HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Herald, 1909-02-12, Page 6•o-•o-oma►-s•s-+ .47 '4. o .lr"a- *a -a o- r r *' /`-o-
A leAUSHI 1t$ BABY
•
IS A WELT„ -SAWN
When baby laughs, and gurg-
le, and Brows mother knows he ¢
m:; well and happy. When he ti
cross, fretful and sleepless give
esss, fretful and sleepless give
hint a dose of Baby's Own 'L'ab-
lets and see how speedily they
will change him to a happy,
smiling child. These 'Tablets
cube all the minor ailments of
childhood and bring healthy,
natural sleep, because they re-
move the cause of sleeplessness.
If the little teeth are coming
through they help thein along
painlessly. Mrs. Oetave Paulin,
Oaraguet, N, 13., says: "1 have
found Baby's Own Talents a
Splendid. medicine for. stomach
and bowel troubles, and to pro-
mote sleep. I strongly advise
mothers to use them when their
little ones are ailing." Sold by
medicine dealers or by mail at
26 cents a box from The Dr.
Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville,
Ont.
®. - 414-
Taking
rTaking His Pick.
The burly prisoner stood unabashed
b<iore the judge.
"Prisoner at the bar," asked the clerk
of the arraigns, "do you wish to chal-
lenge any of the jury?"
The prisoner looked them over care-
fully.
"Well," he replied. "I'm not exactly
wet. you'd call in training. but I would-
e't mind a round or two with that there
i:: old josser in the corner."—Argonaut.
A Woman's Sympathy
Are you discouraged? Is your doctor's
bill a heavy financial load? Is your pain
a heavy physical burden? I know what
these mean to delicate women—I have
l•ren discouraged, too; but learned how to
..re myself. 1 want to relieve your bur-.
ee ::s. Why not end the pain and stop the
,:u: tor's bill? 1 can do this for you and
'rill if you will assist me.
All you need do is to write for a free
bus of the remedy which has been placed
in ray hands to be given away. Perhaps
•his one box will cure yon—lc has done so
i'c:r others. If so, I shall ho happy and
yen will be cured for 2e (tire coat of a
pesuige sump). Your eaters held eonil-
deattally, Britt day for my free treat-
ment, ILS. _. _ UItRAII, Wintlaor, Ont.
••••••-••-•••••••••-4•443.4.-4:4•-•
NOTES OF THE RAIL,
The Italian State ltailway has bought
2.00,000 tone of American coal, to be de•
livered at Genoa at $.5.64 per tori. The
Welsh coal owner,, it is said, asks;l
$0,1'2.
Among the most urgent needs of
Greece is the linking up of Rs railway
system with the rest of Europe. Some
progress toward this end has been se-
complished during 1000.
In Hungary the narrow-gauge rail-
roads are of fifteen differ'eu6' ,gauges,'
from 18 inehes to 30% inches: The li+ov• ,
ernment has now decreed that eneueee
forth such railroads may be built of
only two gauges, 27% inches and 30
inolles.
The first task set for the new central
office of the Prussian State railroads is
a thorough examination of .the rules
and regulntious for the ' different
branches of the service, with a 'View to
such a revision as wil insecure' greater
clearness and uniformity.
An electric tramway service 'will pro-
bably be started in Shanghai this
month. A native paper has been urging
the Chinese guilds to organize a boycott
of the trans, and it declares than the
dangers from the speed of the trams and
live wires must cause innumerable fatal
accidents.
An experimental railroad: for testing
signaling devices, materials used in track
construction and different types of mot-
or cars for railroad use has been built
by the Railway Department of the Ger-
man Government. The road is double -
tracked, and is oval-shaped, lasing a
length of 5,760 feet. The :straight
stretch is about 800 feet long.
Rare Deer Killed in Maine.
