HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Herald, 1909-09-03, Page 6ss at Pit 1 THE THIRDDEGREE.
tomach
g of Uneasiness Before
After Deals is Quickly
With Nerviline,
ne gets an occasional at-
on and knows just what
ing means in the stem-
ject to stomach derange -
y health was seriously
is account. After meals I
ad a weighty sensation in
and over my left side. The
got was from Nerviline—I
times a day and was cur-
ue to use Nerviline neoa-
nd it is a wonderful aid
and digestive organs."
The above letter
comes from Mrs.
P. R. Stetson, wife
of an important
merchant in Broek-
ton, and still fur-
ther proof of the
exceptional power of Nerviline is fur-
nished by A. E. Rossman, the well-
known upholsterer of Chester. who
writes: "Let everyone with a bad stom-
ach use 'Nerviline,' and I am sure there
will be few sufferers left. I used to have
cramps, rumbling noises, gas on my
stomach and severe fits of indigestion.
Nerviline was the only remedy that
gave me relief, and I found it so entire-
ly satisfactory that I would like to have
my letter of recommendation published
broadcast in order that others may pro-
fit by my experience."
You'll find a hundred cases for Nervi-
line—it's a trusty. household remedy
that sells to the extent of a million bot-
tles per year—that's the best proof that
it nnist cure and give unlimited satisfac-
tion. Refuse anything offered in place
of Nerviline, 25e. per bottle, five for $1.
All dealers, or The Catarrhozone Co.,
Kingston. Ont.
ILINE
ESTORES
VWEAK
STOMACH S
And Such is Life.
A New York servant girl shoots a
negro because he no longer loves her.
A childless couple in Indiana quarrel
after 10 years of marriage, and seek
the divorce court. A burglar who is
to be executed for murder sings a
religious song in jail. A child who
goes to a party where there are many
children stands aside from the others
and weeps. When asked what is the
matter, he says, piteously, "Oh, I'm
wasting my time, I'm wasting my
time!" Another young hopeless kills
himself because he has nothing to
do. He is bored to extinction, liter-
ally. His case partly explains the
others on the last. The servant girl's
head and heart are such that she
loses al her feeble sources of emo-
tional activity with her lover If the
Indiana couple had had children and
something to think about besides their
claiming individualities, they might
never have exploded in immortalities
and separation. Boredom leads to
pernicious activity and divorce. The
rr�, erer whoAlsna tc, religicalrs songs
i rieal sari.'reactions has found an
occupation too late. If he has been
a poet in his youth, he would prob-
ably never have been a murderer.
The child who wept at the party may
have had Lipossible ideals put into
his head too early in life. Mere youth
was not enough for the infant and
he had nothing to take its place. So,
of course, he was horribly bored.—
New York Evening Post.
PILES CURB AT HOME BY
NEW ABSORPTION METHOD
A Mere Revival` of the Torture
Chamber of the Middle Ages.
(St. John Sus.)
This "third degree" business is by no
means new. It was and is still the favor-
ite device of those who spend their
time in enforcing law ,in China. For.
centuries the plan there has been . to
keep prisoners from sleeping until the
desired confessions aro made by them.
Even in the United States the martyred
women of Salem ou trial for witchcraft
were subjected to every for of cruelty
that could be devised for the purpose of
making them admit the crimes with
which they were charged. Under modern
police methods there is a refinement of
torture against which prisoners inevit-
ably give way, long continued question-
ing, suggestion, muscular fatigue, and
in short every plan by which theasub-
ject may be made to suffer until the
answers sought by the officers are ut-
tered.
In nine cases out of ten these ans-
wers are untrue; they are given either
through desire for relief from the in-
quisition, or are the result of suggestion
to worn out brains.
Dr. Hugo l4f unsterherg, professor of
psychology at Harvard, in his recently
printed book, "On the Witness Stand,"
deals very carefully with this phase of
police work. "A prisoner," he says,
`nervous and tired, and eager to es-
cape the repeated questions after hours
of interrogation, realizing that the
only way of relief, though it be but
temporary, is to say the thing which
these men desire, often says the thing
regardless of its untruth, and this not
infrequently leads to a conviction where
in fact the self -convicted one is innocent.
If you suffer from bleeding, itching,
blind or protruding Piles, send me your -
address, and I will tell you how to cure
yourself at home by the new absorption
treatment; and will also send some of
this home treatment free for trial, with
references from your own locality if
requested. Immediate relief and per-
manent cure assured. Send no money,
but tell others of this offer. Write to-
day to Mrs. M. Summers, Box P. 8,
'Windsor, Out.
WILL IT COME TO THIS?
(Detroit Free Press.)
"Ice's no gentleman," said the first
suffragette.
