HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Herald, 1906-09-07, Page 2`APT® COOK AND
AUSTRA .UAN NATIVES®
Tile natives of Australia knew the
csrerlieinal virtues of roots and herbs so
well that when first discovered by
"Ceptairt Cook, the great Ethglish na
„motor, they were practically free from
disease. Bileans for Biliousness (the
great .6.ustraalkan herbal remedy), are
smanpounded from the finest medicinal
herbs, and are altogether superior to
to medicines in use before their intro -
auction.
rt is a well-known fact that mo
Meer and stomach medicines contain
tutreury, bismuth, and other mineral
peft ons. If taken for long there siub-
al ccs cause such serious 'effects ae'
toes+ening the teeth, pausing the Bair to
etc. Now Bileane are a lhousehold
esedielne albsolut'ely devoid of all such
Lkatmful ingredients. They are puaely
vegetable and
are a certain
cure for all
liver and stom-
ach troubles,in-
digestl0n,
headache, eon-
stipation, piles,
female ail-
ments, etc.
They cure con-
stipation with-
out causing
griping. If you
rI , are feeling
y� iI1y f Ils�t "run-down" or
eilele /tf/t,l i 1 4 out of sorts
An Australian Native.
ely will s•tiluulate you wonderfully. Bil-
raeies, without the slightest discomfort,
prompt the liver and digestive organs
etc met in nature's normal way, leaving
Chose organs strengthened and stinma-
retved bo continue the •peeformanee of
their duties without further assistance.
They produce a gentle action on the
:Astrels, curing or preventing constipa-
1&n' en, cleansing the Stomach, and ridding
sae system of all impurities.
ileans for Biliousness are also a eer-
iafrs cure for skin eruptions, biliousness,
der ha.dache, had taste in the mouth,
fent breath, dizziness, fainting, feelings
f uncomfortable fullness even after a
fight meal, wind pains, anaemia, debil-
etc. They improve the general ei
.saltation, and are a boon to pale -faced
- s, and weak worsen. Obtainable
Sperm all druggists at 50c a box, or from
Me Mean Oo., Colborne street, Toron-
de: Cut out this article, write across it
are name and date of this paper, and
irk ± to above address with your own
auric and address, and a lc stamp to
-y return postage, and a free sample
user twill be mailed you.
'Red Neckties on Trains.
'Red neckties are always worn by for-
-target brakemen and conductors. Ever not -
egos it:?" said a. railroader.
' ,,Why isit?"
`'A:s'..a `neifety device," was the reply.
"Theze.redneckties that flash upon your
gaze ,on the railroads of Italy, France,
+laesrresny . and England are not a gen
ittu:t the people have a gay taste, but
hat they are cautious and prudent.
'The neckties are supplied free by the
railroad companies for use as danger sig-
mas in emergency. Thus, no matter
easels or where an accident may happen,
there is no need to search or scramble
far s. red flag, but the brakeman whips
off his red necktie and waves it franti-
irmly aloft."
1 Sinerd's Liniment Relieves Neuralgia.
Out For a Fast Run.
oar friend Mr. Deppe of Deppe, N.C., cam
Urea. few days ago and took us out to ride.
New. we are very fond of riding and we
very readily got on board and out of town
lee went at the rate of about thirty miles
eta hour; now we don't want any of that kind
ar" riding, for we came back minus a hat
gad umbrella and if our pants had not been
batted on I guess we would have lost them.
18e more automobile stunts, thanks,
Yloax—Actors are proverbially super-
atitious, aren't they? Joax—Yes; some-
times they even expect the ghost to
Welk.
rhe
etter
y
The tissues of the throat ora
Inflamed and irritated; you
oaugh, and there is more irrita•
don --more coughing. You take
.st cough mixture and it eases the
irritation—for a while. You take
EMULSH 0 N
and it cures the cold. That's
what is necessary. It soothes the
throat because it reduces the
irritation ; cures the cold because
it: drives out the inflammation;
builds up the weakened tissues
because it nourishes them back
to their natural strength. That's
how Scott's Emulsion deals with
gore throat, a cough, a cold.
sa bronchitis.
WE'LL SEND you
A SAMPLE FRES.
COTF LOI'1-o 'ronto,lu"ta"'
POPULATION ESTIMATES.
