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The Herald, 1909-06-04, Page 6Only those who staffer from Piles can know the agony, the burning, throbbing, shooting, stabbing pains which the ailment causes, and the way it wrecks the sufferer's life. f who used to suffer blessedby piles, but whom it has cured. One such grateful person is Mrs. Elizabeth Taylor, of Greenwood Avenue, Toronto. She says :—" For four long years I suffered acutely from 'bleeding piles. During that time I spent an immense amount of money on 'remedies' and doctor's pre- scriptions but got no ease. Zam-Buk was different to everything else 1 had tried, and it cured me. I am grateful for the cure, and as I have never had piles once since, I ljeow the cure is permanent.''. Another ths—irful A. Gardiner, of Catalina, Trinity Bay. She says :—"In my case Zam-Buk effected a wonderful cure. For twelve years I had been troubled with blind, bleeding, and protruding piles. I had been using various hinds of ointments, etc,, but never came across anything to dome good until I tried Zam-Buk, which cured me. That this may be the means of helping some sufferers from piles to try Zam-3uk, is the wish of one who has found great relief." Zam-Buk is a purely herbal balm and should be in every home. Cures cuts, bums, bruises, eczema, ulcers, blood - poisoning, prairie itch, sunburn, blisters, sore feet, summer sores, and all diseases and injuries of the skin, etc. All druggists and stores at goc, box, or trom Zam-Ruk Cn , Toronto, for price. The Man Behind the Blast. L At the head of the rock drilling and blasting gangs in the New York Central yards is a little Irishman who knows the science of breaking up granite cliffs from alpha to 'omega. He knows rock as well as asouthern epicure knows 'possum. It is a rare pleasure to see hint go bout his task. He picks out unerringly he weak spots in the rocky wall before um, probes them deep with cunningly 'anteddrills, and then breaks the solid tuff into tiny fragments. All the time 7,000 workmen are toiling the yards about him, and the trains g and going every four niin- positi • is - onerous, yet his - t mhtly.on his ua'�ir'orry not a rare Took Issue. audience off women, did he?eaAnd took for his text, `Let your women p silence in the churches?" That st have seemed like a deliberate ult to all of you." rs. Upmore—"Quite the contrary, ought to have heard how he ted Paul for writing those words!" WHAT THEY LOST. (Toronto Globe,) e machinists lost $80,000 by a strike h has been regarded as a failure. unfortunate that sting the state there of the labor market t by holding back so perishable a odity. TO ME ROOT _ OF NIS TROUBLE Dodd's Kidney Pills cured . Wright's Backache. •d differed' for Several Years t the Old Reliable Kidney Re- y Gave Him Q' ick Relief. ngton, ask,, May 31.-_ (Special) Dodd'EeKidney Pills cured me of e, and I have recotsmended others who ,have ale?, been ctn.- hese are the words of William a farmer, well known Here, "I I inherited lily trouble," air. continues. "At times for sever - it -Wiese very severe. I also suf- in . morn - d iter tate. in anylP mouth troubled with dizziness and my itdry my urinand sh and there was e• reatment I could find gave me patient relief till finally heifer - my kidneys were the root of lin; I determined to try Dodd's ills: Four boxes cured meal right went at his, trouble aerf- e-examined his symptoms, and wed him that Kidneys Disease rouble,' Do as much for your - if your symptoms=point to dis- - diseased"kidneys the cure Is id's.. Kidney !sills wit do. it. r fail, bored in Melbourne. Globe: Millionaire Burn as said to have made his money in Pittsburg, and to have been stricken with a mortal seizure in Melbourne, Australia. Be- fore death cane, however, he is said to have made a will leaving these great gifts- to Mr. Kidd: [Burn was said to have left an immense sum of money to Mr. David Kidd, of Toronto, to build iw mission in that city.] The Globe wir- ed the Pittsburg Dispatch for informa- tion regarding the deceased. In due course a reply was received saying that no man of the name, millionaire or oth- erwise, was known there, and yet he is credited with amassing his great for- tune in the place. Still not entirely satisfied, the Globe continued the search of knowledge of Mr. Burn, and yesterday