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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Herald, 1911-07-07, Page 2C4er Out Your Nostrils By 6E164 Cetarthozone You Keep Nose and Throat Free of he 'Atria' of Con- sumption and Catarrh. It's supply die;nstieg to keep on sniffcling when (:a.tarrhozouo cures so quickly; It elea.ra array the mucous dis- cllarge, freesthe nostrils and air pas- sages of offensive matter, cures the eatarrli thero ttghiy. hire. W. F. Breach, of Chapman, writes:. "1 have used a great many catarrh remedies, hut none of them ever helped like Ca, tarrhorone. It cleared out my nose and throat, anti stopped a ringing noise in my ears. Uatarrltuzoue is very sim- ple end pleasant to use, and many times better than any other catarrh remedy." Four dniggle t has Catar•rhozone; get it to -day. Two mouths' treatment guaranteed to permanently cure costa $1; sample size, 25 eents. FOR THE THIN ARMED GIRL, Tat girl- tvho frets because her amts are as thin as sticks should partake of a nourishing diet, even though elle may want to maintain a slim figure, She :deo ehould ruts into her arms every night the particular fattener she finds most effective—cream skimmed trona milk, almond oil or the special brand of cold cream she buys. She should put into her, eveuln;; frocks sleeves made filmy fabric, which will veil the arms to the elbow only just sufficieutly to dis- guise the fact that the arms are lean without hiding their pretty color. If the color needs to be improved the arme may be treated with cold Bream and powder before the dance, but every ves- tige of the cosmetic crust be rubbed away before the dress is put on. The process of rubbing should be undertalcen at least three-quarters of an hour before party time. It le a good plan for the girl whose arms are too thin and inclined to look scarlet to put on her long kid gloves some time before she :starts for the party to warns the arms and leave them of a delicate color and one that v'lli match the hands. ts s l bwa �aest, rG°rt``i�, ed ' ur `heat, rashes, eczema core feet., slings an i aiste s. A akin food 2 1 Aid Druotes and Storm -64 "a PREFERRED `SAL: A Missourian from the Ozarks recent- ly '.rent to the citsr to Ree the sights. Re had never been he a big city before. •Ee walked down the street, looking iu the windows and eujoying himself huge- ly. At one plane he saw a sign, "Wom- an's Exebange," The mountaineer hurried into the store. which was filled with various speciments of feminine handieaaft. Ill this the woman's exchange?" he asked. "It ie," replied a very tall, very gaunt and very spenaterlike person behind the counter. "Be you the woman?" and he he eyed her keenly. "r guess I aro." 'Waal, I guess Pll keep Sal," he said apologetically, hurrying out. Spokane Review. American and Canadian scien- tists tell us that the common house fly is the cause of more di- sease and death than any other agency. Wilson's Fly Pads kill all the flies and the disease germs too. IN A THUNDERSTORtNI. Deaths from lightning average about five in a million each ,year, in the Unit- ed States, and they occur more fre- quently in proportion, in. the country than in the city. The safest place dur- ing a thunderstorm is said to be a trol- c'ar; the most dangerous an open win- dow or the shelter of a tree.—Boston Tra necript. 4r# NO TIME WASTED. (From Success Magazine.) Olaf Larson, everting In amillinery warehouse, backed into an elevator shaft and fell down five storeys with a load of boxes. .Horror-stricken, the other em- ployees, rushed down the stairs only to find him picking himself unharmed out of the rubbish. Ess de boss matt?" he whispered cau- ttoesly-. "Tell 'em Ay had to comedown for nails anyway." The man who stinte his wife to keep up his club dues has no business to won- der why marriage is a 'failure, r.. MONEY WEARS OUT; QUICKLY. Wastage Through Circulation on Bri- tish Gold and Silver Coins. It Is the duty or each loyal subject not merely to refuse gold cola that is under a certain weight but to break it. "Every person," the act reads, "shall, by himself ur .uthere,eat, break or de- face such cuin tendered to Trint in pay- meut,and the person tendering the same shall bear the lues." iiut in spite ur Chia act It is • a risky ln•siuess interfering with coins which you utas suspect to be under weight or spuri- ous. Some