The Herald, 1909-08-20, Page 6Gas tstended
His Stomach
Caused Palpitation, and Pre -
Vented Sleep, When Health
Was Gone, Cure Followed
Use of "Nerviline".
"My last wish will bee' writes Harry
P. Pollard, a well known boot and shoe
traveller of Hartford, "that everyone
with a bad stomach may learn as I did,
before it's too late, that Nerviline is the
one remedy to eure. Why, I was in
mighty bad shape, my digestion wan all
wrong and every night I would waken
with a start and
find my heart
jumping like a
threshing machine.
This was eaused
by gas on my
stomach pressing
erg list my cart, When I started to
use Nerviline I got better mighty fast.
It is certainly a grand remedy for the
travelling man, keeps your stomach in
order, cures cramps, prevents lumbago
or rheuamtism, breaks up chest colds
and sore throat—in fact, there hasn't
been an ache or pain inside or outside
for the past two years that I havn't cur-
ed with Nerviline. Do you wonder I re-
commend it?"
For general household use Nerviline
has no equal; it will euro the, aches and
ailments of the entire family—refuse
anything but Nerviline, 25c per bottle,
five for $L00, all dealers or the Oa-
tarrbozone Co., Kingston, Ont.
TESTIMONIAL
N0,
4890
op-4,
Animals Are Poor Sailors.
The polar bear is the only wild ani-
mal that likes a trip on the water, ac-
cording to a French scientist who has
studied its behavior at sea. He is quite
jolly when aboard ship, but all other
animals violently resent such a voyage
and cociferously give vent to their feel-
ings until seasickness brings silence.
The tiger suffers most of all. He
whines pitifully, his eyes water contin-
ually and he rubs his stomach with his
terrible paws. Horses are bad sailors
and often die on a sea voyage.
Oxen are heroic in their attempts not
to give way to sickness. Elephants do
not like the sea, but they are amenable
to medical treatment. A good remedy is
a bucketful of hot water containing
three and a half pints of whiskey and
seven ounces of quinine.—From Fur
News.
TO T1I[ MOTHERS
OF PAL GIRLS
A Case Showing Flow the Tonic
Treerneild Restored Lost
+ ss. a ft
is one o e m mon "j at the
same time most d ngerous diseases
with which growing girls suffer. It is
common because the blood so often
becomes impoverished during develop-
ment, when girls often overstudy,
over work and suffer from lack of ex-
ercise. It is dangerous because of the
stealthiness of its approach and be-
cause of its tendency to grow so steadily
worse, if not promptly checked, that
it may run into consumption. Every
growing girl should take an occasional
tonic to Ward off the insidious trouble;
and in all the world there is no tonic
that can equal Dr. Williams' Pink Pills,
Every dose of this medicine helps to
make new, rich blood, which promptly
makes weak, pale, listless girls bright,
rosy and strong. Miss A. M. Dugay,
Lower Cove, N. S., says: "I believe I
owe my life to Dr. Williams' Pink Pills.
My blood seemed to have turned to
water. I was pale as a sheet; I suf-
fered from headaches, and floating
specks seemed to be constantly be-
fore my eyes. As the trouble pro-
gressed my limbs began to swell, and
it was feared that dropsy lied set in
and that my case was hopeles.ee
to this time two doctors had attended
me, but notwithstanding I kept grow-
ing worse. It was at this juncture I
began using Dr. Williams' Pink Pills,
and after taking a few boxes I was
much improved. I kept on using the
Pills until I hal taken eight boxes,
when my health was eompletely re-
stored."
Dr. 'Williams' Pink Pills cure eases
tike this because they go to the root
of the trouble in the blood. That is
why they cure rheumatism and indi-
gestion, nervous Headaches ,and rack-
ing neuralgia, and all those troubles
from wbich growing girls and women
of mature years so often suffer in hope.
less- silence. If Dr, Williams' Pink
'fills are given a fair trial they will
not disappoint you. Sold by all medi-
cine dealers or by mail at 50 cents a
box nr six boxes for $2.50 from The
Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., _Brockville,
On.t.
