The fellow who was born tired
should look out for punctures.
The greatest paradox would be a
girl who blushes for her own cheek.
:Don't judge by appearance. The
jollier doesn't always have the most
full.
Mighty few .people get nervous
prostration from their efforts in
trying to •snake the world better.
It is never too late to mend, but
it is just as yell if you don't have
'tog. •-
Wooden Head.
Bill—It seems dangerous for a
man to go about with a chip on his
shoulder.
Jill—Why so?
Bill-- He ;stands a good chance of
having his `'block" knocked off.
A Wonderful New Bullet.'
. A Spaniard claims to have invent-
ed a. marvellous new bullet, destin-
ed to revolutionize the art of war-
fare ; for, fired from en old smooth-
bored 'gaol of 1830 pattern, with a
charge of but nine grammes of pew -
der, it can destroy walls or houses
at a distance of. 1,200 yards, or dis-
charged from .a modern rifle, at a
di-ettunce -of over 3,000 yards. The
bullet is 7 inches long, pointed like
an arrow, ,and weighs some 7
ounces. - Ib is rather a diminutive
shell than a bullet. One of its many
qualities, The Telegraph says, is
that, though fired with black pow-
der, not the faintest breath of
smoke issues from the gun at its dis-
charge. There -are no flames. The
bullet proceeds even from a smooth-
bore gun in a straight line, not in
a series of loops, as it apparently
ought to :do, according to the laws
of "balisties,"
' "Shure., it'd be a great wnr-rld."
reflected McGinnis, "if people only
lived up t' -the epytaphs on their
tombstones:" First Suggestion.
Knee Joint Stiff' Three Years
n
CI'll--El) i1 lItiII,INIE.
Anyone would marvel at my recov-
ery, writes Mr. Leonard Latham, a
young man well known about Chat-
ham. I had inherited a rheumatic ten-
dency through my mother's family,
and in my early days suffered fright-
fully. About three years ago the pain
and stiffness settled in my left knee
joint. I was lame and walked with a
very distinct limp. Nerviline was
brought to my notice and I rubbed it
Into the stiff joint four or five times a
day. It dispelled every vestige of
pain, reduced the swelling, took out
the stiffness and gave me the full use
of my limb again. I don't believe there
is a pain -relieving remedy, not a. sin-
gle liniment that can compare with
Nerviline. I hope every person with
pains, with sore back, with lameness,
with lumbago, with neuralgia—I do
hope they will try out Nerviline which
I am convinced will quickly and per-
manently cure them."
If Nerviline wasn't a wonderful
painless remedy, if Nerviline didn't
quickly relieve, if Nerviline wasn't
known to he a grand cure for all rheu-
matic conditions, it wouldn't have
been so largely used as a family rem-
edy for the past forty years. No bet-
ter, stronger, or more soothing lini-
ment made. Get the large 50c. fam-
ily size bottle: small trial size 25e.;
sold by any dealer, anywhere.
Highest grade beaux kept whole
andmealy by perfect baking,
retaining their full strength,
Flavoredwith delicious sauces.
They have no equal.
PAeMB FOR EAt.$, ,.
N, W, GAWrSON, Ninety Colborne Stress,.
Yarentc^
F YOU WANT TO BUT OIL SELL
L Fruit, Stock, Grain, et Dairy- Perla.
write if. ii*. Dason, Warn? n. or 9 '
Colborne Toronwto..
H. W. DAWSON, Colborne St Torentu'
6J ASICA't'C I1ltlAN4 IMPROVE1�"' Fisk
fully equipped with Or without etoc:k,
Write owner. 686 Wilton, Toronto, •
WANTED.
A GENTS WE WANT YOU. WRITE
Dominion Shade Adjuster Co., Wind -
ear, Ontario.
We will pay • you $120.00
•
community. Sixltgidays' worktExpe :egos ,
not required. Men or 'women. Oppor. _.•
tunity for promotion. Seam time may .bm---'
used. International Bible Press' Company.
182 Snadina, 'reroute. ,
NEWSPAPERS FOR SALE
'j COD 1\•1i151(I,Y IN LIVE TOWN IN
UI' York County. Stationery and Boole
Business in connection. Price only'
$4,000. Terms liberal." Wilson Publish-
ing Company, 73 West Adelaide Street.
Toronto.
NURSERY STOCK.
v r1tAIWBELSRIES, R AA1U
PBSB-FS, VFW
k
i Varieties. Free Catalog. McConnell
a Son, Grovesen.d, Ontario. .. ,
MISCELLANEOUS.
Mrs. Brown—"Is your husband a
man of quiet tastes C"' Mrs. Jones
—"You wouldn't think . so if you
heard him smack his lips at the
table."
Useless.
"I heard that you were going to
marry Archie Blueblood, Esther. Is
it. true 1"
"'Marry him! I should say note
Why, I wouldn't know what to do
with him.. He can't ride, pla�ten-
nis, golf or drive a'motor. ear
"Well," said the friend, "he can
swim beautifully, you. know.
"Yon wouldn't want a husband
that you had .to keep in an aquari-
um, would you7"
A. it-ledicine :Hat alderman wa-s.
ejected' front the Council Chamber
for refusing to vote when ',called
upon' and refusing to apologize ,to.
the ehlaii for tdisSrc;epect. '
1V.Cr. J. E. Arsenault, a Justice of the
Peace and station master at Welling-
ton, on the P.E.I. By., says: "Four
years ago 1 fell on a freight truck, sus-
taining a bad cut on the front of my
leg. ' „I thought ,,this would heal, but
instead it developed into a bad ulcer,
and later into a f„,gr.m or eczema which.
spread very rapidly and also started
on the other leg. Both. legs became
so swollen and sore that I could only
go -about my work 'by having them
bandaged.