Banging in front of a etore at Deering
Centre re tll',4 week to a rare ,pe,.imen of
the ,leer family. it was ep.lited in n. i
sin^limes which old banters say they neo-'
el Itefere s..w the 1 kc of.
• It 'scams to be aeresa between an al-
bino and the ernntneln North American
decr ' Besides its peculiar marking it is
a 'gad sized animal, weighing probably
hilt+ pound... Albers. II. Small, the court
a iirephtr. shot ti4i deet' during his
recant hunting trip in tits Rangeley- re-
- A .m-, the: game being sutured at diddle
"~ itlec•a of that ection who
eimee 'aeonhu..tingail their live, dc'c'lur-
_ wase the first th'er of the .,ort thee -
..
hey., e.. eava. _.tleri::'hc+' .7oUrnnl,
TW3 '5CHH 4 PIO "
ft -41-1— GAS a d GASOLINEENGINES
rt)i3 roust. give sat:s-
factioc'o or you don't
pay for it.
SOLD ON TRIAL
l: the only Gasoline Engine that you can tri
mpt°c ra you buy. I know what the "Cbam-
Teen" will de. and I want you to be fully
eatiefied with it before you pay for it. The
mate is low. Full particulars free.
Wm. Gillespie, SU Front St. E.,T0110?iT0
Wit of a Suffragette.
Miss Mary Cawthorne, the suffragette,
completely turned the tables' on an in-
terrupter, wbo, in a clumsy attempt to
ridicule, asked her, •'Don't yon wish
you were a man's" by replying, "No; do
you?"
"Don't you think mothers should stay
at home with their children?" asked a
callow youth, eager to score off a well
known married suffragette who had just
spoken.
Miss Hawthorne reflected for a second.
"Well," she said, her voice taking an
cannel, intimate note, "I don't know
about that: but I do think children
should stay at home with their mothers."
—London Times.
Exactly So,
: ; r•old h;ooeled statem,en L in the 13ar-
t.levillo Enterprise that expan,li !n
moaning teeeinendously the oftener it is
read: "Ever since a Berl lesville plan
rnnrried his stenographer he h:t.a been
short handed," ----Kansas ('i.y Star.
Minard's Liniment Cures Diphtheria.
! s
Too Literal. .
They tell of an Atehi.-somi man wen
oma;- going down street with a girl, She
was one of the kind who believes in the
power of the gentle hint. end, as they
reseed a randy store, she said: "Doesn't
that candy smell good?" "Yes, the nman
replied "Let's stop lore e awl smell it
Oak lake, Man., Dec. :ird, 1908.
L'•r. el'Teggrtrt,
Toronto_ Ont.:
Dear Sir, -1 run enclosing $10 for tis
nmmtnv tobacco cures as you will send me.
A .MOTHER'S TALK
T ' THERS.
What Iain-Buk Did in 'a Western
Home. .
Here le just one iltustratlou of the wisdom
of keeping a box of Zam-Buk always handy.
It la a true record of the various uses to
which this great balm was put—with highly
sat1ef story results in every case—fa just
'ono family. and during a row .m,onths only.
Mrs. C. J. IrIam, of 1107, William Avenue,
Winnipeg. makes the report es follows:—
"1 have found Zam-Burt so very useful as
household balm that I want to make its
merits still more 'widely known. Some eight
weeks ago my brother, Ml'. C. Proctor, hap-
pened a serious accident. White at work,
a rusty nall penetrated the palm of his
right hand. The rust of the nail poisoned the
flesh and inflammation set in quickly. He
went to the General Hospital and consulted
a doctor, :who advised poulticing to draw
out the ooitsou. This was applied, but when
there was no improvement after a few days,
I began apply Zam-Buk balm leaving off
poultices.
"The erect was almost magical! Zam-
Buk soothed the pain, drew out the poison,
and allayed all inflammation. Healing then
commenced, and la a few days he was able
to resume work.
"Six weeks_ ago my husband, Mr. C. J.
