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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Herald, 1914-03-20, Page 8NG LAWS OF CTIA `Sit; HOLDERS MUST. PRE.- SERYF TIB F S E'1~'t'LY. Argely in Use, But There Are ug Means of Catching the Finny Tribe.. arently the Chinese Govern- ddes nut agree with the die - rat the abundance of the sea the free use of man, judging restrictions which they place fishermen. One can imagine outcry which would occur the fishermen around our if they were asked not only a sum for fishing rights in taro section of the sea, but also held responsible for the ration of the fish in the par- r sauce of water allotted to This, however, is exactly the Chinese Government does, ding to the report of the Vice - at Ningpo, China, which has ecuissued. • - Fishing Regulations. gpo is the greatest market in u for fish of every kind, which ported to nearly every native and even to foreign countries. 10,000 craft are fitted out for sea, fisheries in the Chosen ipelago. and a license must be red- for each boat from the authority. For fishing on the es of the islands applications pace must be made to the offi- as the ground bel:,ngs to the r'nment. There are also spe- regulations fur fishing in the s, rivers and canals. 1 payment of a small sum a err - amount of space is granted by officials and a license is issued, the holder is thenceforward responsible for the preserve - of the fish in hie alIetmsnt. No ng is allowed in the spawning on, and, in order to keep the k' in good condition, a propor- late quantity of young fry must sly be placed in the water. favorite Method of catching the paa•tieularl• on the mud flats along the coast by the receding a, is by fixing long nets verti- y on bamboos in the shape of a f -circle, the fish being left pri- ers in these enclosures .at. low _ •..Fishing With Cormorants. n ±h rivers, lakes and canals ing with trained cormorants is favorite method. Each cormor- t has a ring or cord round its elk to prevent it swallowing the •It it catches. and its legs are con- eted with another piece of stti,tg ruling a loop by which refractory • rds may at any moment be ought on board. On the Ningpo River, tan, nlonu- ht fishing is earned on to a. large tent. For this purpose a. long. arrow, flat. boat, provided on oee de with a board sloping down into ie water, and painted a bright bite, is used. On the other side f this:rait is a net stretched yen- eally on st.ancltions. The fish, at - meted by the white board, jump pole it, and; thence into the boat. e net preventing them from fall- ig into the water tdle other side. Yet another novel way of fishing s- with a, net and clapper. The net s stretched on a light bamboo name in the shape of a. truncated iyramid. The fisherman either its n,a boat or wades in the shallows, teiking the water with the wooden lapper, which frightens the fish Lite net. .14 F LAMEi.IiSS BEAT. Scientist »LSeaver$ New Method. of Obtaining Intense heat. Quick Cure For His Rheumatism i r, .. P, 1 FOUND / 1 7 i34DliI�IY.i .!. I iLL II IIv DOIDD'S RION EY PILLS. fic Suffered foe a Year, but ills Return to health was quick .and His Cure Complete. Bourg Louis,' Que., Mardi 13.—.. (Special). -- How quickly Dodd's Kidney Pills will cure rheumatism and other forms of Kidney Disease when taken in the early stages is shown in the case of Mr. Robt. J. Pyle, a. well-known farmer living near here. In an interview Mr. Pyle says : "Working in cold, wet weather. was the' causeof my tiouble, and for about a. year I ` had oceasiont.l cramps in the muscles and stiffness in the joints. I was often dizzy and felt depressed and low spirited. I was nervous and my skin itched and burned at night. "When Rheumatism was finally added to my ills I decided to try Dodd's Kidney Pills. One box cured me completely, and I have had no return of my trouble," - 1)odd's Kidney Pills cured Mr. Pyles Rheumatism because