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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Herald, 1909-08-06, Page 6Eminent . Toronto Physicians Failed to Cure Rbeumatis Miss Flora Chapman Vividly Dee- cribes Her Sufferings and Ulti- mate Cure With "Nerviline." "After being an enthusiastic user of Nerviline for years, I feel it my duty to tell you personally what your won- derful preparation has done for me.. "I suffered torture from rheumatism and heart trouble, tried scores, of so- called remedies, consulted for weeks and months with ,Toronto's most eminent physicians,, bat derived only slight bene - "A friend insisted on my using Nervi - line, and to my surprise a vigorous rub- bing of this powerful liniment eased. the pains and reduced the stiffness in my Joints, . I continued to use Nerviline and was permanently cured. I am now Per- fectly well, an dfor three years have had no rheuma- CURED tism at all. I know many fami- 3 lies where no oth- er medicine but YEARS Nerviline is kept— it is so useful in nnrtor ailments like earache, toothache, neuralgia, coughs, colds, lumbago' ani sciatica. I call Nerviline my "Life Guard," and urge all to try its merit." Dec. 17th, 113. Palmerston avenue, Toronto. Refuse anything else offered instead of Nerviline, 25c. per bottle, five for $1. All dealers, or The Catarrhozone Co., Kingston, Ont. e 4 00 ROW A "DIP" WORKS. As a usual thing the pickpockets vary their mehtods to suit circumstances. On- ly the lower grade dips work in pairs. These are the variety who operate on street cars, elevated station platforms and similar places where they will find crowds of pushing people and at the same time have opportunity to escape if detected. One of the pair shoulders a victim roughly while the other does the work and makes a "get -away." Arrests are frequent, but convictions rare, be- cause the man captured seldom has the loo t. Not but that the higher grade dips work in such places. The difference is that they work in groups and choose times when the prosperous passengers will be in the majority. During the fash- ionable shopping hours and after the theatre at night are considered harvest times. One method is to blot& the exit as the intended victims are about to alight, and in the jumble make the "touch" Provided the vicem discovers his loss within a minute, he is too late because the car or train has sped on. Last winter a trio of dips worked a cle- ver method in Chicago. Garbing them- selves in evening clothes, they mingled In fashionable crowds in big cafes, the- atre exits and railroad stations. One of the party was always hopelessly drunk and the others, apparently actiitte the part of Samaritans, were hard put try- ing to keep him on his feet. With all their care, However, he would stumble occasionally and fall into groups of Iadies and gentlemen, Invariably the sober companions had apologized and taken their charge away before anyone discovered the loss of valuables.—Prom "The Science of the `Dip,' "iin the July Bohemian. b • Minard's Liniment Cures Listemper. • • TRAGEDY. • ' "And do you truly love me, Gwen- dolyn?" asked our hero (for it was in- deed he), anxiously. "With all my soul, Reginald," she murmured, moving away closer. I would 'do anything for youl" "Then,—and his voice shook with emotion—"would you slip me a little loan of $5 till payday?" She thrust him from her and spurned him with tier tiny foot. "Wretch!" she cried, "would you strike a woman"—Cleveland Leader. er Deer Through Kitchen Window. A deer chased by dogs jumped through the kitchen window at the home of Chas. H. McLure, in South Ryegate, hurriedly leaving through another window. The deer was then followed by a num- ber of men and after a long pursuit was found in an exhausted condition from loss of blood caused by being cut by the window glass.