"'M'int's the matter now?" asked the
second. suffragette.
"When I gave up my scat in the street
car to him he never even said `thank
you: „
can be made
Package of
ost
Dalicgous
Pkhe
by dropping the contents of a
Pres Pickle Mixture
in a gallon of vinegar, boil for fifteen min-
utes and pour over the pickles. This mixture
keeps the pickles solid and nice the year
round and imparts a most delicious flavor to
the pickles. Sold at 21c, by grocers or sent
by mail, post paid, ou receipt of 30c.
Practically- all Canadian drug-
gists, grocers and general dealers
sell Wilson's Fly Pads. If your
storekeeper does not, ask him why.
o.ati
Beneficient Vesuvius.
Volcanoes and sharks are the latest
drafted allies of "the man with the hoe,"
As a result of extended investigations
into the results of the 1000 eruptions of�
Vesuvius, the Italian Experimental Sta-
tion, reports that the fall of valcanic
material caused a notable increase in the
'fertility ,of the soil.
It hurts crops then in the ground by
ason of its crushing weight and the
.ss' of injurious salts and acids.
those harmful elements were all
hiy soluble and have already vole -
sed or washed away, while the re-
" ejecta have added vast quanti-
eeded potash, phosphoric acid,
Bogen.
q,, Tasmania, whose shores are
tli sharks in apparently un. -
numbers, has ceased to dread
ers and is nowgetting rich by
s fertilizer inits immense
PA
HAMILTON
KE'L AR `(ti
Druggists CANADA
CO IV
Raj
' JUST TYIINIC i
with half the labor, and at
half the cost of other soap,
Sunlight does the whole
wasbin:."'in half the time,
yet bout injuring the
Eno delicate fabric.
UY.THE NEWS.
The Advertiser Picks Out the Paper
,Most erized b ; J<ts Readers. •
(Now.'York 'Herald.)
Cart I a.Page, head .of the Chalmers-
Detroitit'atomobile interests in the east,
said. yesterdht ,I have .read the kier-
ald'a fnterVie s and. plrpreeiate what is
said of the Wiportanee pi keeping ad-
vertising sepa�, ated froprf sthas editorial
and news coli! ins. Ono' clan see' that
the. subject Iy be; cionsidered from
three viewpoi s. First; from the stand, -
point of the 'spaper`reader. Ile does
not want to : anything in the news
columns but ve topics. Second, the
automobile dee er. He likes to read of
his cars often, regardless of the ques-
tion of news. ; Third, there is ttie adver-
tiser's point of view. He may have one
opinion of tha value of a newspaper to
himself and Lis business and then an-
other view" as to its teal value from a
high advertising standpoint. When he
sits at his desk with a list of the papers
in front of hi and scans them for their
advertising ue his first choice is the
paper that is ost prized by readers and
the public a large for its news value.
I think a majority of advertisers will
admit that the paper drawing its lines
closest between advertising and reading
matter is by far the best advertising
medium.
"The automobile industry is not only
vast, but it is increasing by leaps and
bounds. We would not advertise in the
lavish manner that we do had we not
proof on every hand of the great value
of advertising. All these hundreds of
thousands of dollars spent in publicity
means that we have confidence in legiti-
mate advertising placed in legitimate
papers, and therefore we prefer to have
the tone and standard of our papers in
which we advertise maintained. The
higher the tone and standard, the more
valuable the paper is for our purposes.
"The rush of people to see the new
models and buy the new ears, following
the appearance of our announcements,
tells the story of the wonderful pulling
power of the advertising columns of a
great paper.
"Of this there can be no doubt what-
ever. So it is evident that the more con-
fidence readers have in a newspaper the
more effective will be the advertising
published in its columns."
Life a Funny Proposition.
Man comes into this world without
his consent and leaves without his will.
During his stay on earth his time is
spent in one continuous round of con-
traries and misunderstandings by the
balance of the species.
In his infancy he is an angel; in his
boyhood die is a devil; in his manhood he
is everything from a lizard up; in his
dotage he is afool.
If he raises a family he is a chump;
if he raises a small cheque he is a thief
and the law raises the devil with hien.
If he is 0 poor man he is a poor man-
ager; if lie is rich, he is dishonest.
If he is in politics he is a grafter; if
he is out of politics you can't place him
and he is an undesirable citizen.
If he is in church he is a hypocrite;
if he is out of church he is a sinner and
is damned.
If he donates to foreign missions he
does it for show; if he does not, he is
stingy.
When he first comes into the work}
everybody wants to kiss him; before he
goes they all want to kick him.
If he dies young there was a great fu-
ture before hint; if he lives to a ripe old
age he is simply living to save funeral
expenses.
Life is a funny road, but we all like
io travel it just the same.—Roseleaf.
