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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Herald, 1914-04-10, Page 7MERRY OLD EN0141) BY MAIL AtiouT JOHN ULL AND HIS PEOPLE, rreneee in .the Lan fps .Suprente in. the. mereint World. last'Year eost Loud , 00, less tbart the arima e fire brigade. gush Statistics show th born. of large families •eeatest age, ght M.P.'s. are refusin lei of $2,000, it was. st House of Conanons. er tweuty people were.in 1.0.1 seriously, when a, tr 'turned at Manchester. rry Kelley, of Neweast hampion souller of the just celebrated his 82nd vo galione of wate tied from an Ipswich rese high a. man was drowned, last attending to b ' far , of Henley, nt, was attacked and ver ly,, injured:. .. e pavilion of the Surbiton at Waffron's Farm, U g Ditton, has been destroy • new process a fire -pro d is being adopted in En he electrie underground in London. uring Mass in St. John's Ro toile Church, Kirks -tale, L an elderly woman fell Ler seat. million farthirig.fund has ted , at St. Peter's Parish gston-on-Thames for the e of a new hall. ascbst of over $180,000, scv le trunk roads in Buekingh e are to be remade with st e foundations. dclington Bonsugh Council urehase 'and near Porche d at a cost of $80,000, u el to erect public baths. rd Rosebery is progressing torily. He is now able to r a, short period each day, eping better,. 1 music and dancing licenses e l to public houses at Kin have been .abolished by sing authorities. nsiderable comment hes be 4 in Yorkshire by the aoti erritorial ',officers banning t ) at a ball in Halifax. is proposed to alter the d r of the bull's eye at 500 yar c service rifle competition , front 18 to 10 inches, •eral people were injured in ion between a London Gene bus and a bounty bourse way car at Deptford. clay fishing in the Roundha. ) Lakes was strongly depr by the Leeds Free Church il at •their annual meeting. ty-two cows were recently tered at Liverpool and Bir - ad in consequence of the dis- of foot and mouth disease. y Middleton, of Birdsall Hall, Yorkshire, has now recovered the effects of her recent acci- .n the hunting fields. Duman Sacrifices Still. il That Cent. don • $1,- l cost at wo- Iive to • . g their rated in jured, am. car le, an world, birth - r were rvoir ull,a rained 7 sc- . • Golf Upper ed by ofing gland rail - maxi iver- dead been rec- eralat 8.1111- are ster pon sat - be and at - the en on he ia- ds at il 0 - Bishop of Acer a reached Ply- , Efiglaad„ recently en his re- fter his first year's eerviee in se diocese, extending over an f 450 miles by 150 miles, with dation of one and a. half =li- ne states that the snetives :oming settled tindii the,I3ri- 'stem of rule, and aressete ong Christian tonverts he seessalfithe even- . justice of theeBritish Gov- t, With a respect for native d privileges. The Bishop t juju practices still prevail; been impossible, so far, to at the hid,e,ous customs, and kart of people reverting to again rites at sueh times as and funersels, ' lints= me- an occurred in the remote but the oCetssions were bee mare rare as the advance ay lines and other, means of ication . enabled church to get into closer touch natives. • Irown—"Is your hiisband, a ; Ittiet, tastes V Mrs, ,Tones wouldn't think so if yo'ti in srna,ek• his lips at the ad the stufile) out 0' Dick is reernin'," "You bad en't you sorry for it?" --awful 00117. jest kand he.,'s going to have .tabirtla to -m o'rroW She Got So She' Was Almost Insane ASO THEN FOUND A. CURE IN DOD 'S KIDNEY PILLS. that's 11714 mrs. Wellington Dun- • lop Says Dedd's Kidney Pills are the J.lest of all Medieitfes. Sonth':Wathrvilltel York ,Co., N. B,.,- April 6.--(speeial).