—St. Albans Messenger. ♦s0 Waxed Paper, Every careful housewife should have plenby of waxed paper or parafine pa- per about the house. It is of the greatest value in preserv- ing eatables from the air and keeping' them properly moist :1n the sandwich basket it is indispen- sable Cake wrapped in it will keep ,moist and fresh for a much longer time, titan if put directly into tiie'bps.' When the paper has e''become stioky, run cold water on .rt` and it may be used again. Cheese wrapped ' up in it 'and put in the refrigerator, will keep . - a week, looking as if freshly cut. • Fruit merchants wrap fine fruit in it. This is practicable also for the picnic basket. If a plate of sandwiches is prepared beforehand for a luncheon or any other purpose, where they. enlist; .be daintily perfect, it is a . good plan.:to pile them up on a;plate and then wrap plate and all in the parafine paper. And He Lived Happy Afterward. A sailor with a cork leg was once ship- wrecked on a cannibal island. He saw preparations being mare for the feast, of which he was to ba'. the piece de re- sistance, and with commendable presence of mind he asked the chief (2"chef") if he did not .,think it would be as well if he tasted a sample first.. The chief thought it an excellent suggeition,`.s and so the man held up hie cork leg whilea sample was cut from'tt. The elyief de- cided the man was to old, tough' and tasteless, and so his life was spared.— Cleveland Leader. . PALE, LANGUID GIRLS Weak Blood During Development May Easily Cause a Life of Suffering. A Tonic Such as Dr. Williams' Pink Pills is Needed to Build EJp the Blood and Give New Strength. At no time in her life does a girl stand in greater need of pure red blood and the strength which it alone can give her, than when she is developing into woman- hood. It is then that any inherited ten- dency to anaemia or consumption needs. only the slightest encouragement to rap- idly develop. This danger is, especially threatening to girls who are confined long hours indoors,. in stores,°offices and factories—girls depressed by worry and cares. All these conditions quickly im- pc.verish the blood. and are among the most common causes of sickness• among growing girls and young women.. If at any time a girl finds that, her strength is failing and she is becoming pale and: nervous, has no ambition and is languid,. it is a certain sign that her blood is fail- ing to meet the demands upon it, be- cause it is impure and thin. It is at 'a time like this that Dr. WO - Hams' Pink Pills are invaluable to young women and growing girls. They build up the blood, make it rich, red and pure,. tone the nerves and give new health and strength to every part of the body. They have cured so many cases of this kind that they may truly be called a specific for the common diseases of girlhddod. Miss Minnie Smith, Creighton street, Halifax, says: "I have proved that Dr;. Williams' Pink Pills are all that is• claim- ed for them in cases similar to mine. About three years ago I suddenly. began to run down. I grew so weak that I could hardly attend to my school stud- ies. I suffered from headaches, my heart would palpitate violently at .the least exertion, and my appetite was very fickle. I tried. doctors' medieine and emulsions, but the treatment did not help me. Then I started. taking Dr, Wil- liams' Pink Pills and after taking seven 01 eight. boxes I was stronger'than ever before. I feel that I•. -owe ray, present good health to Dr. Williams.' Pink Pills, BETTED. THAN SPANKING. Spanking does not euro 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 blame the child, the chances; are it can't help it. This treatment also cures adults and aged people troubled with urine dif- ficulties by day or night. ,,, .. _. d.•.► Some Hot Weather Don'ts. Don't 'take long snowshoe tramps. The exertion at beat is exhausting and should be avoided this weather. Don't attend hockey matches. 'Ile Imeeitement heats the blood and may lead to prostration. Don't drink hot toddy before going to bed. A highball with a cube of ice in it is just as refreshing .am'id'safer. Don't wear a . double suit of under- wear. Don't wear furs nor of r-muirfe. You can afford to ignore tatefashion for the sake of (health, Don't go skating. Thie ie another form of exercise best avoided while the (mercury is hovering about 'the eighties. Don't eat twelve plates of cabbage *blip at ode dinner. Leave a few for errpper.-Montreal Herald. and I gratefully recommend: them to other ailing girls." Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are sold by, all medicine dealers or will be sent bei mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2,50 by the Dr. Williams' Medicine Co..; Brockville, Ont. 0.r..'., TO Ah1LS?SE THE' ANii'ilAii.S. At a. country fair out in Kansas: a man went up to a tea where some elk were en exhibition, and stared wistfully up at the aibn. I'd like to go in there,." he said to the keeper, "but it would be mean to go in with- out my family, and r cannot afford to pay for my wife and sevonteon children." „AThe keeper "bogsnt. these hilr?aped.. "Every one," staid the -man. ,. "You wait a ,anlnute"said the 'keeper. "I'm going to bring the elk out and let them see lou." .. Some men are, tenet the to have opportunity knock: at the door, theyex- pect him to push' the. electric .button. ,..Mw x, e DON'T .13E AFRAID that Sunlight, Soap will spoil your clothes' , There are no Injurious chemicals in Sun- light Soap to bite holes in even the most delicate fabric. $5,000 are offered to any- one finding adulteration In Sunlight Soap. o,o its, trouts "LOGGED OFF LANDERS." They Follow the Timber Men in the, Northwest. When one of the huge trees in, the. Northwestern forests is to befelled',tlie boss of the timber gang looks over the ground in the vicinity and fir* the best plaee for the fall. If :there ie a .mf1 aka % spot ileac the tree, so .iuuch tl1e:. Deter, as it will.,strike the mu ranee, ivatWli, less.dangee' of splitting 'or be'in Wean; If -the ground is iniad and. s amy,i$}e men gather .branches ofdifferost�ak,.zbs' and ,make an artificia,l bei'&: a >�-t`he branches are' .piled at inferValSagdlerie or fifteen feet apart to a height'of'three or four feet above the ground, says St Nicholas. Any small trees which Might throw the failing tree out- of the eaurse- marked for it are cut down. "; When the direction 'for falling is de- cided upon and the tree's "bed made up," the expert axemen get to work,. one pair . on each side. Sometimes • a whole day isrequired to cut a "gash" in the side of•a fir tree fifteen feet in diam- eter, but the axe handlers cut away steadily, usually following lines which: have been marked around the trunk„ showing the length of the cut, also the, width of the notch which is allowed;. When the apemen ,have cut through: from•four to five feet of the fifteen foot tree, it is ready for the saw gang. The big crosscut sale, twelve or fifteen feet. in length, is b ught up, and its teeth' covered with a sting of oil. They vary front half an a. Ie to one and a half in- ches in length, d every tooth has been Sharpened,to a edge which is as keen as a file can ake it. This is one. of the hardest tasks of the lumberman's work—sawing through the tree trunk. it must be done in a straight Iine, for if the saw should run. "crooked" it map buekie and break, and en that case amen, fissure must be cut., . Tied tale+ tir7Motit the saw is gen- erally indicated when it has ,gone through. the heart of the trunk Sind is half way to the, other side. The enor- mous pressure of the trunk. causes it to sag a little into the;;irole made *by the axes. A cracking sound is heard and this means the beginning of the end. This is .to certify that 11 Have used The saw is pulled omit and two men be- , lT.hrd's Liniment in my family for gin cuttingaway on each side of the years, and consider it the bestliniment fissure:, s on• the market. I have• also: found it me- lte an houf or tarot after the chips have cellent for horsd flesh:. commenced `falling enough has been eut , . (Signed), away tonstart the forest giant, and,. it eo5ries= down. with a crash, which may be heard. a mile away through the still woods.. The piles, of limbs are crushed to the earth and pieces fly in every di- rection. The top branches frequently dig a hole . severer feet deep. The gaps which are thus made in. tate forest by the, rumbermeu are called' by the people of the Northwest the "logged off lands,' so in the footsteps of the axema r and sawn follows the log- ged off lander" ---the man; who would make his home is the heart of the wil4 derness.. If you- ere to travel through the country were the logged off lenders. Courier -Journal. Here you *mild see novel;vvays be which they rime used the great