(.ab
Minard's Liniment for sale everywhere
0.A
Potato Drying in Germany.
Tice -Consul Burrell, of Magdeburg, re-
ports that in order to cope with the over
production of potatoes in Germany, sev-
eral potato drying plants are operating
in various sections. Such factories are
increasing. due partly to the advaneing
prices of grain. To produce 100 kilos or
220 pounds of dried potatoes, 830 pounds
of tubers ave required, and the product
is worth $3.80 to $-I.80.---United States
Consular Report.
eom..
A pian and his wife are one, and semi=
times it is one too nriny.
Carterhall. Nfld.
Minard's Liniment Co.'Limited:
Dear Sirs,--WVIdle in the country last
summer I was badly bitten by ,mosqui-
toes, so badly that I thought I would be
disfigured for a couple of weeks. I was
advised to try your Liniment to allay
the irritation, arid, did so. The effect
was more than I expected, a few appli-
cations completely euring the irritation,
anti preventing the bites from becoming
some MINARI +S TJL IME.NT is also a
good. article 1 'ep off the mosquitoes.
Yours truly.
• W. A. V. R.
THE UND"
He Was From Michiga
Facial Beautifier Dom
Ogee again does the
the East, Recently a Ne
facturer of fa41a1 bearitifie
etrating ie. one of the 1a1'g
pertinent •stores, One mor
Yorker and her assistant n
cidedly; sober -faced man han
the counter, watching the
Hone and taking in all that w
the attempt to push sales and
the goods.
After about an hour of this he
eyed courage to come up to the c
and purchase several large peekag
the goods. When he had paid for ti
he handed his card to the assistant. Si
was., surprised to discover that the man
was an undertaker doing business in a
large Michigan city.
A week later the undertaker wrote
to say that he had used the *paragon
with most gratifying success in his busi-
ness, and that every one who had seene
the results were amazed at the lifelike
appearance and the absence of the ordin-
ary pallid hue of death.
Facial beautifiers for the dead cer-
tainly seem to be a new departure. --N.
Y. Sun.
Cured by Lydia E. Pink=
ham's Vegetable Compound
Baltimore, Md. — "For four years
my life was a misery to me. I suffered
from irregulari-
ties, terrible drag-
ging sensations,
extreme nervous-
ness, and that all
gone feeling in my
stomach. I had
given up hope of
ever being well
when I beganto
take Lydia E.Pink
ham's Vegetable
Compound. Then
I felt as though
new life had been
oall myn , and. I am friends."—Mrs. W. S Folin,
1938 Lansdowne St., Baltimore, Md.
The most successful remedy in this
country for the cure of all forms of
female complaints is Lydia E. Pink-
ham's Vegetable Compound. It has
stood. the test of years and to -day is
more widely and successfully used than
any other female remedy. It has cured
thousands of women who have been
troubled with displacements, inflam
oration, ulceration, fibroid tumors, ir-
regularities, periodic pains, backache,
that bearing -down feeling, flatulency,
indigestion, and nervous prostration,
after all other means had tailed.
If you are suffering from any of these
ailments, don't give up hope until you
have given Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege-
table Compound a trial.
If you would like special advice
write to Mrs. Pinkhamn, Lynnn,,
11lass., for it. She has guided
thousands to health, free of
charge.
PREFERS GERM-LYY .
(Ottawa Free Press.)
Those E)iglisheneintlyd have been
pluming tliereee1ves tilitf ' in' the event
of trouble,' between ;Qrea.,t Britain and
Germany' the sympath'i4,;of the United
States 'Would, be • wajrb e in have had
their illusion`.ilispell:ii,?;'lay Medill Mc-
Cormick, of the S O1 i;eitgo Tribune, who
in a letter to theTinily°i Mail asserts
Americans care a good deal more for
Germany than for England. And yet
Mr. McCelriniek, when he visits Canada,
is very pleasantt spoken!
eatseeseesee
Winard's Linirriertt ,Relieves Neuralgia
a M "
. MAKING ROOM FOR MM.
Dr. Edward Vitereti, dale was a foe to
long seximins. Ilk used to .tell, a story
of a 161)g -winded pre alier•and. the minor
prophets.
"This preacher," so Drr isle would,be-
gin, "once preaeted over an hour on the
four great prophets, iuid then, when
his exhausted congregation thought he
was through, 1 i took a long breath,
turned a fresh page and, leaning over the
pulpit, said: IF -
"'We now co.e to the more complex
question of the inor prophets, First let
us assign to th 'm their proper order:.
Where, brethren, shall,me place Hosea?'
"An irascible old' gentleman in a back
pew rose, took his hat and sties. and
said as he departed: •;
" Place him here, if yoti;.want to. I'm
going' "
The heiress who thinks of wedding a
Count should wait and count the cost,
Veteran Composer of Church Music.