Enclosing the Stamp.
"There's only one decent way to in.
elose a stamp for a reply," said the head
of a large business, "and that is to use
one of the stamps from the outside rows
of a sheet with a blank margin that can
bo stuck upon the setter and leaves the
stamp ready for use. Any other way
either loses the stamp or else spoils it
for use. But I found to -day a trick that
is pretty good. Most people'enelose the
stamp by sticking it down at one cor-
ner, and then you leave to paste that
corner down when you use the stamp.
The new trick is to wet the stamp in a
little space in the centre and stick it
there. It pulls off easily, yet when you
use the stamp ell the eclgee have gum
enough to seielr "---Fneen Machinery..
DIETING AN ENGINE..
A Locomotive Under hte Case of High
Salaried Food, Experts.'
Itaflroadinfe. is a pretty exact science,
and bite big engine on the testing table
at Altoona is only- one of many vi-
denees of the skill that is being brought
to bear upou the operation of the great
railroad properties of the country at
the present time,
This engine goes upon 414, says•
Outing. Dr. Wiley down at Washing-
ton, with leis young men ; sustaining
themselves scientifically upon „meas.
ured and selected foods has something
of the same method that is shown with
the test engine at Altoona. Its sup-
ply of coal is carefully weighed and
analyzed by sample.
An aeounting of the amount on-
sumed down to ounces is kept; the wa-
ter supply is also examined and mea-
sured with great care. When the test
is finished and the big captiveengine
has covered miles of theoretical grades
with a. long theoretical train hitched on
behind the experts get busy with •their,
pencils and begin to prepare the re•
ports upon which their chief may rely
when he goes ahead to construct another
gross of 100 -ton locomotives.
There is no guesswork about modern
railroading. Many hundreds of then F
sands of dollars are spent each yearixt.'
expert scientific tests of every sort, in
the salaries of men whodevote their en-
tire time to this work, and the rail-
roads reap the benefits of many more
hundreds of thousands of dollars in op -
ern ting economies.
Everybody now admits
'Zorn -Bolt best for these.
Let, it, give YOU ease
and comfort.
Drurris r and Stores eve,ywherc
CARE OF RAILWAY CAR -
To care for its rolling stock the rail-
road creates two distinct functions of
its business. Its tracks, tunnels, bridges,
ali the care of its permanent way de-
partment. Similarly, the mechanical
department assumes control of the cars
and engines, sees to it that these are
maintained to their fullest capacity,
both by Dare in daily service and. by cer-
tain visits to the shops at regular in-
tervals, for repairs, reconstruction and
repainting.
To clo all of this requires . a large
pLn.'j
letitasetegserend machinery.
It is c i_ ri a luted at every important
point along the railroad. At terminal
aril operating points, roundhouse facili-
ties of greater er less extent are sure
to be located and at the headquarters
of each division these are generally ex-
panded into shops for the making of
eight repairs and to avoid handling
crippled equipment for any great dis-
tanc.e. One large shop plant is apt to
suffice the average retil>;oad for the
heavy repair work. If the road stretch
to any extraordinary length, even this
feature is apt to be duplicated in order
to concentrate this repair work as far
as possible.
All this concerns the care and repairs
of the locomotives—which the railroader
quickly groups under the title of "mo-
tive power." To care for she engines
while they are in use out upon the line,
to see to it that engineers and firemen
alike handle these mechanisms with
economy and skill is a responsibility
that is placed upon the road foreman of
engines of each division. He has supervi-
sion over smaller roundhouses, but at
any 'of the larger of these structures
there is a rouudhouse foreman in direct
charge. The railroad long ago learned
that its best economy rested in having
a plenty of executive control. That'has
cone to be one of the maxims of the
business.
There is a master mechanic in charge
of the division shops and in many cases
he has authority over the road foreman
of engines and the roundhouse foreman.