How Chicago Boomers Figure the In-
crease of People of That City.
It would not be strange if the casual
reader should become somewhat confused
by the estimates on Chicago's papule. -
tion, We start with the census figure
for 1000, which was 1,608,575. The in-
crease over 1890 was 54.4 per cent.
Next there is a government estimate
for 1003, which is 1,873,880. The increase
is 175,305, or slightly more than 10 per
cent.
The following year, 1004, there is a
srto'ol census that tells a story of ar-
rested development and decline, OM -
cages population is only 1,714,144, oe
159,736 less than it was in 1903. There
is no increase worth speaking of in the
four years since 1900.
Then comes a Health Department es-
timate for 1905 which appears as 1,990,-
750. Tluis is but 116,870 more than the
census bureau's estimate for 1903, and
looks like a gairly conservative figure.
Iii the sante year, however, there es a
directory estimate of 2,0; 2,760, and the
difference between the two is 282,010.
Finally there is the directory estimate
just out. It puts the population at 2,-
300,500, and the method by which the
calculation is made is carefully explaan-
ecl:
The publisher's,eetimate of the populee-
tion is not determined by •using an arbi-
trary multiple—tlhaat is multiplying the
number of mance in the directory by
31-2, 4, 41-2, •or some other figure; it
is based. ,on the United States census.
We take as a basis the number of names
in the directory in a census year, and
in succeeding years increase our estimate
of the population at the sante ratio in
which the names in the directory in-
crease, and we find it makes the result
almost as acelomate as the enumeration
of each individual.
A question of some importance, how-
ever, is which census is used, and we .be-
lieve that the public+hers adopted the
pial some years ago of going back to
the census of 1800. This was because of
the general belief that the census of
1000 did Chicago a great injustice. If
it were to be accepted we should have
to adroit frankly that the increase since
1900 that is indicated by the estimate
is very improbable. It amounts to more
than 35 per cent., or in exact numbers
to 601,925. This is just about equal tb
the increase in New York as that is
indented. by the recent State census.
But New York had 3,437,202 ,people to
begin with, and Chicago only 1,898,575.
All the figures, except that of the school
census for 1904, would go to show, how-
ever, that the population now exceeded
2.000.000.—Chicago Herald.
CUT OF
"IMPERIAL" PUMPING WINDMILL
Outfit which won the CHAMPIONSHIP OF
THE WORLD against 21 Amerioan, British
and Canadian manufacturers, after a two
months' thorough trial. Made by
GOOLD, SHAPLEY M MUIR CO. LIMITED,
Brantford, Canada.
New System of Making Wine.
'Wine germs, which make it possible to
duplicate the famous wines of Bordeaux,
Burgundy or the Rhine, are among the
latest experiments of scientists. The
germs are obtained from the dregs of
casks which have contained genuine old
wine, and those for each 'particular brand
are placed for safe keeping in a sub-
stance prepared from Japanese isinglass
and fruit juice. In the jellylike mass
the germs soon establish a colony. When
needed, sufficient germs may be placed
in a tube of sthrilized fruit juice. After
two or three days the juice will be in
full fermentation, with plentiful effer-
vescence. This process is said to impart
to the wine the exact bouquet and char-
acteristics of the wine from 'which the
germs originally came.'
* e
His Horse.
Mr. Stingirnan's antiquated horse is,
to put it mildly, rather thin, and a sif
to make up for lack of flesh on the body,
the animal has a head many sizes too
large for it. Of course, people talk about
that horse, and Mr. Stingiman doesn't
like it, The other week, for instance,
Stinghnan had gone to the expense of a
new collar for the brute. Ten minutes
after delivery he was back at the sad-
dler's with the collar.
"You blundering idiot!" he blurted out..
"You've made it too small! I can't get
it over his head!"
"Over lois head!" ejaculated the sad-
dler. " Man„ it wasn't made to go over
his head. Book him into it."
And Stingiman was quite rude.—Se-
lected.
'Every actor who hoofs It back iiom4
doesn't leave footprints in the sands et
time.
What a Journalist Should Be.
Nowapnper men in general,, and the
younger men in the .profession in par-
ticular, will De interested: and profited
by reading an article on The Independ-
ent Press; Its Opportunities and, Duties,
which appears in the North American
Review for July, the writer being Mr.