rnontils ago a (arlmsby wo- man offered a half sovereign In pay- ment of goods to a local shopkeeper. Tee latter put the eodn in a testing machne, and as it broke in two, refused to take It. The cola, however, was pronounced by experts to be perfectly genuine, and when the case was taken into a court of law the shopkeeper was ordered to refund ten shillings to the customer. Mousy, both gold and silver, wears out at a startling rate. Tt is reckoned that there is usually a hundred, million pounds ir, gold coin In England, a very large Proportion t ongtironoms of 1banke 1 Yet t1 in that which is in active circulation the wastage Is so great that during every twelve months seventy thoussted pounds worth of gold and silver are rubbed off into fine dust,—Pearson's Weekly. SAFETY FOR CHILDREN • DURING HOT WEATHER Every mother knows, or should know, the danger her baby runs during the hot summer months. Summer complaints come quickly and develop so rapidly that often before the mother realizes her baby is ill he is beyond all help. Every mother of small children should keep a box of Baby'e Own Tablets in the house. A Tablet now and. then will keep baby's Lowela working regularly and his little stomach sweet --this le the secret of keeping baby healthy and of warding off cholera iufantum, diarrhoea, dysen- try and all other dreaded sinnmer com- plaints. The Tablets are guaranteed free from all injurious drugs and may o given to the newborn babe with per - feet safety. They are sold -by all medi- eine dealezh, or by mail at 25 cents a box from The i)r. Williams Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. A FLAT WORLD. (Vancouver Province.) The ancients thought the world was flat, 1'zn really not surprised at that, We'd find it flat, I dare say, If we were living in their day. Just think. they had no autos then, No show girls to delight the men, Nu pipes to smoke and no cigars, No cocktails served at handsome bars. No bridge to play and no pink teas, No liners speeding o'er the seas, No yellow journals and no flats, No women's monstrous picture hats, Ne tarif problem to attack, No gowns that button up the back. No end seat hogs with manners rude, No monkeying with the price of food. No ice bills, no cold storage eggs, No bunco steerers and no yegga, No trolley cars with clang and whirr, No Teddy to keep things astir— Say, is it any wonder that The. a4rcients thought the world was flat. PILES E -at M. l Mistilition Methai1' e4 If you suffer from bleeding, itching, blind or protruding Piles, send me your address, and I will tell you how to euro 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 re- quested.. Immediate relief and perman- ent cure assured. Send no money, but tell others of this offer. Write to -day to Mrs, M. Summers, Box P. 8, Windsor, Ont. i'1 NEW BED NEEDED. "During the days of gold fever in Cali- fornia," said an old sea captain, "our ship was so crowded teat you could hardly get a place to sleep. `Captain, said a. man when we were three days out, `I have just got to have some place to sleep' "'Where have you been sleeping?' .t asked. "'T have been sleeping on a sick man,' he passenger said, 'but he's getting bet- ter naw."—From Success leragazMe. .1.111111 PEACOCKS GETTING SCARCE. The fad of the Eastern rich of hav- ing peacocks 'to enhanoe (the 'beauty of their parks has just brought people in this country to realize how scarce these birds are. 01 Hunter,a. local horse buyer, recently promised a friend in Pennsylvania that he would Bend him a peacock. When he gave the promise Mr. Hunter thought it would be no trouble to 'obtain ono, as a few years ago they were plentiful in Decatur co f. He started out the other day to buy the fowl, but before he succeed- ed in finding one he drove more than one hundred miles: Inquiry develop ed the fn^I. that peafowls are bought up as rapidly as possible by the East- erners at fanny prices. Mr. Htuiter's specimen attracted as much attention here in this city as some rare bird from a foreign country, Ile it was the first seen here for years,---Greennbuty Correspondence Indianapolis News. '•-.• New Use for Sotles In Chicago. Henceforth seeks will be warn on t),o feat, nor around the family savings. Poe-, talYsavin:gs banks have eoree.