Mr, E. S. Cun- ningham, editor of the Melbourne . Ar- gus, one of the visiting delegates to the Imperial Press Conference, was ques- tioned on the natter of the millionaire's death in the antipodean city. "I have lived in Melbourne for forty years," said Mr. Cunningham, "and I can run over the names of practically all the million- aires in Melbourne or Australia, but Burn was certainly not 0110 of them. Had a millionaire died in our town, We as newspaper men would certainly havo heard of it. But I cannot recall any such case. I'm sorry I cannot help you out in any way, but you can take it for granted that Millionaire Burn did not die in Melbourne or in Australia, ei- ther." $•S The Little Girl's -weet hoc..';, Eugene Walter, at a dinner at the An sonia, was accused of pessimism. "Well," said Mr. Walter, "I am not a pessimist, but I don't believe that hu- man nature is by any means angelic. We are all much alike. The best we can do is to curb our faults and favor our virtues." "What faults should I curb?" a pretty young lady asked. "Wethink yolWalter, you'd have aboutt the same faults to curb as a little girl I talked to yes- terday. She's a charming little girl, and as we conversed alone in the drawing room while waiting for her father and mother to come down I said to her: "'Have you got a sweetheart?' "She smiled and wriggled. 'Meth,' she said softly. "'Yell,' said I, '1'11 give you a quarter if you'Il tell me who he is.' "'Tommy,' she answered, in a low voice, and 1 gave her the quarter. su"A few minutes afterward she said "'Now, if you'll give me another quar- ter, I'll tell you who my other sweet- heart is." BETTEi THAN SPANKING. Spanking does not cure children of bed-wetting. There is a constitutional cause for this trouble. Mrs. M. Sum- mers, Box W. 8, Windsor, Ont., will send free to any mother her successful home treatment, with full instrutions. Send no money, but write her to -day if your children trouble you in this way. Don't the chil the chances are it help t.This tre tme t also cures adults and aged people troubled with urine dif- ficulties by day or night. CONCERNING FISH EGGS, Simp 0 T1 the 5,000, this havo the A The eggs ture spawn water would in wa groes, tempe it flo white period The temper things done o ery as with 1 desirab a bat or trou done b ing the Whei water into th off, in the egg be brief ti ting off wend pera h would b ibly rad surrounye bt water th be accel about rt that mi week oa in a day The Apple Country of Europe. Normrlmandy is the apple country of Eu- rope. Germany is its best custer. The apples which could not be sold were turned into 73 million gallons of cider, which is the favorite beverage Of the in- habitants of Northern Prance, le Means by Which the Hatchin f Them, May be Expediated, Th g Aquarium received lately from United States Fisheries Bureau 000 white perch eggs—the eggs of species are very small—which been placed in h.-tching jars in quariuni's model fish hatchery. period of depends largelyc onathe tempera- oftion. of the water in which they are ed or placed. Whitefish eggs in of a tempeture of 58 degrees ter toff autemperin atureout hofe53dade-- that being about the present rature of the Crot' - water as ws into the Aquarium's tanks, WI eggs require for hatching a of from fifteen to twenty days. susceptibility of fish eggs to ature makes it possible to do with them that could not be terwise. If in such,.a hatch. the Aquarium, for instance is limited spaoe, it should be le to expediate the hatching of ch of eggs to make room in jars ghs for other eggs, this can be y the simple expedient of rais temperature of the water, a the eggs are in the hatchery is all the time kept running e jars or troughs and running constant circulation, to 'give gs aeration but this circulation suspended for a comparatively mo without injury. 