Then under him he has his various as-
sietants, forming a working force not at
all unlike that of the average iron work.
ing shop. All of this organism .is gath-
ered together under a superintendent of
motive power, who, in tura, may report
to. a general mechanical superintendent.
This official answers only to the general
manager, or, in come eases. to a vice-
president to whom these functions of
the care of the railroad are delegated. --
From "The Mechankal Department of
the Railroad," in the Outing Magazine
for ,7uly.
Nell—I wonder h+.iy on earth they
ever married. Belle—Probably because
there is no marrying hi heaven,
&'sal rRrD'> 111
1� r
110
ail
ALL OVER THE WORLD
thousands of housewives
use Sunlight Soap in prefer
erence to any other, because
it cleanses the clothes more
thoroughly, and at half the
cost without injury to
hands or fabric.
Maxims /for Business Men.
tile Bookkeeper.)
"Talk is ehi,ap. "; Therefore don't hand
alit boo muck of it. It makes you and
your proposition,: also, look cheap.
A. real salesman is one part talk and
eine parts judgment, and he uses the
nine parts of judgment to tell when to
use the one peat of talk.
Getting lelet ess is a good deal like
Courting a girl -you mustoffer the right
kind of goose,: d keep on calling.
Enthusiasm it: the best shortening for
any job; it m kes heavy work light.
A tactful i n can pull the stinger
from a, bee : i, thout getting stung.
When a fellow knows his business, he
doesn't have to ;explain to people that
he does.
Stock your; brain up so that schen the
demand comes you will have the goods
to offer. i
An appeal et reason is ofttiines Iess
effective thaneappeal to the pocket,
Hot air can take up a balloon,a long
ways, but it . can't keep it Stere. •
A man who does big things is too'busy
to talk about Them. •
Putting off an easy thing makes it
hard, and putting off a hard thing
makes it impossible
The short -out to success is hard work.
A pleasant ro, too, when you once
get acquaintedi, with it.
Minards's Liniment Co., Limited.
Gentlemen, --In June, '98, I had my
hand and wrist bitten and badly mang-
led by a vicious horse. I suffered great-
ly for several jhys i and the tooth cute
refused to heaautit your agent gave
me • a bottle ot ;IMAM'S LINIMENT,
which I bega ,'using. The effect was
magical; in a hours the pain had
ceased and i wo weeks the wounds
had completely healed and / my hand
and arm were well as ever.
Yo .8 truly,
A. E. ROY,
Carriage Maker.
St, Antoine, P. Q.
WASTE ,OF LIFE.
(Montreal Gazette.)
Newspaper statistics show that in
the past month 1,176 persons met
death ia the United States by drown-
ing. The returns from Canada are not
available, but they must be in pro,
portion to those of our neighbors. A
league to teach people to be careful
when on or in the water mig it be as
good in its effect on population as an
immigration agent.
A WINDSOR LADY'S APPEAL.
To All Women: I will send free with full
instructions, . my home treatment *which
postively eures Leuoorrhoea, Ulceration,
Displacements, Failing of the Womb, Pain-
ful or Irregular periods, Uterine and Ovar-
ian Tumors or Gi owths, also Hot Flushes,
Nervousness. Melancholy, .Faits in the Head,
Back or Bowels, Kidney and Bladder troubles,
where caused by weakness peculiar to our
sex, You can cathine treatment at home at
a cost of only 12 cents a week. Hy book,
"Woman's Own Medical Adviser," also sent
fres on request, Write to -day. Address,
Mre. M, Summers, Box H. 8, Windsor, Ont.
FUTUIEL INVITATIONS.
(Exchsuge.)
Cogger --Howdy, old man? When you
are down my way in your automobile
drop in some ti+irte,
Ilardwood---Qh, :r travel in an aero-
plane these days.
Cogger—That so' Well, drop out some •
time.
Minard's Liniment Cures Cokde, etc.
Steel. Street Cars.