— Clttear) ldc*L amrAti JUNE i1RDES What more appropriate Wedding Gift for a young housekeeper than a set of E B. EDDY'S INDURATED F1BREVVARE Comprising Tub, Pails, Dish Pan, etc. dsonao In appearance—Lasting A lifetime .All Grocers. AN' All y .R.S PET. Signor Gabriel itnunzie is' not only a, great writer, 1» man of great origi. realty. At his yr at Settignono, near Florenee, he lam a.med a little sala- mander which eve get upon the writ- ing table, which , 'considered belonged to him and his m tsar. The salamander was a general pet, and was looked upon as the household ;god, Three years he lived with the poet, and then, like all Pete, he died, mnoh . to the grief of his master, and the French eonternpo.arv, from which we take.'tire foregoing, tells us that tete., author of "Francesca. da Rimini" actually trhad tears. That D'Anttirueie's -grief far his little friend did riot end with tears is evi- denced. by-` lde fete cit to -day, says tite London (lobe, By the side of the hearth whiali the salamander loved ao well, D'Anrtunzio h I erred buried, under the g reat. mantieplmee, The opening of the little *milt 'is el eed by a black mar- ble slab upon .who In letters of gold can be read; 'Beattie salamander sac- rum." No visitor wit() cella at the Villa of Setignano fails to have his attention drawn to the little tomb, and on the writing table,wItere ',lie salamandeir took this ease in hippie; days, the visitor will notice a little ley in silver gilt in- closed in a silver offer. It is the key of the iron door of the tiny tomb. D'Annunzio, who ' revels in myths and legends, does not comprehend why the salamander shall not yet rise again.. Have You a "'Irlteezy" Chest? Means your•troubt, is deep seated. To delay is dangerous, A41.the inflammation willYbe drawn out rn ene'day by apply- ing Nerviline. It pt etratos through the pores of the skirt, relievee inflammation and thus prevents seriou,3 Consequences. For sore throat, week chest and tenden- cy to colds, no preeeriptien is better than Nerviline. Per nearly fifty years' it has been Canada's great household re- medy. Twenty-five. Ants buys a large bottle. THE SW S GUARD. :, r1 anst':>rr estion as., to the 'eaeon fare Po se's .body- guard the "Swiss 'Guard, a , cor- respondent soya: In short, Because they .are natives of Switzerland. Tho guard came into being in the reign of Pope Julius. II., who asked his friend Peter van Hertenstein, . canon of Lucerne Cathedra., to send him 200 Swiss men atarms to protect his person. The assembly at Zurich con- sented to the enitment of the men, and in Sanuary, 1600, the guard, cal i- manded by a young nobleman, Cas- per von Millen, entered. the Eternal City. In the 400 years of its existence the gaard has made an honorable record_ They fought well when fighting was necessary, but of late deadly weapons have been laid aside and the tune - tion of the b vel now is to act as a guard of hoar to the Pope.--Frozn Switzerland. The genuine Wilson's Ply Pads are by far the best fly killers made. Every housekeeper should use them. all Druggists, Grocers and General ;;teres sell them. UNREA:' REMBRA1' DT.% On a recent vlyago Chief Engineer Galloway, of the+,w"eitn .'iner .iaapland,. was showing a Texan ever the ship. They got to talking gad Galloway said it seemed a pity that American millionaires were bringing so many Ettr'oppeau art treasures to this country nowadays. "It's hardly right,": he argued, "that 'nen who just happen to have the money should be able to take fembrandts and Van Ducks from countries; that have had them for generations,'; "Theta' so," agreed the Texan. "Those fellows just go over to 'Europe and buy 'em up, don't therm Why, say, Gallo- way, not ono in ten% eevr read 'oral"— Saturday Evening Post, Lots of us never get any bouquets thrown at us till the day of the funeral, THE EARTH'S CORE. At a meeting of the iieisnlotogical Association at The Hague Prof. Weichert asserted that his studies of the var'yirrg velocity of earthquake tremors passing through the interior of the globe led to the conclusion that the earth consists of a central core of iron or steel about 5,581) milts in diameter surrounded with a stony shell 930 miles in 'thickness. Between the outer solid rind and the inner layer of rock covering the metallic core he thinks there is a layer of liquid or plastic material lying a little less than twenty miles below the surface of the earth.