Samuel Baw'les., editor of the Springfield
Repubitean, His conception of 'what a
true journalist should be and what a
genuine and self-respeoting journalist
should stand for in every community are
admirably expressed in these 'worsts:
"The journalist has one client, one pa-
tient, one flock—that is to say, the
whole community; and, clothing should
stolid in the way of his single-lhanded
and devoted service of that one interest.
He should !beware all entangling alii-
an'ces—political, social, commercial—
which may limit or embarrass such ter -
vice. He ehonld let, the honors and
emoluments of office go to other people.
His own office, if properly administered,
is more important and more powertul
than any his fellow -citizens are likely to
confer upon hint,"
neo
Make It Spades,
Occasionally they manufacture a good
stor : est tells
of
bride
moue
deisou
cess
cremated. The decision was left to the
eldest -son, who, looking at his mother,
said, "I will leave it to you," to which
the lady replied: "I make it spades."
(Calgary District)
Ready for the plough.
Convenient to Railway and Post
Office, Market and Schools.
Climate the finest in Canada.
Cattle graze all winter, and fatten on
prairie hay.
Soil the richest in the Northwest.
Will grow, without irrigation,
Winter Wheat, Oats, Barley, Sugar
Beets, Alfalfa, and almost anything
that grows in other parts of Canada.
With irrigation a crop never fails.
11 the best Ontario farms could be
irrigated, .they would double their
present average yield, and could
be cropped ten years longer without
running out.
They are cheaper now than they
will ever be.
;The first crop should pay for the
' -'id and increase its value four -fold.
pecial Reduced Railway Rates.
rite for illustrated folder.
Telfer 5 Osgood
Selling Agents
216 CORISTiNE BUILDING
MONTREAL
TERRIBLY DISTRESSING.
Nothing can cause more pain and more
distress than Piles.
Ointments and local treatments may
relieve but cannot cure.
Dr. Leonhardt's Hem-Roid is guaran-
teed to cure any case of Piles.
If Hem-Roid doesn't cure you, you get
your money back.
Item -Hold is a tablet taken internally,
thus removing the cause.
$1.00 at all dealers, or the Wilson-
Fyle Co., Limited. Niagara Falls, Ont.
a
Australia's Commerce Act.
The Australian Commerce act, which
went into effect June 8, contains a pro-
vision regarding the labelling of goods.
It in part requires a trade description
specifying the exact nature of ingredi-
ents to be placed on all articles used for
food or drink by man or used in the man-
ufacture or preparation of articles used
for food or drink by man, and on medi-
cines or medicinal preparations for in-
ternal or external use; apparel, includ-
ing boots and shoes, and the materials
from which such apparel is manufactur-
ed; jewelery and seeds and plants. How
strictly the terms of the regulations will
be interpreted may be judged from the
fact that the term "whiskey' 'is to be
applied. to "whi'cey Made- from pure
malt only " ;'.ir regulations to which
these special provisions are to be enforc-
ed are to be published in the Govern-
ment Gazette, and.will not take effect
until after three months of such notifi-
cation. This act does not apply to
Australian made goods exported to any
one or more States of the Common-
wealth.
Mindrd's Liniment for sale everywhere.
ma4
Life in Dawson.
The ubitquitous servant question bobs
up in Dawson in the shape of unskilled
labor at high prices, and the family
which is fortunate enough to possess a
cook pays well for her services—$60 to
$70 a month. This includes board and
lodging. A woman who comps in to pre-
pare dinner and set the house in order
receives $35 a month, while the ordinary
scrub woman commands $3 a. day. Keep-
ing warm in winter is another expensive
necessity. Wood is used for fuel, and last
winter it cost a housekeeper of my ac-
quaintance $67 to heat her six -room cot-
tage for one month.
There is no place in the world which
has a wider range of temperature than
Dawson. In winter the mercury drops
to 60 and 70 degrees below zero and the
ordinary thermometer goes out of busi-
ness and a spirit instrument is used to
register the degrees of cold. In mid -sum-
mer it sometimes becomes so warm that
the sluice boxes at the mines are worked
at night, which is always cool, instead of
during the day. This can easily be done,
as throughout the summer the sun comes
up before 3 o'clock in the morning and
goes out of eight after 10 o'clock in the
evening. The red glow remains all night
and one may read a newspaper by a win-
dow at midnight.