13y shut - the inflow of new winter the ture of the standing water in the eggs would then remain e in an hour or two percept - sed by hie warmth of the ding air in the building; and increase of warmth in the e hatching of the eggs Would prated. When little fishes are ady to come out a hatching ght have extended through a n by this means be completed linlcation from this eonsultito requesting particulars the manager of the worl;,e writes a,s follows: "It was on account of an extra auda- cious robbery committed in a jewelry store at Marseille ilial a trial was made to utilize our extra strong, polished Plats glass as a —,greater protection against the .smashing. of the show win- dows. While an ordinary plate glass, such as is usually put in jeweler's show windows, was smashed to atoms by one single stroke -with a metal 'trimmer' mallet, the sante attempt to break the Valle polie' furnished by our works proved entirely fruitless. They then proceeded to throw a large piece of cast iron with extreme violence at the show window, and all they succeeded in doing was to make a small hole into it measur- ing only a few centimeters. Thereupon several shots of a revolver with steel cast balls were fired at the show win- daw with no further damage to the window than the entering of the balls into it to the depth of a few millimeters. The plate glass which will stand all such usage is ordinarily made of a thickness of from twenty to twenty-five milli- meters (0.787 to 0.984 inch); but, if de- sired, a heavier plate can be made with- out in the least diminishing the trans- parency of the glass."—United States Consular Reports, OVER 1,400 PUBLIVATIQNS IN. CANADA According to the 1209 Edition of the Can- adian Newspaper Directory, just out, Canada and Newfoundland can boast of 133 daily papers, 1,016 weekly or semi-weekly, 262 monthly or sem[-monthly, and 1.4 publiehed less frequently. These figures can be relied on, as the Can - the oldestwand�largeeser teAdvertising Agency in the Dominion, A. McKim, Limited, of Ken- treal and Toronto. This Is the Sixth Edition of their Directory, which fills a very real need lu Canada, and deserves a place on the desk of every business man, whether he Is ax advertiser or not, In addition to listing and describing Can- adian periodicals, the Directory supplies a comprehensiep gazetteer giving the population, the chief In41.1stries. the railway, telegraph, banking facilities, and. other Interesting lea - tuna of every newspaper city, town and vil- lage in Canada. ' The book contains over 430 pages. It is splendidly bound`'and •ls certainly a credit alike to the publishers and to Canadian news- papers generally A, McKim Liu{ ed, are particularly well qualified to edit td publish this, the stand- ard book of reference on Canadian publlca- tions. They are the pioneers in the Adver- tising Agency field to the Dominion, the McKim Agency having been founded in Mon- treal AnnsJanuary.KiS wwno 'is stilyears the head of the business. Dacknowledged leaderss me in this liine inhave been the Canada, and the Agency business has been developed from a very small beginning—then perform- ing only the functions ofthemiddleman—to a very large producing enterprise which rens into the millions. Tears ago a the requisites for(issuccessful l advenized rtisingnIs ofa thorough knowledge of advertising .mediums, and they began the publication of the Can- adian Newspaper Directory, which is now recognized as the most complete and accurate work of the kind published. -The price, express or postage prepaid, is :.0o. 4•♦ Song Birds Die From Cold. Great numbers of birds migrating north have been caught here by the cold wave and storm and hundreds have died. There was- one flight of estimated fif- teen hundred cock rob s> whigh alight- ed on the; norma' a4 grounds and have remained here fora couple of days. The neat most numerous bird is the hera mit thrush and also there are a few bluebirds. Snell a visitation of feather- ed songsters has never been soon in Winona before. Citizens generally have provided them with food as many of them have seemed to • lie in a starving condition.—Winona correspondence St. Paul Despatch. Minard's Liniment used by Phy- sicians. Bees and Sparrows Fight for Tree. . A spa •n owst an 1wa swarm&loft bees orgthdozen ie possession �e e n of the house, Mainld street, waswtnessed to -day by a number of interested spectators. The colony of bees swarmed around the tree, and, discovering a hole about forty feet from the ground, flew in. The first of the array, which filled the,air like a miniature cloud, had hard- aentered rfinreecsfcne out uf g theink feathers and chattering with anger. There were six sparrows living in the atree, and gallant£or fighfive fore e spossess on out f their home, but the bees were too much. for them, and after a time they slowly flew off, fighting to the last.