The veteran composer of church hymn
music, Luther 0. Emerson, has just ob-
served his 89th anniversary, and is yet
able to walk about the region of Hyde
Park, where he lives, and visit Boston.
It is said that he has collected more
thanasevonty books of church music, as
well as directing more than 300 musical
festivals and conventions. At his family
party he sang "The Ivy Green" and an-
other song. Mr. Emerson belongs with
W. B. Bradbury and the rest of that day,
whose style of music is sure to recur in
use after the popular religious jingles of
the last thirty years are forgotten.—
Springfield Republican.
q.♦
Minard's Liniment Cures Dandruff.
WHERE AMERICANS CAN CO IPETE.
(Philadelphia Public Ledger.)
"I see an American girl is to marry
a Portuh nese pretender."
"She might as well stay at home and
many an Amerie,wn pretender. 'i did."
:p ed
Minard's Liniment Cures Burns, etc.
BETTER THAN VACATION.
"Bill, where ye goin' to spend the
summer?"
"I don't have to go anywheres this
summer. I got a job drivin' an ice
wagon."
0
as
Bus
nume
Mini
is(hini3eif mean
He plays the a d is four
an instrument called the balalaika,
which is a kind of guitar with only
three strings. He often sings to this in- ,
strument, for bo possesses a tenor voice
of excellent quality. He is more than a
little proud of his vocal powers, and
once, after entertaining his domestic cir-
cle with some ditties, -be laughingly ex-
claimed: "Well, my children, my enem-
ies say many harsh things of me and ac-
cuse me of being destitute of many cap-
acities, but I defy them to say that I
cannot sing as well as the best .of
them !" The czarina is also musical and
a celebrated violinist once said of her
that "She sings and plays so well that
if she were in another sphere of life
and became a professional she would win
great fame."
The Czar' is quite up to date in his
liking for golf, though he does not de-
vote much time to the "royal and an-
cient game." In the park of the winter
palace there are links and Nicholas II.
is sometimes to be seen there enjoying
himself immensely. The autocrat of all
the Missies has always taken an inter-
est in agricultural matters, and another
hobby of his is farming. Some photo-
graphs were taken some time ago show-
ing an engineer giving the czar instruc-
tions in the use of a newly invented
plow. In one of these pictures Nicholas
II. was himself guiding the plow as it
turned up the furrows.
The czar is by no means what can be
called deeply read, but he takes great
delight in literature of the lighter kind,
and he is credited with the remark:
"Were I not -well, what I am—I should
he the greatest bookworm in the world."
One of his most eurious hobbies—and
yet. perhaps not curious when one con-
siders his extremelg nervous tempera-
ment—is the study oflltigm. He
loves to get hold of spirrrua mediums
and clairvoyants and he is superstitious
in many ways. Some time ago a certain
spiritualist was established at the court
and it was rumored that the Czar and
this man used frequently to arrange ,
seances together. A weird story used to
be told during the Iate Russo-Japanese
war to the effect that a diver told the
Czar that, having dived to the bottom
of the sea, he beheld the ill-fated Ad-
miral Makharoff standing on his sunken
battleship with a halo around his head.
"Tell the Czar" said the apparition,
t"the Russia will soon be victorious."
It is an undisputed fact that
one packet of Wilson's Fly Pads
has actually killed a bushel of
house flies. Fortunately no such.
quantity can ever be found in a
well kept house, but whether they
be few or many Wilson's Fly Pads.
will kill them all.
CANADIAN 110LIDAYS.
(Niagara Falls (N. Y.) Gazette.)
In sharp contrast with the rush and
hurry of life on this side of the border,
is the rational attitude of our Canadian
cousins. * * * Life us our Canadian
friends live it is worth while. Tliey
pluck the flowers by the wayside while
we waste our energies in mammon wor-
ship.
♦ o
Lifebuoy.Soap 1s delightfully refreshing for
Bath or Toilet in bot weather. For washing
underclothing it is unequalled. Cleanses and
purifies.
®
JEALOLT Y.
(New York Times.)
Abou Ben Adhem advanced his clnbn.
"I never go away in the smuttier and
leave my telephone bell ringing," he an-
nounced.
His name leading all the rest, the jeal-
ous said the list was alphabetieal, any-
how.
�
BESTIN
EN Ali
Ca!ia't help But Lose Rs hoops
Fall to . Pieces. You Want Som
thing Better Don't You? Then A
for Pais, and Tubs Made of
g]
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B
2
A
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a
d
a
d
b
b
c
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Each One a Solid, hardened, '.ailing mass (�
% iota a hoop or Seam .hist as Goad ea 1a