HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Herald, 1906-09-28, Page 6OILCANS AND CHANCE OF SEASON
rci_OW THIS VEGETABLE
EEDY Alms THE BODY
If the thermometer jumped from BO
in the shade one day to 20 below
zero the next, flow few people would
escape a terrible chill. Why? Because
the body could not adapt itself to the
change quickly enough. But from Sep-
tember first to the coming winter the
body has to prepare for such a (Mange,
Generally it needs a little help and Balsams
provide that help. The liver, stomach and
bowels are the organs which suffer most
from change in temperature.
The liver is composed of thousands of
tiny cells, and in these cells the bile
is secreted, and the blood is purified.
Summer's heat has weakoned them—
made then feel limp like you did. 'Win-
ter has some heavy work for them to do
if your health is to be preserved. Bileans
are a vegetable help --not a mineral poison
like so many liver "medicines." Bileans
tone up the liver, strengthen and en-
rich the secretory glands and strengthen
the walls of the intestines. They thus
cure indigestion, liver disorder and Iwo
stipation, and in females, various irreehe
tarites, all these mean that the body is
run down and out of order —needs
Bileans. A11 druggists supply them
at 50 cents a box. Ask any friend who
has used them what Bileans can do.
The Reason.
Little Leland and Jeanette are cous-
ins and live in the same house, says the
Chicago News, Jeanette went to Wau-
kesha on a visit. On her return Le-
land asked her if she had been to Sunday
School.
"Yes," she answered, "and a little boy
there winked at me, but I didn't wink
back,"
"Huh!" said Leland, "I know why,
It was 'cause you didn't know him."
N
Minard's Liniment Cures Dandruff.
The Life of Bells.
(Korea Daily News.)
Comparatively few people know that ringing
a, bell ruins it. That it, a b.11 lits a definite
length of life, and atter so many blows will
break. A 900 pound bell, struck blows of
118 foot pounds of force, broke after 11,000
blows. A 4,000 pound bell broke after 15,-
000 blows of 350 foot pounds force. A. steel
composition bell weighing 1,000 pounds broke
atter twenty-four blows of 150 foot pounds,
but its maker said it was calculated for a
lighter blow.
illankg
and Illitading
Dia ond
Promptly and well—and at reason-
able prices—we attend to the repair-
ing of Watches and Jewelry of all
kinds. A special mailing box in
which to forward your watch to u3
will be sent you free on request.
We haveunequalled facilities, ton,
for the designing and manufacturing
of special articles in Jewelry, Silver-
ware, Lodge Regalia, insignia, Eta
We buy old (kid Jewelry at high-
est prices.
We send u;3on request free ofckaree
put large illustrated catalogue.
TITLES TO ARCTIC LANDS,
Lands Hitherto Unknown Discovered and
Named by Explorers.
The voyage of the Canadian government
cruiser Arctic to the far north suggests for
consideration the question of the ownership
of some far northern lauds. Iran many years
explorers of various nationalities --British,
American, Seandinavien and others — have
ventured into the frozen wilderness lying be-
tween the dominion of Canada. and the north
nolo and have there discovered lands thither-
to unknown and have named them and plant-
ed flags upon them. There has been much
international rivalry in the work of elabo-
rviting the arctic map and of pushing on
toward tate pole.
But there has been little thought in the
minds of the adventurers or in that of the
public of the delimitation of international
boundaries in the realms of paleoerystio ice
and ternal enow, But now the Canadian
govind
heornment intimati u that that the Dominionht o extends
extends
clear to the north pole and' that all the lands
which have been discovered and explored in
those regions, no matter by whom, are under
the British flag.
Academically the question is somewhat
complicated and might form the subleet of
interminable argument. Thele aro those who
hold that discovery and exploration give title
to new lands, while others insist that title is
not perfected without actual occupation and
Permanent settlement. But how if the lands
in question are not fit for or suseeptibie of
settlement?—Now York Tribune.
s+s.
Blame Easily PIaced.
Mrs, Jones --I wonder what it is than
makes baby so wakeful?
Mr. Jones (savagely) Why, it's her-
edity, of course—this is what comee of
esour sitting up at nights waiting for me.
—Stray Stories.
a
OA ves
�^
Torat, int.
CUT or
"IMPERIAL" PUMPING WINDMILL
Outfit which won the CHAMPIONSHIP OF
THD WORLD against 21 American, British
and Canadian manufacturers, after a two
months' thorough tt•lsl. Made by
GOOLI), 505. PLEYAli 2IULit CO. LIMITED,
Brantford. Canada.