—Derby cor- respondence Philadelphia Press, As for Minaret's and take no other. The Lunatic's Thought. The chaplain of a large private asy- lum in Yorkshire, England, recently ask- ed a brother clergyman to preach to the inmates em a Sunday morning during his absence. He said to 'him: "preach them a good sermon, tor though insane on some points they are very intelli- gent." The preacher talked to them of,° Africa and India and of heathen moth- ers who threw their babes into the sae- reel River Ganges as offerings to the gods. Tears streamed down the face of one lietener. When asked by the clergy- man afterward what part of thesermon had affected him the lunatic replied: "Sir, I was thinking it was a pity your mother didn't throw you into the Gan- ger." English Herring Fishing. The English east coast herring fish- ing has been brought to a close and the boats are being rapidly made up and the crews paid off. At Yarmouth and Lowestoft the total catch has been in round figures, 77,36" lasts, or 1,011,152,000 fish. A BASKET FULL of clean, sweet•sanelling linen is obtained with half the toil and half the time if Sunlight Soap is used. Sunlight shortens the day's work, but lengthens the life of your clothes, 60I Malaria. Malaria ever has been, and is yet, the great barrier against the invasion of the tropics by the white races, not has its injurious influence been confined to the deaths that it causes, for these gaps in the fighting line might be filled by fresh levies drawn from the wholesome North. Its fearfully depressing and de- generating effects upon even those who recover from its attacks have been still caore njurious. It has students of tropical disease and conditions that no small part of that singular apathy and indifference which steal over the mind and body of the white colonist in the tropics, numbing even his moral sense and alternating with furious outbursts of what the French have termed "tropical wrath," characterized by unnatural cruelty and abuoimai disregard for the rights of others, is the deadly work of malaria.It is the most powerful cause, not merely f the extinction of the white colonist in t n the tropics, but of the pecu- liar degeneracy --.physical, mental, and moral --which is apt to steal over even the survivors who succeed in retaining a foothold. Two particularly ingenious investigators have even advanced the theory that the importation of malaria, into the islands of Greece and the Ital- ian peninsula by soldiers returning from the African and Southern .Asiatic con- quests had much to do with accelerat- ing, if not actually promoting, the clas- sic if of both of these superb civili- zations. To come nearer home. there can be little question that the baneful, persist- ent influence of malaria has had much to do with both the degeneracy of the Southern "cracker," or "mean white," and those l tive ferocity in all c t lasseswhich of takemt the form of White Cap raids and lynching mobs.—Dr. Woods Hutchinson, in The Outing Magazine for May. I was cured of Bronoliitis and Asthma by MINA•RD'S LINIMENT. MRS. A. LI:V'x.'`iST rl'E. Lot 5, P. E. L I was cured of a severe attack of Rheumatism by MINARD'S LIbNLMENT. Mahone Bay. JOHN MADER. I was cured of a severely sprained leg by MINARD'S LINIMENT. 13ridgewatJOsi mA A. WYN.ACIIT. THE FARMER AND HIS DOGS. (Grimsby Independent.) I have seen a man drive into town from the country, followed by two or three dogs. He would tie up his horse town,and remain in hours, and all thewhile his dogs had nothing to do but run helter skelter through the town, followed by about town dogs. Lawns, flower beds, garden plots; verandahs, back yards or front yards are all the same to them. Fight- ing and snarling one moment, leaping and playing the next, raciug and romp- ing the third and scratching and paw- ing, ruining and tearing up everything in their path the next. Keep Minard's Liniment in house. Prevailing Winds in Antarctic. In the reports of the recent Antarctic expedition frequent allusion is made to the prevailing southerly winds and blit, zards. The fact that these winds con- t'inue to within such a short distance of the South Pole throws doubt on the view that a great anticyclonic area lies over that region. If such were the