it was caused by sick Kidneys. Dodd's Kidney Pills always cure sick Kid- neys. If you have any two of Mr. Pyle's symptoms, you have sick Kidneys and you need Dodd's Kid- ney Pills. J. CANALS AND AUTOS. Few things can more strikingly illustrate the changes brought about by the progress of recent years than the proposition to con- vert the vast number of canals in England into trunk motor highways for the exclusive use of auto traffic. The suggestion is made by no less practical a personage than Danson Cunningham, one of the most prom- inent members of the Liverpool Chamber of Commerce and the Mer- sey Docks and Harbor Board. It is much less than a century since England was especially proud of her system of canals ,connecting all im- portant points of the country and supplying the then cheapest known form of transportation. They are stili used oto some extent, but the railways have taken away the lamer part of their business, and it is now round, by experiment and in actual practice by large business houses of all classes that goods.can be moved more cheaply by motor -trucks than by rail for limited distances, be- cause the cost of switching and lending and unloading on freight cars. is saved. while deliveries are made with greater promptness and breakage is reached in proportion to the lessened number of times the goods are handled. It is thought that the proposi- tion to convert the canals into road- ways for motor traffic will meet with opposition, since the English are not yet ready to abandon their canals altogether, and that the re- sult of the agitation of the subject will be the building of special mo- tor roads connecting all the great manufacturing centres of the north- ern part of the kingdom with one another and with the principal sea- ports. Prof. William A. Bone, of the Im- perial, College of Science and Tech- nology in London, has hit on a manner of gas heating that may greatly change our methods of using fuel. When, a mixture of gas and air under high pressure is directed against 'a red-hot fire -brick held a short distance away, the mixture will burn at the surface of the brick. Now if such a mixture of gas and air is forced through the porous brick, and lighted on the farther side, it will burn like an ordinary gas flame; blit if more air or ,less gas is used, it ceases to bum, but the porous surface ,bccotnee whine; hot . In that way it is passible, -with afe-aA; eroliorliy of •fuel, ix; get a tenl- pe'rature far above the melting point of 1latiuuim, This .nameless beater is now used for iseatin.g boil- ers. it does away with grates, smokestacks, and chimneys; it pro-' Educes no smoke or objectionable xidor,.: nd it utilizes ninety per cent, nl.''the heat value or the fuel. Does Your Head Ache 'With Catarrh? POINTED PARAGRAPHS.' A poor reputation may be better than none at all. After a self-made man finishes a. •1 s the factory. hecoeste job } A man's wife always agrees with him when he doesn't want her to. The wise man.does his duty and lets the other fellow do the explain- ing. After a, girl gets married .she.' help her. 'girl friends to the same sort of trouble. A friend may be a chap who hopes that he can use you before you can MO him. No man can appreciate the best of it until after he has got the worst of it a few times. A bore is a man who, when he has an hour to spare, goes and spends it with some one who hasn't: A man never questions a woman's sanity as long as she doesn't inter- fere with any of his crazy projects. Even if a man has no other bad habit he is apt to send souvenir postcards to his friends every time he has occasion to visit another t own. Reassuring. Nervous Lady (in whose street there had been several burglaries) : "How often do you policemen come down this road? I'm constantly about, but I never see you." Policeman : "Alt, very likely 'I sees you when you don't see me, mum. It's a policeman's business to