RS. HUNTER'S STORY
Says Restelte aro "T+ltty lifurveilous,"
Mrs, I, Hunter, of 111
Raglan Road, Kingston,
Ont„ says;
"I have suffered with
kidney and liver trou-
ble and chronic eonsti•
potion for some time. I
Was subject to dizzi-
ness, bilious headache,
nervousness, drowsi
in the back
nets,
, pains
• e, a tared,
weary feeling nearlyand allsid'the tiandme,
"I tried almost every rnedicine, was
treated by doctors and. druggists, with
little or no benefit.
"I tried Dr, Leoahardt's Anti -Pill, and
the results have been truly wonderful.
1
rim 30 much better, Ant, Pill is a
most wonderful remedy"
All dealers, or the Wilson-Fyle Co.,
Limited, Niagara Falls, Ont.
FLOWERS THAT I ILL FLIES.
Sweet Peas Freshly Picked 'Effectually
Destroy the Annoying Insects.
A. local druggist has found a new agent for
the destruction of flies that for activity and
effectiveness discounts •anything ti
offered for that purpose. And not only is it
harmless but it is a thing of beauty as well.
After selling annually thousands of sheets
of fly paper of the sticlty and poisoned varie-
ties and a ton more or less of insect powder
the lama all'previoustmethodsbids
w tha
ir to au-
ehim and
thFor osevis eralydays the druggist, who iho are in the s
lover of flowers, has had upon his front cases
bunches of sweet peas of a variety grown
originally in California, Each morning after
opening up the store he has found collected
around the base of the vessel containing the
Ms quite an accumulation of dead flies.
For the first day or so he regarded the mass
of defunct dipterous insects as an aectdenal
gathering in the neighborhood of flowers,
'but curiosity prompted him later to watch the
conduct of the few flies lett in the store. It
was observed when the peas were freshly
picked that immediately after their being
placed in the vases those flies in the victuty
severmed upon the petals ,and proceeded to
fasten themselves there. Shortly afterward
they tell from their positions dead.
It is presumed that the odor of the peas at-
tracted them first and tbat afterward they
absorbed some poisonous exudation that the
flowers possess and died in conequenee. So
far as known the peas possess no toxic effect
upon the human being. --Springfield Journal.
_m
Mrs, I, Ilunter,
As a Favor.
A young Scotch minister came to
preach his trial sermon. He was very
nervous and as the fear of .some dis-
arrangement of his hair laid bold of
hint, he suddenly turned to the sexton'
in the vestry and whispered, "Could
you get me a glass."
The sexton seemed to be not a little
surprised but he returned presently with
smothing under his coat, which proved
to be a bottle.
"I've git it, inee/lister; but ye must
say naethin' about it, or 'twould be the
ruin of me. I only got it as a special
favor, an' they warnshoe gi' it me at
a' if I barna told them 'twase for the
new meenister, "Ye'll be vera carefu'
aboot it, I hope, These is nwfu' folk
for talkin' aboot meenisters an' sex-
tons.
A Humane Notice.
Meat of the small animals and birds
that live in agricultural di;)tr•iots are i
helps rather than enemies to the farrier.
It is to be regretted that farmers' boys
are brought up with the notion that they
should kill all such at every opportun-
ity.
In Trance the farmers have learned
better than this. They have gone so
far in opposing the killing of these small
creatures that they have notices put
up in every rural community in France.
One of these bill -boards contains the
following exhortation and recitation of
facts:
"This board is placed under the pro-
tection of the common sense and honesty
of the public.
"Hedgehogs ]ive upon mice, snails and
wire -worms, animals injurious to agricul-
ture. Don't kill a hedgehog.
"Toads help agriculture. Each one de -
treys twenty to thirty insects hourly.
Don't kill toads.
"Melee destroy wireworrns, larvae and
insects injurious to the farmer. No trace
of vegetables is ever found in his stom-
ach; does more good than harm. Don't
kill males,
"Birds ---Each department of France
loses. yearly ninny millions of francs by
the injury done by 'meets, Birds are the
only enemies capable of battling with
them vigorously;. they are great helps
to farmers. Children, don't take birds'
nests."—Selected,
WAN E !�
e7 s.r.
Minard's Liniment for sale eve,, y H here.