—Prom the Scientific American. Wire 7 .I1t 11 (.Is My mare, a very valuable one, was badly bruised and cut by being caught in a wire fence. Some of the wounds would not heal, although I tried many different medicines. Dr. .Belt •tdvisetl me to use MINARD'S LINIMENT, dilut- ed first, then stronger as the sores be- gan to look better, until after threat weeks, the sores have healed, and, beat of all, the hair is growing well, and is 2.1`0'1.' WRITE, as is moat always the ease in horse wounds. F. M. DOUCET. Weymouth. • MAY'S PINK FLOWERS. You will find the wood lily In the woods. Turk's cap lily is blossoming in the lowlands. Rocky woods show the pdetty trumpet honeysuckle. Low and sandy spots appeal to painted cup (figwart). ]Pink azaleas are lovely, but persist in growing in swamps. That pretty crowfoot, the wild col- umbine, is found in woodlands. To find milkwart (fringed polygala) penetrate into the depths of the wods. Calypso, a lovely pink orchis, has the urilcinciness to actually hide itself in boo. Moss pink (phlox subulata) clothes w;hnfe hiIlsfdcs in, the rocky wcodlarliis. Rhododendrons are beginning to turn Some mountainous woodlands into things of beauty. 4ay IOW MANY CORNS • HURT YOUR FEET? If you haven't tried Putnam's Corn Extractor, who haven't used the article that will remove corns, callouses and sore foot lumps In the shortest time. Don't waste another cent in plasters, pads or salves—get the guaranteed Corn .Reliever, Putnam's Painless Corn and Wart Extractor. It ants quickly, never pains, removes the corn forever. Price 25 cents. THINKING. AND WALKING. (Montreal Herald,) The average American never walks, because he thinks It saves tlmo to ride The average Canadian Is about the same, only not quite so much so. Therefore the observation of Mayor Gaynor that he while always a kingoshould appeal tot work putting rattier a new view on the ease. I1 walking is not a waste of time, hut a help to the profitable enjoyment of It and every man who has accustomed himself to the exercise knows that that is what It Is—then perhaps the rushing trolley car Is not quite so time -saving as it looks. Minard's Liniment Cures Diphtheria, Electric Lamps of Low Tension. The German General Electric Society nom manufactured metallic filament lamps to bo run at the low tension of 14 volts, giving lights of 10, 15 mad 15 candlepower. They cost about half the price of metallic filament lamps spade for tensions of 110 and 220 volts, •and are said to be very durable. Their ali- mentation is rendered' possible by means of transformers, which reduce t'lte fila- ments have to be long and thin, but those used with bow tension are short- er, thicker and cheaper. It is asserted that the light yield of a lamp is ithereas- ed when used at low tension. e'eileele'",e05`1"' )a: At ,1'3' {N, .:troll N+`\' . .: btu.-. irt,',i„vr: ,.,r,y • 1Ne •4akcG�€xis--.uta '>t ts iisH1E STAM DARO 'ARTICLE IILusE1X it EVEEN1EAE ' Y'br,W.p1!''" of ••', culPANY,111410 t,MAoe p�V2°NT°0MO514 � „.. intiu,iniiiidii811l11 a. '' M OST PERFECT 1 , 1 ITHE K N DJHAT PLLAS s 'llll �IiIII� E Iii �Illi� EOPLE' I 1 MACE s ISSUE .NO, 27, 1911 e-sttewerw.a.wein WOMEN WANTED. W OMEN WAN'L'ED, TO TAICP) OR - vv se dors in spare time ; no experience scy rnnecesothoraary. and girlsOur,lines Applyespe, Deplallt. Aused, l3rltby- teh Canadian Inftstriat Company, 228 Albert street, Ottawva. AGENTS WANTED. ......,....Z A GENTS WANTED—A STUDY of r rt. other agency propositions convinces us that none can equal ours, You' will always regret it if you don't apply for particulars to Travellers' Dept., 228 AL» here street, Ottawa. .4...•01.0 FARMS FOR SALE. OR SALE' --SPLENDID FARM, 100 •x' acres, frame buildings, near City of London; cheap under mortgage. bass terms. Apply at once. London Loan Corttpany, London, Ont. ho cannot I. acccpr no Si,her, but send ntuup for Illustrated book—leafed. Itgivea full partic- ulars and dlrectlen, invaluable to tunes. WINDSOR SUPPLY CO., WIis ecru Ont. General Agents for Can a. • THE D,ARADIA B IIEWSPAPE11 DIIECTOAY FOH 1911 IS lutereslnd and sboulrt know about the wonderful MARVEL, Whirling Spray The new Vagh ,i.Syricge. gest —Most convenient. it clesoeea instantly. Ask yeo, drugg@tforl We have Just received from the pnb- lisi.ers, A. i'fcliim, Limited, of iblontreal and Toronto, a atopy of the 1311 Edition, of the Canadian Newspaper Directory. 