secrete 'isself." Piles Cured in a to 14 Days Druggists refund money it PAZO OINTMENT fails to cure Itching, Blind, or Protruding Piles. First application gives relief. SOc. How Personally Conducted. He : "Have you seen our new al- tar 1" She: "Lead me to it." blinard's Liniment Co., Limited. Have used MINAB,D'S LINIMENT for Croup; found nothing equal to it; sure cure. CHAS. E. SHARP. Hawkebaw, N.B., Sept. 1st, 1906, Heard in a Bake Shop. Baker: "No five -cent loaves of pumper nickel left, sir ; only the large ones." HAVE YOU SORE NOSTRILS, WA- TERY EYES, MUCOUS DROP- PiNGS IN THE STOMACH. CATARRHOZONE WILL CURE YOU. For the first time in the history of medicine, a treatment for the cure of Catarrh endorsed by the medical pro- fession rofession has been given to the public. Hundredsof patent medicines have been advertised, but never before has tb.e legitimate physician in good stand- ing recommended the free use of a Ca- tarrhal remedy. The merit of Cat.arrhozone is so un- questioned, its cures so numerous, as to entitle it to rank as the one remedy by which Catarral disease in the head, nose and throat can be reached and cured. The cures of.Catarrhozone are permanent„ Even those blinding headaches, that stuffed -up feeling in the nose and forehead, are relieved in five minutes. Chest pains and dis- charge of nauseating matter is stop- ped. And just think of'this-=-you`atop bawking—•you no longer snuffle or gag ssolseepose Oataixh!zone „• heals and soothes away all irritation and 'coni potion, • .Why delay? By using Catarrhozone tock you start on the way to health.- Cai.arrhozone will make and keep you tree•"from every trace of .cold, throat, chest, or catarrhal trouble; has done It for thousands, Why not for you? ]'.arge . size lasts two months, costs $1.00; small size; 50c, All dealers or by mall • from tete Catarrhozone Co., • Buffalo, bl'.Y, and Kiligston, Ont. Customer : "Very well, give me A loaf of pumperdime." Low Colonist Rates to Pacific Coast Via Chicago a North Western ny., March 15th to April 15th from points in Canada to Salt Lake City, Ogden, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Portland Tacoma, Seattle, Victoria, Vancouver, `Kootenay District and Canadian Northwest pointe. Through Ponriet sleepers and freee- clining chair cars from Chicago. Variable routes. Liberal stopovers. For full in- formation as to rates, routes and litera- ture, write or call on B. II. Bennett, General Agent, 46 Yonge Street, Toronto. All ready baked to a nicety; whole, mealy aiid fell flavored, Resting, only is necessary. to 4 le 4,44 r i1 s n3fa r grsa1 >u snits :NEWLY DESIGNED BIPLANE; Maineester Inventor Has Machine W iic'h Should Break Records. A :p.able .from London says : .A highly' ingenious device, which un- doubtedly will prevent many future accidents is about to be embodied in a new British aeroplane now near- ing completion. A difficult problem, which has al - way monfronted aeroplane designers and Chas become more urgent than ever -'with the great increase in speed, has been that of enabling machines 'toland at a reasonably slow speed, and yet flyas fast as possible. The necessity of this pro- vision allay be gauged from the fact that the modern aeroplane, with its full load, weighs the better part of a toil, and that the usual flying speeds. range from 60 to 80 miles an hour. A. V. Roe, ;the Manchester design- er, has adopted the expedient of providing his latest biplane, a very small machine, with "Swept -back" wings,,;and is expected to beat .1111 existing • records with what are termed "air brakes." 