'relate. while returning from work quite late
in the evening, was bitten by a dog, the dog's
teeth penetrating. the flesh on his thigh just
above the, knee. Directly he came home
Zam-Buk was applied to the wound, and in
a few days the soreness was gone and the
wouoad thoroughly healed.
"A third instance of the healing power
of Zam-Buk was provided when my little
boy had a nasty fall. lis is five years old,
and was playing oae day when he fell. HIS
head struck on a sharp stone, which cut a
nasty gash. As soon as I had washed the
cut I applied Zam-Buk In the usual way,
and it was really wonderful bow quickly it
relieved the little fellow's pain. Within a
week the cut --•a deep one—was quite healed.
"nyery mother who once proves the all-
round value or Zara -Buis will never again
be without it."
Zam-Buk is a pure herbal balm, and cures
cuts, burns, bruises, abscesses, ulcers, eczema,
scalp sores, ringworm. chapped hands, void -
sores, frost -bite, bad leg, inflamed patches,
etc, it also cures piles. Used as an erubro-
oation it will be Lound to remove rheum-
atisum, aclattca, and neuralgia. All druggists
and stores sell at 50c a box, or post free
from 9.am-Bpk Co., Toronto, for price.
Dogs to Match.
The lato Dowager Empress of China
the most' powerful personage- of the
day, yet between the limes of a recent
imperial edict a delightfully femin-
ine bias is easily. discoverable, says
the Youth's,Companion.
1 +law the effects of your cure Oa my Her 11/e0e` r. who was the supremo
Mall last spring, which treed him of the authority If#t+nl'the standard qualifinea-
habit in one week.
1 am sending this so that I can make
some ('Itristnmas presents to some 1
knott', and will, I trust, accept it, and be
rid of the vice by 11)09.
With regards ana wishing you every
su tees
I nm, yenta truly, •
Robert R. Smith.
u.m
An Insomnia Cure
•
1n muutning story is told of the late -
Melee: of London, Dr. Creighton, and
Lord ltu,ehery. Lord Reeebery com-
plained to the bishop of want of sleep,
to 'rltich the: bishop r'eptied that he
never suffered front insomnia. The earl
,1ae•rved that, he wished he knew the
to imale% '1'Ite bishop's formula was very
simple. 1f he felt drowsy he t'ou'ted to
write a s'e'niors and i11 a few moments
he was wide awake. On the other hand
if he want -'d to sleep all he had to do
was to etart to real a sermon, 'I'heu
sleep came in a few seconds. Lord Itose-
bcry, we are told, replied that it was
his practice to choose the leaser evil, and
he preferred want of sleep to reading
sermons. ---London Globe.
•.p
SI 1 Washington, D. C. and 'Return,
via Philadelphia.
Front Suspension Bridge, Friday,
February 13th, via Lehigh Valley R. R.
`Pickets good ten days. Particulars, 54
King street east, Toronto, Ont.
tions of tit! little Pekinese spaniel,
which is a fv1lisively reserved for im-
perial use4:'gntae an order thus:
For th . nr,, la : it be like that of
a lion, avid, to be carried in
the .j ,m4 ,.; olden robe, or the
color tp ;�- ,7ralftlack, bear or
white.'`t'i 'i elike a dragon, so
that trete 7ImtitImay ,be a dog appropriate
to every oostutame."
His Pay.
"How much?" asked the bridegrooni,
addressing the Atchison clergyman who
had just married them.
"Well," the parson replied' "the law
allows me $2.50,"
Thereupon the groom produced a half
dollar and said; "Here is 50 cents; that
ewhile."—rlWilson Crlob,. mvill remake it $3."—Xansas City Journal.
lick?.%A.A. A` t,: J#:- '0"
115i � f fit�tk 5 � t+ 41;1 ' pti .1' .O . Liana. PAW.. "
Write for Weekly Price Lists,
JOHN HALLAiM -
Shipments Solitiited.