" I consulted two doctors, and tried
all the salves, liniments and lotions I
heard of, but instead of getting better
I got worse.
izsa
4t This w condition when I got
my
first box .of Lnm•Btmk. Greatly to my de-
light that first her gave me relief. I con-
tinued to apply it to file sores, end day by
day they got better. I could see that at
last Z had got hold of something which
would cure me, end in the end it did,
"It is now over a year since ga,h.Buk
re my •e ad there has
wot'ked a tore in� ease, a
been noreturnof the, eczema."
Panay 'herbal axa composition, Zant•Beik
is a sure Dura for all. skin diseases, cold
sores, chapped hands, ulcers, blood -poison.
lm,q, varicose sores, piles, ringworm,
inianied patches, cuts, burns and briueett.
All druggists and stores sell at no, bazaar
post free from Zieseliatk (lo,, xotronte, foal
price. ,
(^i SNCER, TUMORS, LUMPS. ETU..
tee internal and external, cured with.
out pain by our home treatment, Write '
us before too late. Dr. Bellma.a Medical,
Co.. Limited. Collitigwood, Ont.'
Canadian Hair Restorer
Before,,. and .After wing . _
Restores Grey Hair to ,original cetera Two mighii
use from same bottle, hair of one becomes Meek,
the other blond or other color as they were in
youth. Steps Falling flair, Dandruff, Itehiuz.
Cures all Scalp Diseases, Produces.row Growth,
Satisfaction guaranteed or looney back .
Price 75 cents or two for One Dollar (postage paid,).
Not sold In stores, addresi!
Canadian Hair Restorer Co., WLIIDSoR, our.
"Father." said Mabel, "do you
enjoy hearing me singe„
was the answer, "I don't know, but
it's rather soothing in a way. It
makes me forget my other;
troubles.''
piles Cured in 6 to 14 mays
Druggists refund money it .PAZC7
OINTMENT fails to corn itching. Blind,
"I see where some writer says or Pu•otrudieg Piles. Eirse, a'ppiieatlon
gives relief. 50e.
there is a shortage of small
change."
"He must have been going
:through his pockets after his wife
saw them first."
To Care a Cold in One Day
Take LAXATIVE DROMO QUININE
Tablets. Druggists refund money if it
fails to cure. E. W. GROVE'S signa-
tore is on each box. 25e.
-"I hear your wife is going to lead
all the fancy dances at the charity
entertainment?" "Olt, yes 1 She's
used to that sort of thing. She's led
•me a dance all my life,"
Minard's Liniment for sale everywhere.
THIRTEEN MISTAKES OF LIFE.
To attempt to set up your own
standard of right and wrong.
To try to meastire the enjoyment
of others by your own.
To expect uniformity of opinions
in this world.
To fail to make allowance for in-
experience,
To endeavor to ahold all -disposi-
tions alike..
Not to yield in unimportant tri-
fies.
To Took for perfection in our own
actions.
To worry ourselves and others
about what cannot be remedied.
Not to help everybody, • wherever,
however, and whenever 'WO can.
To consider anything impossible
that we cannot our -selves perform.
To believe only what our finite
Minds can grasp: ,
Not to make allowances for the
weaknesses of.others..
To estimateby somoutside qual-
ity, when it e; is that within which
makes the man. .
lemmd's Linitutllt cures tic?-tns, Etc,,
Johnny, aged six years old, has
arrived. at what has been called, the
"-story-telling age," or the age
when children's imaginations get
the better of their desire for truth.
Rimming into the house the other
day, Johnny exclaimed, •"Manima,
I just saw -a kitten on our fl•<rl:tt
porch that was as big as a lion 1"
,"Johnny, you are telling another
story, -and I think 1' I1 have to whip
you for it.. You know no kitten is
tie big as a lion," said the mother.
"That's what I always thought,",
replied Johnny, "but. I- asked him,
and he 'said he u- "
" A -L Ili C0 DYSPEPSIA,'
TABLETS
Proved of Great Value to 11 W"
There is only one explanation for thel
numbers of enthusiastic letters that we
receive praising Na -Dr et -Co Dyspepsia
Tablets, and that is that these trzb eta
certainly do cure any hind of stomach
trouble.
Here is a typical letter from Mtsii
I,liza Aitnaworthy, Canso, N.S. :
is with pleasure I write to infopz
you that your Na -Dm -Co DyspepsiG:
Tablets have proved of greet value to
laze. I tried remedy after remedy but
without any lasting good. Having hearff,
of your tablets curing such cases as
mine I decided to rive them a fair trial-.
They proved satisfactory in my rase.
s8'
The remarkable•suecees of Na-Dru-C'
Dyspepsia.TableLL is such a success a*
can only come to an honest remedy,
compounded according to an exceptive»
ally good formula, front pure higr&
clients, by expert chemists. If you are
troubled withyour stomach just ask
your Druggist about Na-Dru-Ce
Dyspepsia Tablets, compounded by the
National Drug and Chemical Co, of
Canada, Limited, and sold throughout
tete Dominion at aoc, a box. 144
EDD. 74
ISSUE