Steel street cal e, ,the first of their type
to be used on surface lines in any city
in the country, will be placed in service?
within a few days by the Chircgi lia l -
way Company. The • ears have been
built: by the Pressed Steel Gar ("emptily,
of Pittsburg, and the supervising en-
gineers who dost ed them believe they
will be almost indestructible.
A number of the cars are• finished end
are being fitted out' with tiueks at the
shops of the Pullman Company. The
only Wood about the new coaches is in
the doors, and the steps, The cost t,f
the steed cars is only a little more than
the other type naw ln'use, and they will
weigh completed 52,000 pounds, err 300
pounds loss than the present double -
truck coaches. In eclor and design they
are the same as the new care noel* in use,
the minor differences being distinnuiih.
able only on close scrutiny. The cost of
each ear will be about six thousand d,a1.
:a rs.-- .Ch ieago•1,eeord-11eralcl.
AS a mule the more a man's thirst is
irrigated the faster it grows,
THE FLY,
Facts Which Every Housewife Ought
to Know.
Tho comrnoii house is a carrier of
disease. Typhoid fever,fly
diarrhoea, dys-
entery and tuberculosis are carried by
flies.
Flies feed on food, and also on filth.
They go from the one to .the other. In
by they carry dirniae
tChiaable. One fly may conveysease gesix mtoilliothn
acteriawa.
Flies breed in manure heaps, out-
house, refuse, ash -pits, and all decom-
posing animal or vegetable matter and
unclean places. Do not allow decaying
material of any sort to accumulate on
or near your premises. If such exist,
cover with lime or kerosene oil, and ie -
move as early as possible.
See that your sewerage system isin
good order.
Screen all food; cover food after a
meal; burn all scraps and refuse,
Screen all windows and doors.
Burn pyrethrum powder in the house
if flies should gain entrance.
If there is no filth there will be no
flies.—Haiper's Weekly.
MADE ON CAVA
I�Y�.�rY.�t
nigh
Oracle
Guaranteed Chemically Pure
SOLD IN PACKAGES AND CANS
Same Price as the poor
Adulterated Kinds
The Cost of Sickness.
Prof. Fisher, of Yale, has been figuring
on the cost of sickness to the nation at
large. He calculates that 3,000,000 peo-
ple are needlessly and continuously ill
in the United States, and that this con-
dition might well be prevented by strict
attention to even the simplest hygienic
measures. According to his data, tuber-
culosis alone is res onsible for 500,0
perso, -"g +;, v ill ve
mit
be wli,t•-3V1
phoid alone costs the country $350,000,-
000 and this is a disease that can be
wholly prevented by attention to neg-
lected details.• In support of this state-
ment, and showing what can be done in
an individual instance, Prof. Fisher
quotes the case of the city of Lawrence,
which, by the introduetion of a wa-
ter supply, reduced its typhoid mortality
by over 80 per cent. It is shown by
carefully gathered data that malaria
costs the country $100,000,000, and that
this is wholly preventable.—Boston Ad-
vertiser.
ISSUE NO. 33, 1909
AGENTS WANTED,
A GENTS WANTED; OT•I.70RS OLEiei,R 324►
.49. weekly. Why not you? Alfred Tyler.
London, Out,
IIELP WANTED.
TIE CD
A Good General Servant who
can do cooking. Smal("Family:.
HIGHEST WAG1ES
MRS, JOHN M. EASTWOOD,
Hamilton, Ont.
PERSONAL.
rj ORTUNE TOLD IN BUSINESS, LOVE,
A marriage, domestic affairs, enemies,
speculations, etc,; all mysteries revealed.
Send 6 cents in stamps and birth date. A,
RENAUD, Box 841, North Coaticook, Que.
UNHEALTHIEST CAPITAL.