44 Read the Papers. Teacher : "What is a pedes- trian?" Country Pupil: "A feller what gl ts.'run over by an automobile." Ills -_Flesh liorribly Burnt In two weeks of the month of February, Winnipeg's building per- mits totalled a million dollars. Minard's Liniment Cures Burns, Etc. ItaIBi'lii) ills MIND. Questioner Much Concernetl. About a Few Million Years. An eminent English man of science recently delivered a lecture during which an amusing incident occurred. In the course of his re- marks lie said something to this of, fect: ' `It is •a well-established fact that the sun is gradually, losing its heat, and that in the course of seventy million 'years its heating power will be so diminished that all. beneficent 'effects Will be lost, and no life can exist on the earth." - As soon as this 'se'ntence was ut- tered, a sturdy Briton in the rear of the hall rose and signified his de- sire to ask a question. "Pardon me," he said, "but how long did you say it would be before this ter- rible calamity would•occur:2" • ' "Why, about seventy million }years,''.' • repeated the scientist, with a smile. • The questioner fell back into his seat with a deep sigh of relief. "Thank heavens!" he muttered. thought I understood him to say seven million." 1tis':rlruggist'.sold hint a cheap acid'corn cure `• what he should have bought wits irut,P irn',v Corsi Extractor; it's purely vegetable and eats in 24 hours.' Insiekt on "only "Putnam's Extractor." 25c. at all dealers. Pardoned Rint. "He Itat some sins," St. Peter said; ::hut cover them with chalk; He's often listened for two hours to other people talk." Sales Logic. Bachelor: "Why should I get a cook -book 1 I have no wife." • .. Agent . "Bilt' I haves slid neecd 'your- costrrnission. I3 ave aU he"ztl t !'r` Women workers in Chili receive` an average of 38 cents aday, "I don't suppose you have •a' fiver, you want to lend • me'?'' "Yeiti in- sight does you credit. How did you; guess 1'r ROYAL i ICIKNQSiES. I'rinoess; Royal i;s�iX to Be Called "Her tonal S1►yiress." The Royal Faintly are no more .above ni�cicrraiu:ee than other people. The :['since of. '11'a•1•e�s has •.always been ktaown • in the family As "Davie,'' because when Elie was called "Eddie" it. i'�eminded- Queen Alexandra of het.- lost son. The Frince�ss Ii-oyal, usetd to be eallecl. ".`TIIer Royal 5hynees;'.,' ;,frorli the agony: of ntt�vousn6ss she went through if strangers• were pr�asent; and Princess Alexander of. Teck is often .affectionately callecd "The Useful and nrnaariental.'i• It is al- so whispered that certain Royalties, a very beautiful daughter with a very plain mother, have been nick- named by a mischievous yblinp; prim cuss "The Daydream and the Night- mare." laical Effect o Nenralia TlrobbinE Pail Goes Welly Minard's Liniment Cures Dandruff. Minister (who has surprised Mc- Dougal writing a betting slip): ``McDougal, I am versa surprised at ye. Ye ken We awfu' sinful tae gamble, don't ye?" McDougal: "Weel, meenisber, I must either gamble or, drink. Ye know the pro -- Vett says, 'Of' two evils choose the least. ' It wadna be carryin' it out to elto:ose neither." One ,thorough. application of Zam. Bok .at night will bring ease by morn. tug. Zan .lialestops theinserting, heals , the cracks and makes the hands smooth: Mrs, A.. F.' Phillips, of Ayer's bjiff, Que., eager t— I suffered ed torn bly from chapped hands. Sometimes I s most *erled'wlth the pain and smarting, Zana Bok was `°,rilcirmrriended•and. , it •genre ,islqqaer ease alio:eatr as'ssoon as r eplied. Now my, hands` are. einite smooth, l Also ore Z,m.Euk ter ell ekfr ' eruptiose,.uloers, p4Ies onto, buses wail Nal skis lejurie*. Sec. nos Aft d,e 1ieti eo Soft A YEAR'S SUFFERER CURED BY "NERVILINE." No person reading this need ever again suffer long from Neuralgia. Nerviline will quickly cure the worst Neuralgia, and Mrs.. G. Evans, in her strong letter written from Rus- set post office, says:—"One long year, the longest of my life, was almost en tirely given up to treating .dreadful attacks . of Neuralgia. The .agony I. experienced during some of the bad attacks was simply unmentionable. To use remedies by the score without permanent relief was mighty discour- aging. At last I put my faith in Nen- viline; I