TORONTO, ONT.. .
.r y'+< 14No..prs + 4;s• 1X. i, kiellet4"-,uses _+.a;.,A
MitreratsI',iuit>ient Co., Limited:
•Sonne time he 1: had a bad attack of
Quinsy, whieh laid me up for two weeks
and cost a let 'of money.
Finding gm lunmp again forming in
nw throat, •1 bathed freely with MIN-
.AILIYS LINIMENT, and, saturating a
cloth with the liniment, left it on all
eight,
Next morning the swelling was gone
and I attributed the warding off of an
nttack of leititisy 'to the free use of
M1'ARD'S LINIMENT- '
C,, F. WORDEN.
T FAVOR OTF.:13
`tzk 99
neat a the Sphinx I"
THE MOST PERFECT MATCHES YOU EVER STRUCK
ass In Cnn*da, ask for Eddy's Matches
St, John.
The Unexpected.
"Bet yon a dinner," said Rivers, in an
undertone, "she laces to the rear when
he gets off "
"You're on," responded Brooks. •
"I beg you pardon," said the fair
maiden, flashing a radiant smile on
Brooks; "but I am a trifle lame. May
I ask you to help me off the ear!"
An hour or two later.
"I judge," remarked Rivera, as they
sat down to the dinner he was paying
for, "that the beauteous damsel over-
heard us,"
Minard's Liniment Cures Colds, etc,
Office Boy Humor.
Some time ago an office boy, answer-
ing the telephone for the first time in
hie life, and not knowing how to use it,
was told thee, when the bell rang, he
was to answet 1t.
When, therefore, he heard it Ting, he
picked up the receiver and shouted:
Hello: 'Who's there?"
The answer calve back: "I'm 103."
i'Go on," said the boy. "It's time you
were dead."—Tit-Bits.
Minard's L• iniment Cures Garget in
Cows.
▪ ®sill
PITTSBURG
---
Traffic of the District Exceeds that
of Five Leading Seaports.
(Pittsburg Press.)
George Washington, then 23 years of
age, located Pittsburg 153 years ago as
the "gate of the west," and prophesied
that a settlement built here was
hound to grow and flourish beyond the
imagination.
Allegheny county covers a large area,
valued' with improvements for assess-
ment at over .$1,000,000,000. Its popula-
tion is over 760,000, and there are 25,-
000,000 people within one day's ride. Our
fuel resources and rail and water facil-
ities are unparalleled, more coal than
underlies all Englammd and twioe as much
mined in a year as in all Russia, and
2,000,000 tone more than the production
of France. The estimated centre of
50,000 ,square miles of coal. Fourteen
railroads enter Pittsburg and five great
trunk lines centre here. The clouds of
smoke by day and the flaring furnaces
by night attest the greatness• of our in-
dustries. Gigantic and stately public
buildings show forth the faith of our
people and the performance of our com-
munity. Miles and miles of boulevards
and paved streets, and 250 miles of elec-
tric lines, 1,000 miles of natural gas pipe
lines, and over 1,000 acres of parks pro-
vide civic convenience and comforts
that are unsurpassed. At the Union
station it is said that a passenger train
arrives or departs on an average of
about every two minutes each 24 hours.
The total record is 1,000 passenger trains
daily in and out of Pittsburg.
Our total annual traffic by river and
rail for 1907 was estimated at 140,000,-
000 tons. In 1006 our freight traffic,
exclusive of intransit, required 3,300,000
ears, an average of 10,000 per day.
Combine the tonnage of New York,
London, Liverpool, Hamburg and Ant-
werp, the world's greatest ports, and
still Pittsburg is in the lead.
The banking capitalized strength of
the banks of the Pittsburg district is
caiculated. to he $5,000,000, more than
the eomnbined capital of the Bank of
England, all the organized banks of
Scotland and Ireland. the Imperial
Bank of Germany and the Imperial
Bank of Russia, and $18,000,000 greater
than the capital and surplus of the
banks of Chicago and Baltimore com-
bined. Our banking capital and sur-
plus are 48 per cent. of our deposits,
and our bank resources $1,308 per capita.