St. Petersburg, which is to have $50,-
000,000 spent on it for sanitary im-
provements, has been described as the
unhealthiest of European capitals. Its
death rate always exceeds ,its birth
rate, a fact not to be wodered at
when we remember that two centuries
ago its eentral island was usually under
water. Only an autocrat endowed with
the unconquerable will of Peter the
Great could have succeeded in building
a city on such a site. 0f the motley
throng of Tartars, Cossacks, Russian
soldiers, peasants, convicts and Swedish
prisoners employed in the work suer
100,000 died within the first year, and
their total death roll during the six
years spent in building was close on
250,000.
Few had so much as a shovel, and
yet before a foundation could be laid
undergrowth had to be cleared, swamps
had to be 'drained and embankments
thrown up. Earth was scarce, and had
to be fetched from a distance, the work-
men scraping it up with their hands
and transporting it in their shirts or in
bags improvised out of rags or matting.
There was 110 shelter for the men, and
they were often without food for two
days at a time. All these hardships
added to Peter's zest, and when he hap-
pened to be present at one inundation
and saw wreckage covered with inen
being carried away, he is said to have
clapped his hands with enjoyment.
No More� Sour
Catsup
PARKES'
*se
Minard's Liniment Cures Garget in
Cows.
THE KING'S POLICE MEDAL,
(Toronto Mail and Empire.)
In the British House of Commons the
Home Secretary recently announced that
the King has been pleased to approve of
the establishment of a medal, to be
called the King's Police Medal, for the
reward ot courage and devotion to duty
on the part of persons serving in . con-
stabulary forces and fire brigades
throughout His Majesty's dominions,
Mr. Gladstone further stated that the
medal is one of honer for special merit,
and that it will not be given for pro-
longed service alone, but only for ser-
vice, long or short, that has been dis-
tinguished by the qualities mentioned.
w •.r
p,linard'n Liniment Cures Diphtheria.
Asbestos in 'Orsk District.
Fresh discoveries of asbestos have
been made upon the property of the
South Urals Aspestos Company in the
Orsk district. The average content in
asbestos of one deposit is 15 per cent.
At times it reaches as high as 80 per
cent., in point of quality resembling
chysolite, and being very soft and wool-
ly. The fibre is strong, while the color
in lumps is olive green, but the single
staple ap*,ears to be pure white. A sec-
ond deposit presents similar ,conditions
and wealth of contents.
er
s a concert ted extract of apices that flav-
ors catsup and preserves it for all time.
Many people have given up the making or
catsup because it always spoiled. You can.
now make bettor and nicer looking catsup
than you ever made before ;,U you insist on
getting Parke's Oatsup Flavor from your
Grocer. It leaves the natural red Dolor of the
tomato and imparts the most delicious flavor.
Sent post paid on receipt of 30 cents.
PAR E PARKE
HAMILTON 1lruggisis CANADA
THE SUMMER CROP.
(Exrhange.)
Hank Stubbs—How's your crop Lam-
in' on?
Bige Miller—Waal, we've got the bed-
rooms all full now, an' 'spectin' four
more termorrer.
O V•
After making a most careful
study of the matter, U. S. Govern-
ment scientists state definitely
that the common house fly is the
principal means of distributing
typhoid fever, diphtheria and
smallpox. Wilson's Fly Pads kill
the flies and the disease germs,
too.
s- s
Platinum a By -Product.
In British Columbia platinum is found
in many of the alluvial gold workings,
where it can be saved as a by-product.
The saving of it in a small way is, how-
ever, attended with so much trouble
,that ib has been practically neglected
and no appreciable production made re-
cently.
Minard's Liniment Cures L isten per.
abao
A CHINESE PUZZLE.
Ching Ling Lung and Chang Long Suey
Could 'not. get -enough chop suey;
One day they ate until they died—
Did they eommit chop-suey-cide?
—Success Magazine.
Th[ [ST WOODEN PAL
Can't I1eip But Lose Its Hoops and
Fall to Pieces. You Want Some.
thing Better Don't You? Then Ask
for r' cls and Tubs Made of
if:3 .p E
Leach One a S®liif, tiardeneo, Lasting Mess Eddy's Matches
Without a tloe}p ur Sewn Jost NIS blood