No difficulty is experienced in, ob-
taining good results from snap shot pho-
tographs taken on the street at 10, 11
and 12 o'clock. They are, however, with-
out shadows and are rather lifeless for
reproduction. The cheechaco—the Indian
word for newcomer and the popular term
for tenderfoot—finds it difficult to go
to sleep on account of the light, and for
some unevxplainable reason, the hotels
use white curtains. This is reversed in
winter and during December and Janu-
ary there are only three hours of day-
light each day.—Leslie's Weekly.
.es
Minard's Liniment Cures Dandruff.
The Five Vowels.
(Alley Sloper.)
At school the master warned me that
I never shauld Urger
That there are juid five vowels in
The English alphabet.
He said: 'You must remember them;
you'll Sind it useful to."
And then he said the vowels five
Were A, B, I, 0, U.
Since I've .grown up I've found that X
Can flourish and can thrive
With fewer than he told me o1;
I do not need the five.
tries fact Is, three are quite enough;
They always Null nee through;
So I've discarded A and 117
And stink to I. 0. ti.
Town of Many Languages.
There are few cities in the world having
more newspapers and of such varied tongues
than Buenos Aires. Altogether the number
of dailies, weekles, monthlies and irregulars
published in the republic fluctuates about
180. Besides, of course, the "national" lan-
guage. with its wide divergencies from Span-
ish, there are papers published in Castilian,
in Italian, French, German, as well as
English, in Basque, in Norwegian, and Dan-
ish, in Arabic, Syrian, Hebraic, Servian and
in several dialects, while in the Chubut ter-
ritory the Welsh organ has considerable sale
and influence.
Minard's Liniment Co., Limited.
Dear Sirs,—I had a Bleeding Tumor on
my face for a long time and tried a num-
ber of remedies without any good results
and I was advised to try MINARD'S
LINIMENT, and after using several bot-
tles it made a complete cure, and it
healed all up and disappeared altogeth-
er.
DAVID 1:1h1NDERSON.
Belleisle Station, Kings Co., N. B., Sept,
17, 1904.
Airship Nomenclature.
There is a equabbie as to the correct
name for various flying machines, air-
ships and balloons, and the Aero Club o8
France attempts to set the mattes
straight. "..Perone'£" describes a flying
machine heavier than air; that 15, an
apparatus having no gas bag. "Aero-
n'efs" are divided into several classes:
"Helicoptera," machines depending on
screws for flight; "aeroplanes," machines
in which equilibrium depends on plane
surfaces, and "orthoptera," mechanical
birds and machines propelled by the flap-
ping of wings. The expression "aviator,"
very 'often incorrectly employed, should
be applied only to the pilot of an "aero-
nef," as "aeronaut" is applied to the pilot
of a gas balloon --Boston Daily Adver-
tiser.
Getting Ready for a Cruise.
Yonkers, N.Y., Statesman.)
"John, you look after the gang plank."
John—Aye,aye, sir.
"And, Tom, you look after the centre
board."
Tom—Aye, aye, sir.
"I'll get busy and look after the side-
board."
ils®n' s
LY
s
Three hundred times bet.
to than sticky paper.
NO DEAD FLIES LYING ABOUT
®old by all Druggists and General Stores
and by mail.
TEN CENTS PER PACKET FR063
ARCHDALE WILSON,
HAMILTON, ONT,
•
ISSUE NO. 36, 1906
MISCELLANEOUS,
$200---AGENTS-4200
$2O
Agents wanted everywhere—old and young,
Write at ouoo for particulars of our $200
Prize offer in addition to generous commis-
sions.
RADSTOCK MFG. CO., TORONTO, CANADA
PICTURE POST CARDS
15 for 10e; 50 for 50e; 100 for 80c; all dif-
ferent; 500 for re assorted; 1,000 envelopes
50e, and 60c; 1,00 foreign stareps 25e. W.
It. Adams, 401 Yonge street, Toronto, Ont.