stumps, felt . Wilson's Ply Pads, the best of some of°item have actually heen ztrq0F.411 fly killers', kill both the fifes =into teniporary homes. after ihifs' llreml a jos ben eat down ext oster,o ;fp t l}a and the disease „er�las. f g,tleer rtrapidly decays its all • as '18 a, feee years it may be+iorkie� Retribution.. a shell with the outside ti,•1. "A curse on the man that invented aThen it is an easy nit 'tb a bald spots!" he exclaimed. bole ;in one end for it door• aileVeStatirer But the curse came home to roost, andl three smallholes for windows,'1 ,clean roosted. out the insideto cut down an adjacent With the result that his head is as cedar and split it into shingles for a bald now as au eggplant: roof and the house is ready fob oeartipa- tion when the stove, dishes and furnd tune are put in. If the stump is so sound that it would be too big a task to cut away the inside` of it the settler. sometimes uses one end for a wall of his house, placing logs er planks against it and making a sort of lean-to, Mineral's Liniment Cures Garget In Cows. feet r infer Hats for Horses. A. local newspaper. argues that it es better for both horses and humans to go without, bats in summee, because a French scientist has found that the :tom- erature of a horse is less without a h&t Uhan one, But this editor deep' not, An- nounce his intention of facing the sie- neer sunwithout a .hat, and' doe*, not seem to realize that br.spite of a 'high- er temperatnre the animal ,or' marl "may be better off with'somo protection, 'from sustroke. Dr. W. Blair Reid; vetterinar- inn and pathologist of 'the New York Zoological Park, says that the use of a horse sunbonnet is horse sense. ,This is the opinion of our .Massachusetts agents. We urge.ethat on net account. should. sponges, be used Under` these 'mats, for the minutes the water is a1Ti3orbed the sponge serves no make the head hotter instead of cooler. In hot weather horses should .be:, allowed to drink four times a day. It is also well to sponge off their heads, ears, nostrils and necks with cold water at the same time. "Water is . the first neat need of every animal during the summer months:"—Our Dumb Animals." is the best remedy known i n69E' sunburn, heat rashes, ecgems„ sore feet;, stings and busters.. A skin food! .SU Drngpfats and Stores.—.50e, Calvin as a. Man of the World. Calvin had mane( advantages. He was not a. scholar merely; he was a mean of the world. He had travelled, was familiar with' the life of courts, was on. terms of intimate friendship with malty of the• most distinguished persons of his day.. He had a com- manding intellect, a literary style which was the envy and admiration of the learned. He knew law as well as he did theology: )french as well es he.did Latin. His grasp of a wide range of subjects; as well as his at- tention to detail, were things to mar- vel at. Add to these an inexhaustible patience and a bull'dbg---sacity of purpose, a vivid human interest and en amazing capacity for work, and we• begin to understand' how it was that this penniless and sickly for- eigner, who came ib Geneva in the first instance so utterly.• unknown and with prestige as to figure- in the rec- ords merely as "a Frenchman ' end- ed' by setting bis stamp so inefface- ably upon the .place that it remains there even to our- own' day.— Marta Hornor Lansdale"s ' x. man side Calvin"' in the, Ally 'tune. ISSUE iw. 81, 1909 AGENTS WANTED, ('1 ,A,A'VASS1k RS; RIDGULAR CUSTOM1HRSi freight prepaid; samples 'free or return., able: exclusive territory; salary' or commis - sloe. Alfred Tyler, London, Ont. HELP WANTED. Wilk -rump A Good General Servant who' Can do Cooking. Small Family. HIGHEST WAGES MRS. JOHN. M. EASTWOOD, Hamilton, Ont. Madrid' a Noisy City. • Someone had well divided the Inhabit- ants into two classes: those who go to bed after 3 a. m., and those who get up; before 4. It is true that the streets are never quiet. The stone cutters, who are iliending the sidewalk, began chipping at' efaybreak. Next we heard the electric, oars, with their loud gongs, and the mule carts, clattering over the noisy cobblestones. By breakfast time the sound of the hurdy-gurdy echoed in our oars. Street fakirs shouted