—Mrs. Wel-- lington Dunlop, an estimable resi dent of this pla.ce, has given an interview in which 'she, states that she believes Dodd's Kidney Pills to he the best of all medicines. Mrs; Dunlop says : "When I commenced taking Dodd's Kidney Pills I was in a terrible condition, I had been sick for over a year and had paid out more than one hundred and thirty dollars for doctors and medicine. I would 'get some better and then get just as bad as ever.' "The doctor said my trouble came from my stomach. His medicine relieved me for only a few :minutes after I had taken it, and I got so that I was nearly insane. "I had not taken Docld's Kidney Pills two days till I was some bet- ter: I took twelve boxes in all,. and I can truly say they have doneme reore'good tha,n• any medicine I have ever taken." Dedcl's Kidney Pills are suffering wornan?s'best frieud. If you haven't tried them yourself, ask your neigh- bors. JUISER AS A GYMNAST. Thought He Would Be Asked to lump -Over a Table. The Munich papers contain in_ teresting accounts of a great gym- naitie display before the Empero on the occasion of his visit, there. His Majesty remarked that in his youth gymnastics were a, bore. eNo* a new epirit had come over them, and they were made amusing and agreeable. He expressed his ear- nest hope that gymnastics for WO - men wound become more general, as this would certainly contribute to thy physical welfare of the race. At the close of the display the Emperor was asked for his signa- ture, and a table was planed before, him for that purpose. He after-. wards said: "I thought should have to jump, over the table, and RIZ just about to take off nay•coat I" Miss Gertrude Becks, the woman who "cleaned up the Panama Canal Zone," and who, for her splendid work in directing sani- tation, will receive some special recognition from the United States Government. For Instances Mrs. Brown --``Our - language is full of misnomers. For instance, I met a maxi once who 'was' a ,perfeet" bear, and they called • him a civil. engineer!' Mrs. Smith -e -"Yes, but that's not so ridiculeu.s as the man they call a teller in a. bank. He won't tell you anything, I asked one the other day how much money my husband had on deposit and he just laughed at lee." "I Hear Now Deafness All Gone" r Ani Tickled to Der0 at the Miracle Catarrhozone Perrormed for Me. At 75 Can Hear Like a Young Child. "Alter suffering so long from a bad case of catarrhal deafness, it is no wonder that' I am tickled to death, at the miracle Catarrhozone performed for nie, writes T. Y Weightman, from. Bridgetown. "I had dreadful head - noises, a continual buzzing in my ears. My trouble was due to catarrh of the head and ears, and it also f,ffected my throat, which was irritable and sore. Catarrhozone seemed to reach to the very bottom of the trouble. It cleared up my 'throat weakness, rid me of catarrh and as a result my hearing returned. lsaiw at rny age of seventy_ fivel can hear like a child, and I am thankful to Collins' Drug Store for having recommended Catarrhczone to me." . In case of deafness, asthma and bronchial irritation, nothing can. equal Catarrhozcne -- every physician and druggist says so, and 'we advise our readers to try this treatment, large size containing a beautifully polished hard rubber inhaler and sufficient medication for 2 months' use, price Can- ada.Co., Buffalo, N.Y., and Kingston, Sold by all druggists and storekeepers or post paid from The Catarrhozone e1.00; sreailer tria.: sizes 50c. and 250, LONDON'S POPULATION. Remarkable Figures Show How English People Migrate. Volume IX. of the report on the census of 1911 eontains some re- markable figures showing how Eng- lish people migrate from where they were born, says the London Daily Mail. • The five metropolitan counties, Essex, Herts, Kent, Middlesex and Surrey, together with the county boroughs of West Haan and ,Croy- don, contain more than a million natives of London. Essex claims e,f3a,943 of them and Middlesex 357,- 63. Of London's 4,251,695 inhabitants' 1,436,686 were bora outside the county, and it is a,nothsr remark- able fact that the proportion of na- tive Londoners has risen at each sliceessive census since 1881. At the same tine 'the rate of growth of the population of London has steadily declined. Foreigners of all nationalities in, London mum - her 153,128, more than half the to- tal Lt England and Wales, and a larger number than at any previous census, I was cured of Acute BrOnchttis by, MINARD'S LINIMENT. Bay of Islands. .1. 