Mrs. Winslow's Soothing syrup should al-
ways be used for children teetuing. It
sooth :, the child, soothes the gums, cures
wee. colic and is thebest remedy for Diar-
rhoea..--.—
DR. LE,RoY'S
PIEMALE PILLS
ri:ggluty,l e
A. safe, sure and reliable monthly re:uin.
tor. These Pills have been used in Franco
for over fifty years, and found invaluable
for the purpose designed. and ere guar n -
teed by the rankers. Enclose stamp for
sealed ulrcalar. Price 01.00er box o1
by mail. securely sealed, on receipt of pile's
LE ROY PILL CO.,
Box 4s, Hamilton, Canada.
Chicago's Trolley.
Great joy is manifested all over the city
at the expected inauguration of overhead
trolley service on the Madison street and
Milwaukee linos on Sunday. The rest of the
world had overhead trolleys years ago, got
tired of them and adopted underground trol-
leys. Now comes along poor Chicago, al-
ways ten years behind in anything that de-
pends on the city government, and picks up
the leavings of other cities and is only too
glad to get them. This is the result of eight
years of democratio rule and municipal own-
ership bosh.
41.
THE BEST TEA.
It's an old saying that contentment
is better than wealth. A very lifnited
amount of wealth is necessary to pur-
chase a package of tea eontentanent,
as "SALADA" is put up in quarter, half
and one pound packets and sold at po-
pular prices so as to be within the
reach of everyone.
Apology Due the Lobster.
"Get off my toes, you lobster!" cried
the Yale freedman to the New Haven
peeler. Astounded Bumble took that
beardless insulter in. A police magis-
trate fined the young desperado $15, A
scratch on the dignity of a New Haven
policeman merits a penalty of much more
than $15. But what compensation is
there for the offended dignity of a lob-
ster, tha.t sacred crustacean, the king of
foods, for whom palaces and lordly halls
are built, a god who is killed and, eaten
all day and all night long? At best the
policeman is a necessary evil. The lob-
ster is an indispensable good.—New
York Sun.
- Tiff i'•• AV.
TRADE MARK REGISTERED.'
Ointment quickly cures itching Piles, Eczema, and
other skin troubles.
Leo Corrigan, 475 Ferguson Ave.. N. Hamilton,
had Eczema since childhood. He consulted
specialists—lay weeks and weeks in hospitals—
and despaired of ever getting better.
"1 thought 8fira would be tike other remedies /
lead trier!," he writes, "but, to my deh'ght, 's few.
Iw,urs after the first aft lieation 1' felt great nr1kf.
It
114.1 worked wonders for me."
Don't put it off—get a boa of Mira Oinimeeit
at once and be relieved. Price 50c.-6 for $2.501.
At druggists —or from The Chemins' Co. ei
Canada, l imited, Hamilton --Toronto.
Cold Storage for Hay Fever.
Hero 1s a cure of hay fever that may not
come to late for the susceptible victim of
that fell malady. The Hospital relates that
"a gentleman who was a sufferer from hay
fever happened one summer to spend two
hours in the refrigerator hold of a steamer."
This cured him and he had no further attaek
that summer. As a remedy "cold storage"
has objectigns, but there are victims who
would even be cured at the expense of a
frozen foot or fingers, and at any rate the
idea is refreshing. Those of us who enjoy
novelty, and always the "last thing," might
rush for the refrigerator the instant we begin
to feel that hay sneezing coming on.
Minard's Liniment Cures Burns, etc.
et o
Where Woman Pleads Not Guilty.
'(Sheridan, Ore,. News -Sun.)
Yesterday we were asked'lf we ever saw a
baldheaded woman. We answered, "No," we
never did, nor did we ever see a woman
waltzing around town in her shirt sleeves
with a cigar in her teeth and running into
every saloon she saw. We have never seen
a woman go fishing with a bottle in her
pocket. sit on the damp ground all day and
come home drunk at night. Nor have we
ever seen a woman yank off her coat and
say she could lick any man in town.
"The play's the thing," remarked
Shakespeare. But had he lived in this
age he would' have known that printer's
ink cuts rather a considerable figure.
Farmer=s
airy en
Whom you regWro a
Tit, Pall, Was Basil or Milk Pan
..to
kelt your groove eyes
D1. $rte'
ARTICLES
You will fired they give you satis–
faction every time.
THERE IS NO SUBSTITUTE
TITUTE
Insist on being supplied with EDDY'S every time*
eafroaos as a sagewarowaaor eco