read of the wonderful pain subduing power it possessed and made up my mind to prove it valuable or useless. Nerviline at once eased the pain and cured the headache. Con- tinuous treatment with this magic working remedy cured me entirely, and I have ever since stayed well." Mrs. Evan's case is but one of hun- dreds that might be quoted. Nervi - line is a specific for all nerve, muscu- lar or joint pain. It quickly cures neuralgia, sciatica, .lumbago, lame back, neuritis and rheumatism, Forty years in use, and to -day the most widely used liniment in the Domin- ion. Don't take anything but "Nei, rhino," which any dealer anywhere can supply in large 50c. family size bottles, or in a small 25c. trial size. No Lie. First Wanderer : `.'I pay my rent by the quarter now, Bill." Second Ditto : "G'wan l - Wheat are you giving us i"• First: "That's straight -twenty- five cents' a night." Only One "snomo QtUININE" To get the genuine, call for full name LAXATIVE BROSTO QUININE. Look for signature of E. W. GROVE. Cures a Cold in One Day. 25c. Women mix mortar and ,carry the hod fur' building operations in Mun- ich, Germany. fdinard's Liniment for sale everywhere. -Mike hits Back. "Where's that bulldog you had last summer?" asked the motorist, as he drove into -the yard. "Oh, the poor baste swallere.d a tape measure," replied Mike; "a.nL he died, sorr." ; "Indeed V' exclaimed the man. "He died by, inches, I suppose, he continued waggishly. "Oh, no sorts ' said Mike : "lite went around th' back of th' house, sorr, an' stied by th' yard." Industry. Prisoner : "Your Honor, 'I stole to buytools, so's I could go to work.” Judge : "What tools did you need?' . Prisoner : "Why, a brece and bits a ji.nimy, ' a. diamond drill. Dem tinge cost money. „ Try Murine Eye.lkemedy It you have Red, Weak Watery Eyes or Granulated Eyelids, Doesn't Smart --Soothes Eye Pain, Druggists Sell Murine Eye Remedy, Liquid, 25e, 50e. Murine Eye Salve in Aseptic `Tube. 25c, 50c. Eye Books Free by Mail. 'Aa Cy* Towle e.. d ger ilil.tiee 1MA Meed Cwe 1Kuritae Eye itsesedi' Ce., Chloe m' Got a Surprise Plimsoll. Cholly : "And was my ;present a surprise to your sister i" Willie; "You bet! Sis said she never thought you'd send htr Apy- thing so cheap." Cutici Ando Treatment: hands in 'hot Soap. Pry, a Ointment, and or old loose glo Quinn' Soap and the world. A liberal booklet on the care a mtg. Gent poet -tree. On., Dept. 13K. Bog FARMS v ASK: IMPROVE under crop, f owner. Perry Love H. w. DAWSON, Toronto. Ir You WANT Fruit. Stock, d write II. W. Dawe Colborne St:: Toro. N. W. DAWSON, w A GENTS WE Dominion Sh sor, Ontario. We will pa to distribute religi continuality. Sixty not required. Me tunity for promoti used. Intern a tiona 162 Snadina, 'Coro,. NEWSPAPE GOOD WEEKL York Count, Business in .con. $4,0'00. Terms Ab. -ing Company, 73 Toronto. NURSE ��'t rHAwBEARIES, A„7 Varieties. Fre a Son, Grovesend, MiSCEL CANCEA, 'TUB internal and out pain by our h us before tpo late. Co.. Limited, Collin A Sensitive Protest "You've gone to :.a great deal pf trouble and expense to give your boy aro, education "I wouldxi't ,liiin l that," replied Farmer U trit6vtel "if Josh wod ld- rx"t"`thsiffe licsiiftaffil expect to learn me as much in two or three weeks as he found out during the whole term,'" Minard't Linbnent Relieves Neuralgia, „,t 1: ket sp:Juty may,.r, n Bickeraik "I have been usin for a good many year fact, I am never withal $1a°bottic--6 for S5 a copy ox oar book "Ire Dr. B. J. KEN Enosburg Falls :lit "Kidd leeks v He seems to ha, cowed by comet/hi hear Z He fools from a bull on a • "Mummy : "CA' that was on the board this alto' 'Because what eaten ill" • of;'the'.bowela la' silty for good (- waste matter tri collects there is oncea (lay,. it'.de whole body, cans eeetion and ,si+cl and other, harsh irritate the'. dell l`)r. `I',? Pills entirely the bowels efi'eoti ening, sickenint its. N Indian I ED. 7.