case light variable breezes might rather be expected so near the pole. _ e of Michigan Therviolinimt cannot give the dentist being header pointers on doing bridge work. itie - .... .. v. J_,, 1.e711`s7 AGENTS WANTED. AGENTS WANTED—OTHERS CLLS�AIS $2e weekly—why not you? Alfred Tyler, London. Ont. HELP WANTED, W ANTED—LADIES TO DO PLAIN AND light sewing at home, whole or spare time; pay; work sent any distance: charges op id; Mend stamp for particulars, National Manufacturing Co„ Montreal, Que. A DelaGEROU'S LAW. (Toronto News.) According to the Detroit News, IVlictri- gan judges complain that the indeterm- ine to sentence law places too rnuclr pow- • er in the hands of wardens and Mardon boards, Nominally, the courts fix the Ien.gt.h of sentences, but in practice the wardens do so. .A judge may impose the„ e minimum penalty- for an offence, but it remains in the hands of the warden to double the term if he sees fit. "'' It is argued that this is a dangerous authority to leave in the hands of a non - judicial official, who may be governed by personal motives. HEALTHY LITTLE CHILDREN. A mother should not expect that her children will escape all the ills to which babyhood and childhood are subject, but she can do much to lessen their severity and make baby's battle for health easily won. Baby's Own Tablets should be kept in every home where there are little ones. They are mothers' ever -ready help and Baby's best friend. The action of the Tablets is gentle but thorough. They cure colic, indigestion, constipation, diae teeth- ingrhoea, allay time, destoyhworms a and promote healthy, natural sleep. And the mother has the guarantee of a government an- opiatest that narcotic. medicine Sold bycontains mediri,te dealers or by nail at 25 cents a Lox from the Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont, Well Paid' for Writing Ads. Khighest saIa ied adverclaims eemment writer in the world. An agency in that town says in plain terms that the salary of one of its advertising writers."at the present time is £500 sterling a week, which is almost $2,933 in American money," The statement is contained in a letter to White's Class Advertising, which had referred to an English agency which paid one of its writers £400 sterling a week, as having reached the record top not* in salaries for that line of work. '_---ter • s Minard's Liniment Lumberman's Friend. Human isms. . Some roses are known by the cheeks they decorate. To make the most of the figure six turn it bottom upward. The surgeon is ready to slash any.�oir1 thing except his bill. It's a wonder that more nen don't become. rouiid'Shouldered from stooping tq .feller:: Aflter having ben so mad he couldn't say things, a man begins to boast of leis wonderful self-control. A woman nearly always slums up beat in an argument when she doesn't know\ anything about the subject on tap. Most visits are worth while in order to get back Home again. You can tell a rich man by the way he doesn't have to pretend to be. aWhrl has sign ishe will smileatyou halfl ralimile away. What a man likes about the long walks he takes is how he can boast about how much Longer they are. A Woman's Sympathy bilAre heavdiscouraged? aoads yIsuyourepa n a heavy physical burden? I know what cthese mean to delicate women—I have ure myself. discouraged,een want to relt ieve ;yourobur- dens. notr'svbill end ntdo this for stop and will 11youwill assist me. box of you o remedy Which hens been placetei in my hands to be given away. Perhaps this one box will cure you—it has done so forowill If f r 2eii(the happy of and postage stamp). Your letters held confi- dentially. MRS x . 32 ite CURIUM y for W1 dser,rO t, Summoned,, "Colne over and see nee," "Sorry, old man, but I have an en• gagernent with my tailor in 20 min. Utes" "Gecl but you're getting swell! Couldn't break such an important date, eh?" "No, The date is in the court rooms;''' —Cleveland Leader. State Saves Waterways. Efforts to monopolize the waterways d off private tthe State corporations author - es. .•eee,1.•lYA'.`Area.p •.{,121, iY.a."kN as• Pq::f4 THE EST EN PAIL Can't Help But Lose Its (loops and Fall to Pieces. You Want Some. thing Better Don't Foal? Then Ask for Pails and Tullis Made of Each One a Solid, Hardened, Lagting Mess Without a Hooper Seam lust as Good as Eddy's Matches