their wares and singing beggars, with their weird yodel, roamed up and down all day. Just before dinner the women who cry lottery tickets and evening papers took their stand at the corners, and their' stentorian voices never stopped until' after midnight. Madrid carries no latch -key. The concierge holds it by day, the street watchman by night. Con- sequently the hours of sleep were con- stantly onstantly broken by the sound. of Band- ' clapping, followed by the quick, heavy step of the watchman in response, to his:• mediaeval summons. Altogether) unhes- itatingly pronounce against Madrid as B- rest cure. It is by far the noisiest place. I was. ever in..—Outing Magazine:. Catsup Never Sours, when Farkas' Catsup' Flavor anti Preserv8r Es Used This 1s• a: concentrated extract of spices, that flavors and preserves catsup. It does not. eaMen the tomatoes like spices, but leaves, tbafie their naturalred color. Catsup made. with Parkes' Catsup Flavor never sours. Iooks better and tastes better than that made• by the old' fashioned way. A trial will con- vince you. Sold at 25c b,v your grocer or sent poet paid for 30c,. are ` arke t> w. S;. PESTO. ' "Woodlands," Middleton;. N.. S. • A Careful Man:. "I notice yea are very cautious what you say about. people 1"' "Yes" "Why is this?"' "Well, I ain't prominent enough to claim I was misquoted."— Louisville in 4 to Wright Machine. c Minard's Linirnent Cures Colds, etc, Too Cute. "Algy, isn't there something resting ou your mind?" "Aw, come now, Miss Cuttingly. Yon want me to say yes, so you can crush me with the remark, 'Why, how can it find a place to rest on anything so small?"' • Men?s Straw Hats. The new shapes in men's straw hats vary little. The crowns are fairly high, but the bands are wider than last year on manyof the hats, The English • hats are wonderfully light in weight, some of although they look particularly solid. Alpine hats are now made of green straw, and some of the shops are featur- ing Ecuador panamas,, which are entire- ly ntirely distinctive and are very unlike the more familiar variety of this hat, as they are almost ecru in color. The younger men are,of course, affecting - soft gray, or even green, felt hats and. are wearing them this season with gaily colored bands or•eeen hat searfs.—Fair- child'§. Magaziwe.' .• Red, Weak,, Weary, Watery Eyes. Relieved by Murine Eye Remedy. Com, pounded by experienced physicians. Ka- rim uritte doesn't smart; soothes eye pain.. Witte Murine Eye'Remedy Co,, Chicago, for illustrated Eye Book. At druggists. In the Suburbs. "Do you pay your servants by ,the week or by the month?„ "Mercy! How long do you think they stay with us? We have to pay them. by the hour."—Cleveland Leader. r6 Don't experiment with unsat- isfactory substitutes. Wilson's Ply Pads kill many times morehouse flies than any other known article. NO PATENT ON IT, "Your fountain pen never leaks? How do you manage it?" "I never fill rt." m+s' Minard's Liniment Cures Diphtheria. TH.P DIFFERENT. Howard—Before marriage he said he'd go to the ends of the earth for her. Coward—And after marriage he did: it—to get away.—Life. The Wrights have . designed types of aeroplanes for use in France as well as the United States.. • The America n de- sign was aceepted by the United States Government for military purposes after it had made an aerial voyage lastingover an hour, and at en elevation at times of 250 feet above the earth, In September, 1008, Orville Wright performed this suc- cessful feat with Lieut. Prank P. Lethal, the aerial expert, as a passenger, This'. aeroplane, which is the most practical design which has yet' been built in Aanet•iea., is forty feet in length, Its weight without passengers is 850 pounds, including a g solene motor having the power of forty horses, which has driven it through the air at the rate of tihirty- nine mikes an hour—the speed`of d fast railway traits; --Prom :flay Allen W illey's ',Airships" in July St. Nicholas. Thi BEST WOODEN PML Can't Help But Lose Its Hoops and Fail to Pieces. You Want Some. thing Better Don't You? Then Ask for Pails and. Tubs Made of • EDDY'S FIBREWARE radi ones Undo rim lashing M Eddy'l Matches Without■ Hooper Sal feat emu God wo