Gold Laid Ali=<'1 t
Where Negro Labor Doesn't Pay.
Guaranteed for 20 years
FREE for selling 4 dozen Co-
balt Gold Inkless pons at 6e-.
each. These pens write a
beautiful color by simply dip-
ping in water. No ink- re-
quired. Write to -day. We
trust yen with the pens, sell
them and return the money
mullein tide litfle beauty
(Cold
Finished Watch
ee
tl;Oa.T2iOL51 PEOf�IICO.
P 130
ISSUE NO. 6, .i )09
*12410.2.
HELP WANTED.
A OZNTs WAN'TDD TO WORI'I UP TDA
Cil route, Alfred Tyler, London, Ont.
W1 D WANT Rtaianlete WOMEN, A.Lt4
over Canada to work for us during
their spare hours, selling our high grade
Perfumes, Toilet Requisites, Teas, Coffees,
etc, No references necessary. Work pleaa-
art and remuuerative. The Home Specialties
Co.. Tranby Avenue, Toronto, Canada.
A Westchester Legend.
There is a curious story of mingled
quaintness and superstition told about
the building of the mill dawn across the
Pocantico, near to Philipse Castle, at
Tarrytown. Lord Philipse postponed the
erection of the church of the Hollow in
order to complete the dam, but the
dant burst each time he tried to build
it.
In his distress he was approached by
Harry, his old slave. Harry told his
master that in a dream the Lord of
Heaven had been revealed to him when
the Lord said the church must be built
first if the dam was to remain firm when
constructed. Philipse followed old Har-
ry's advice, --From the Westchester
County Magazine.
"The Southern colored: people coat ale
$8 a month iu food." said the manager
of one of time biggest fauns in California
to me, "arid they don't do $20 worth of
work. You see plainly there is no use
paying them $15 a'month wages, or the
balance ' would be on the wrong side.
Mexican greasers cost us between $8 and
$0 for food a month, but they will do a
good $1,50 worth of work a dry.
"13ut take your husky young foreigner
or native born American worker. I•Te
costs less—about $6.a Montle , when you
are catering' nn a big sale, but be
wants a choicer class of feed; but then
he works. .:I ran afford to' pay such
young fellows $2 or $2.50 'a day and
ave a bigger margin of profit than for
the cheaper unskilled labor. Everything
,l1as got to make ,good on this farm on
the profit side. of 'accounts, from a blade
e• 4 4
A WINDSOR LADY'S APPEAL,
FARMS TO RENT.
,h` TOOK FARM TO RIIINT—A FINE STOCK
k7 farm of 126 acres, flve Milos north of
London. on Proof Line road; grand opportun-
ity for right, party Enquire W. 5, John-
son. Arva t'. 'im., Ont. _
FOR EXCHANGE.
AnMaoAyidFOR
iOntriny Smyyte,44ab t
street. Louden. Ont.
MEDICAL.
Q URE CURE FOR THE NEXT THIRTY
I, days: $2.50; one half regular price. Our -
tis Asthma .Remedy. 51 Richmond Rost Tor-
onto, Ont. r
LAND WANTED.
8460.0,:7 CASH
PAID FOR
South African Volunteer Land Warrants
If substitute papers properly executed.
iweke eight draft with papers attached.
First National Realty Co.
Winnipeg, Man.
Peference—.Merchants' Bank.
OUTLINED PROGRAMME.
The Laymen's Missionary Movement
has just announced the programme for
the National Missionary Uongress, to
be held in Toronto, March 31st to .Aspen
4th.