1II. center:Ems 1. was cured of Pacial 'Neuralgia by NARD' s LINIMENT. N.S. wm. DANIELS.. I was cured of Chronic Rheumatism by MINARD'S LINIMENT. Albert Co., N.B. G5O. TINGLEY. .'01.mft•MI In twenty generations every per- son has had 131,076 direct ances- tors. ralnard's Liniment Cures Dandruff, Theory Shattered. "Children," said the teacher to his pupils, "you should be able 1:0 do anything equally well with either ha.rid. With a little practise you will find it just as easy to do any- thing with one hand as it is with the other." "Is it?" enquired the urchin at the foot of the clas-s. "Let's see yeti put your left hansLia the, riett-hand --- ustekett, "or 7o u r ter) u sere. A bite of this and a taste of that, all day long, dulls the appetite 'and weakens the cilge.stion. • Restore your stomach to healthy vigor by taking a Na-larteCo Dyspepsia Tablet after each meal—and out out the /piecing°. Na-Dru.Co Dyspepsia Tablets sire he best friends tor sufferers frotn. indigestion and dyspepsia 50o. a Box at 7ottr Druggist's, Made by the National Drug and Chemical Co. of Canada, Limited. ae ieXa..a••-• .:.••••-, Not to Repeat It., Some yeare ago an Irish member of Parliamena forgot the strict rule that members must address the House only threugh "Mr. Speak- er." "Gentlerama" he began on rising, and was ebesfped instantly by ries of "Order For a., moment lie paused, then he resumed, "Mr. Speaker, sir, 1 recognize that in beginning my speech with the word 'gentlemen' I made a mistake, for which I am deeply sorra and'I pro- mise that if the House will forgive tne I will endeavor not to repeat the error." 1 UTICUR SOAP And Cu ticura Ointment. They do much for irri- tated, itching scalps, dan.druff and dry, thin and failing hair, and do it, speedily, agreeably and economically-. Cutiourn Sony and ointment are sold throughout the world. A. liberal sample ot each. wIth 32 -page booklet on the cue and treatment of the sero and swap. ;sent poet...ire°. Address Potter Drug .!tc Chun. Corp.. Dept, ult. lingten. U. s. A. .TAPAN HAS A. "PERE DAMIEN The Rev. Alfred Hewlett, Briton, Is Fighting Leproey. Kumamoto, a town of about 60,000 inhabitants, has two of the six Ja- panese leper asylums. One is the Kwaishun, founded in 1895 by Miss Hannah Riddel, an English woman, who!has received the blue ribbon of japan. In this asylum there were fifty.patients a year ago. The other is the Taira -in, founded by the Catholic Father Corre in 1894. Last yea' there were fifteen patients• . To the "leprosery," as the naiddl ages would have styled it, founde by British womanly sympathy, British Father Damien has devote himself. He is _the Rev. Alfre ew ea, vicar of St. Pa,ul'e, R,oel 9) e a d d '11`q.DS LOST' INDIAN TRIBE. And One Aged Member Givef$ New Version of Nits8sere. Prof, Frank Speck, of the Univer- sity of Perinsylv.ania, is prepariug report on a tribe of Inclians lost for 187 years, which ho found unestpea- edly on , a. recent trip to the Prov- ince of Qlteb(3d. • The tribe 7,46 known as. the Wawenocks, once one of the strong tribes of New Eng- land.Five families are all thatre- roain. • He found only ope old man; Neptune, who spoke the original language of the tribe. From Nep- tune Prof. Speck learned another version of the historically eelee br4t,e4 massacre of Norridgeweek, in Maine, where the Wawenock fon- merly lived. Whittier, in his poarra "Mogg Megone," useathe massed/a as the theme of a eulogy on Father Basle, who is pictured as a martyrs andNehpetumne's story differs from the se historical one. Aecording to his ac- count, when Gen. Lovell, with the write B. English troops, friendly Indian to Father:Reale, to mike of Norridgewoea he sent a tt. W.9 came within It few aeiberne ask him to come 'secretly to hizn for an interview, Resle met the Gen- A,Gegag: eral and accepbed a bag of gold apply, upon . agreeing to call the Indians e°'"'" of the tribe together for a couneil on the following -day. Reale gather- ed the tribe together in e. church, and the English troops fell on them, setting fire to the church and shoot- ing the Indians as they tied. An In- dian, believing that Father &ask had