'i'hie Is the seventh edition of this vat- uai,le wuret, which fill:; e. very real treed or. the desk of every businees man, whether he is an advertiser or not. Tho Canadlatz :\ew52spaper I)trlctory lists and duscrlbes l,u periodicals in Caught and .Newfoundland.. Of these 135 are dally, 1,108 n eokly or send -weekly, !:8.i monthly or semi-monthly, and 23 are pt:allshed lasts ,"roclnentiy. This is a con- ai,lerable increase over the last edition. :n addition to title, the Directory sup- plies a c.rmpre'tensive Gazetter, giving th rail pop . elegrapheand bankingt facilities atsd other interesting features or every newspnper city, town and village In Ca rade. This work canlair,i over CI pages. It is spleudfdly bound and is cerrairly a ere- dir- One to the publisher's and to f.'an- eallea newspapers generally. A. McKim, Limited, are partirulerly well qualified to edit and peblish this, the standard book of reference on Canad- ts.tt pubilcatLone. They are the pioneers in the Advertising Agency field in the Dominion, the McTilm &genry having been founded In Montreal In ;Tannery, 18t;0, twenty-two years ago, by jr. Anson Mm[ int, who is still at the head of the business. During all this time they have been the acknowledged leaders in this line In Can- ada, and the Agency businesat has been developed from a very small beginning— then performing only the fnnetlons oC the middle-man—to a very large produr- Ila enterprise, which runs Into the mil- lions. IL floes without saying then that no other Agency Is in closer tonrh with the publishere of the Dominion than ;4i:nnint'e and they are therefore able to ret tile Most reliable leformetton. The pricy or the 1011 Directory is $2.00. '.-i Minard's Liniment Cures Colds, Etc. HIS STAR OF MERCY l -IAD SET. Little Arthur 11iaa very proud of his lnerriborehip in the "ba-nd of mercy." He wore the badge, a small star, as if it were a policeman's in - sigma, and could often be heard re- proving the other boys for their cruel treatment of dogs and cats. But one day a lady of the neigh- borhood wile asteonished to find him in the very act of tormenting the cat meat Cruelly. She protested, "Why. Arthur, what are you doing? I thought you belonged to the band of mercy.' "I did," he said. "but I lost my star."—Prom the Metropolitan. Minard's Liniment Cures Garget in Cows. THE FOREIGN KNIFE. (Ottawa Citizen.) The European foreign element in Ot- tawa, especially the Poliacks, have been getting somewhat out of hand lately, and on friday night there was a serious stab- bing affray. The use of the knife and revolver has become altogether too conti- nual among these people In Montreal, Toronto and Hamilton, but so far they have given !ittte trouble 1n the city. Use of the knife or the gun should be put down with a strong hand by the local authorities, and the most effecff've man- ner in which to do thio Is to deal out a few stiff sontorv's to early offenders. MOD hen 'Von want to clear your house of flies, see that you get Wilson's Fly Pads. Imitations are always unsatisfactory. A REMEDY FOR 1-11CCOUGi-i. (European Edition of the N. Y. 23erald,) Hiccugh Is a sudden and spasmodic contraction of the diaphragm, determin- ing a brusctue sheet to the walls or the abdominal and thoracic cavity, and is ac- companied by a rough and inarticulate sound caused by the sudden closure and sonorous vibration of the vocal cords. dmatesmieltesmpoeaging sthidsagreaesyltm there is one recommended by Dr. Petit, or Beaumont, which although not really new Is but little known, It has the merit of being extremely simple and is said to be remarkably efficaciotts. It consists simply In swallowing' as quickly as possible a tablespoonful of powdered sugar without any admixture with water. The hiccough will be Im- mediately stopped. If it comes on again, the same remedy again will be found srccessful. Witat is the action of the powdered auger? Probably It sets up a kind of reflex action. The sugar certainly playa no specific rale in thi.*, case, and it is probable that: any inert powder would have the same effect. Dr. P, etit. has made use of this remedy for some years and it hart rarely failed. Aeecrdingly he rcoommends recourse to it even when the ease of hiccoughs may have resisted alt the standard romedles. Minard's Liniment Cures Distemper, R+4 More Greenbacks Than Gray Matter, young D l2lilori, Is tetra feat! ori int her Cap. Ethel—tea ; a' goose feather,