It opens with a meeting for clergy-
men and theologioal students, to be ad-
dressed
ddressed by Robert Speer, of New York,
and other leaders, and the regular ses-
sions of the Congress begin with an
evening meeting, with an address on"The
World's Debt to the Missionary.". The
themes for the different sessions are
such as: "The Victorious Progress of
Missions," "'ire Place of the Olu rch in
the Making of the Nation," "How to
Lead the Church to its Highest Mission-
ary- Efficiency," "Canada's National Mis
sionary Policy."
Besides prominent missionary leaders
from Canada and the United States rend
opromnent returned missionaries, there
will be addresses by a commission. of lay-
men from Great Britain.
Minard's Liniment Cures Distemper.
4,410
Origin of Californian Petroleum.
In a recent paper.A. M. Edwards dis-
cusses the origin of the petroleum of
California. The relation which has
been proi„od to exist between 'present-
day deposits of marine diatoms and
asphalt and petroleum, suggests that the
more ancient sources may Imave heel a
like origin: elle petroleum' of.CaUi-
fornia may be the result of the decom-
position of ancient beds of marine dia.-
tome.
To All Women: I will send free with full
instructions, my home treatment which
postively cures Leucorrhoea, Ulceration,
Displacements, Falling of the Womb, Pain-
ful or Irregular periods, Uterine and Ovar-
tan Tumour or Growths, also Hot Flushes,
Nervousness. Melanoholy, Pains In the Heed,
Back or Bowels, Kidney and Bladder troubles,
where caused by, weakness peculiar to our
sex. You can continue treatment at home at
a means O'of wn Medical' Adviser," a so sen12 cents a week. t
free on request, Write to -day. Address,
hit's. M. Summers, Box„H 8, Windsor, Ont.
Color of Human Hi ir.
In time tail 111 u,....,”, flail' Color we
Had that citiidren are not ordinarily
darker than thei+' darker parent. Con-
sequently, if both parents Clave ttaxen
hair the children willh ave hair of the
same sort. from this principle, applied
generally. it follows that when both
parents have alt organ in a low condi-
tion of development it will be so also
in all of their children. 'flit, principle
explains the persisting or increasing de-
generation in the descendants 'of two de-
generate parents.—Professor C. B. Dav-
enport, in Science.
neons , ..m,..,er•.� .sass
With most typewriters this is a period
of transition from the old to the new.
The Underwood is tho pioneer visible
writer. It is long past the experimental
stage. It is sate to buy an Underwood.,
UNITED TYPEWRITER CO. '
LIMITED
7 Adelaide St. East, TORONTO
He Guessed It.
Strauger—Can you tell me where John
Jones lives?
Native—That's his house up th' road
a little ways—th' red brick.
Stranger—And Sam Smith—where
does he live?
Native In that white frame house
jist across th' road from Jones.
Stranger—They are close neighbours, it
would seem?
Native—Yew bet they air, stranger;
neither uv 'em kin borrow a cent from
th' other.
IFREEtaOWGAANDA DIAMOND
SHELL RING
�4lmlirj_ Gold Point only 'e dozen
l .15k,.60. each. These pens write a
beautiful color by simply dip-
ping in water. Write today
nd we will send pens and
big preinitun list. In a short time you can
win this "Electric Sparkler" and also an
elegant chain.
QUEEN CITY SUPPLY CO.,
Dept.4 0l Toronto, Ont.
The Usual Formula.
A little boy wanted to give his mother
a birthday present, and he did not know
what to give her, so at last he decided to
give her a Bible, After he had bought it
he did not know what to put on the
front page, so, after looking through
some of the books in the library, he de-
cided to put the following on: 'To dear
mother, with the author's compliments."
I n 1968,
Grandpa (peevishly)—Well, y'can tally
all you like about Rocketships, Monor-
ail -fliers and this here. new line of New
York and London night boats, but give
me the good old times. Yolks didn't used
to be in such a tearing hurry. In my
day, if we hiked along at 65 miles an
hour, we though it was fast enough for
anybody" Peek,