betrayed them, shot him as he fled. fi. We -torn Painful Swellings Reduced Itinsenlar Strains Ended SUCH TROUBLES NOW QUICKLY RUBBED AWAY BY POWER- IC A-NcE FUL REMEDY. in her strained and weak, that are frequent- re.. Limit If you have any inuseles that are out pain tis before ly subject to rheuznatic pains; if you have any painful swellings that refuse to go away—get busy with Nerviline• r This is the very sort of trouble that Nerviline Is noted for curing quickly,1 "I have proved Nerviline simply a won- der in reducing a hard, painful swell-. ing. It followed aa injury received I in my left leg and caused me great pain and discomfort. The muscles were strained and sore, and no other remedy g -ave the ease and comfort got from rubbing on Nerviline. There , is a soothing, pain -relieving power about •Nerviline' that tottelred the root t N OOD Business $4,000. • Ing Corn Toronto. %Li ma: w Varie Son, G HOLS tere Twen ty-fl Leitch, S t of my trouble. Nerviline reduced the ling, it destroyed the pain, it ght my limb back to perfect con- n," The experience of Mr. Bow - whose home is in Middlesex is not unusual. Thousands are proving every day that muscular pains of every kind, chronic rheuznatism 1m - neuralgia and sciatica will yield I erviline when nothing else can by cure. Nerviline is an old- time family pain remedy, used nearly forty years with great Bt.:moss. The large family size bottle costs 50c., trial size 25c. at all dealers. .11701 Fixed, Though. One doesn't have to be particle. larly sharp to cut a figure in society. Ferry, Birkenhead, and a, brother swel of Maurice Hewlett, the novelist, ditio brow He is about 50 ,yeareof age. Leprosy, that terrible incurable en' diseasewhichis still a ecourge of the East, is fairly prevalent in ja- pan, where there are about 30,000 lepers. The figures contrast poasi strangely with those of the patients at Kumamoto. The other leper asY, lunis are at Tokio, Osaka, ICanaz- awa and Aomori. Although the Diet seven years ago undertook Governmental eontrol of the question and subsidized the six asylums, notification of disease is not yet enforced. Many families' have a special room in which they isolate an infected member. A Sure Favorite --saves the house- wife lunch thank - Jess cooking..— . Post oasties • The factory cooks them perfectly, toasts them to a delicate) golden -brown, and sends them to your tabje ready to eat direct from the sealed package. Fresh, -crisp, easy to serve, and Wonderfully Appetizing Ask any grocer— ost Toasties Canadian PottUln CereaI Co., Ltd. •Windsor, Ontario. .16 Piles Cuxed In 8 to 14 Days Druggists refund money It PAZO onprzolxv tans to cure Itching, Blind, or Protruding Piles, First application gives relief. 60e. Doing His Best. 'Why do you cry like that, my hoy 7" "Kin you show me any better way 1" Mlnard's Liniment cures Burns, so, Well Supplied. "I'm introducing a brand-new in- vention—a combined talking ma- chine, carpet sweeper and letter - opener," said the agent, stepping briskly into .art office. "Got one already," answered the proprietor. "I'rn married." • Try Murine Eye Remedy. If you have Red, Weak, Watery Eyez or Granulated Eyelids, Doesn't Smart —Soother; Eye Pain. Druggists Sept Murine Eye Remedy, Liquid, 25e,50e. Murine Eye Salve in Aseptie Tube, 25c, 50c. Eye Books Pree by Mail, an ilk° Pento aced tor All Ryon that need Core Stassisse ISys Remedy ChInnite Came to Embrace. Dad was 'threatened with fever, and when his little son came to embrace him before going to bed, he said, "Now, my boy, you mustn't hug me. Yon'll catch the scarlet fever." The lad looked at his fa,- ther for a moment. Then, "Say fa- 1 ther," he added, "who did you hug " Too %my stf This Rind. "That's a strange pair of Scalee you have there. 1 suppose they are of the Ambueeade kind," 'mbtiecade Whet is that ?" "Why, they lie in weight, as it »sere." . Some m they ean't because t: yacht. It conkeuesrtisal of this yo Sufferer - To CI Take LA X Tablets. falls to cur ture is on e Had one in Mother she would Bu "My hu on earth,' "Dear n ler than Mronx. "Indeed de red soft cause he ti to shovel