4
Another War on 112
Ladies to do plain and light sowing at
tome, whole or Sparc time, good pay; work
pent any distance, charges paid send stamp
for ftt11 parttrulars. National MKanufaeturing
f2o., Montreal,
"He's got a new plan to
suttees,"
Coal til, I suppose?"
"Not bis idea is to erose
Hing bugs so that you may
and thus swat them easily
ft 0
She I don't believe you when you
cry I am the only girl you ever loved.
Ile ---T don't are wily you shouldn't, All
the other girls did.
osquitoes.
exterminate mos -
them with light -
see them coming
in the dark."
Throat Coughs
A tickling in the throat;
hoarseness at times; adeep
breath irritates it; ---these
are features of a throat
cough. They're very de-
ceptive and a cough mix-
ture
ixture won't cure them.
You want something that
will heal the inflamed
membranes, enrich the
blood and tone up the
system .. .. ,•.
oats Emulsion
BIRDS AS DANCERS,
A. 'writer in the Strand says that dame
keg
eixeing is the principal play of many birds.
I'erhtaps the 'finest of bird dmneers is
the South American pock o' the •rook.
These birds have regular denting plant;l,
level spots which they keep clear at
sticks and stones.
A dozen or snore of the birds imam -
title around this, spot, and then a. eoek.
bird, his scarlet crest erect, steps into
the °entre. Spreading his wings and
tail, he begins to dance, first with, slow
itnd stately steps, then gradually snare
and more rapidly until he is spinning
like a mad thing. At last, tirati out,
he oinks down, hops out of the ring, and
another takes his place.
Some of the quail tribe are great
dancers, and so are the American sand
hill cranes. It is a most Microns eight
to watteh a crane dancing; he is so
desperately eolenln ower the 'wihole per -
forename. He looks like a shy young
mail who haus just learned to waltz and
is rather ashamed of the a000niplt]shrreeat,
FALL EXCRUSION TO NEW YORK.
Tickets only $9.00 to New York and re-
turn, from Suspension Bridge, via Le-
high Valley Railroad, Thursday, October
4th. Tickets good 10 days. Good on
regular express trains leaving Suspen-
sion Bridge 3.50 and 7:15 a. m., 7.15 and
8.43 p. m.
For tiekets, and further particulars,
call on or write Robt. S. Lewis, Passen-
ger Agent, 10 King street east, Toronto.
Who Pays for It?
(Brooklyn Eagle.)
Mr. Gompere is said to have a $20,000 auto-
mobile en the way from Paris. It probably
coat only half that, but there are some march-
ers in his army who wonder if they atrren't
going to have even bicyclees. It is easy to
be prosperous,., if you knew how. "
is just such a remedy.
It has wonderful healing
and nourishing power.
Removes the cause of
the coughand the whole
system is given new
strength and vigor .'..�e
,rend for free sample
SCOTT & BOWNE, amid:
Toronto, Ont.
,hot. au t$r.00. 4111 drug lett
A
For a ,'i � ,4i� s
A reliable cough and cold cure should
be always in the house ready for use tho
moment the first symptoms appear.
Itis always easier, cheaper and better
to check a cold in the very beginning.
It is safer, too.
Shiloh's Consumption Cure, the Lung
Tonic, has been tested for thirtythlee
years, and tens of thousands of homes in
Canada and the United States to -day are
never without it. e
A denier writes: " Shiloh s Consumption Cure
is without doubt the best remedy for Coughs end
Colds on the market. Once tared, my customers
will buy no other.—L. Ebky, Neeetsaweya,Ont� '
If it were anything, but the best would
this be so? Try it in your own family.
If it does not cure, you get back all it cost
you, We take all the chances. Neither
you nor your dealer can lose. Isn't that
fair ? 25c. is the price. All chalets in
medicine sell 303
The Bad Boy's Quotation.
The Sunday school class had been
asked to bring a donation of five cents
eadh, and to study up an appropriate
quotation, to be repeated to the pastor
as each one should go up to his desk to
place his contribution in the pool bas-
ket. First boy (dropping his nickel) said:
"Cast t'hy bread upon the waters and
it shall be returned to thee an hundred-
fold."
Pastor—"Very good, Master Tom,"
Second boy—`What you give to the
poor you lend to the Lord."
paster—"Good, my son."
And so on, each boy recited becom-
ingly until the bad boy's turn arrived,
and he said as he thrrrt in his niekle:
"A fool and his money are soon parted."
Minard's Liniment Relieves Neuralgia.
The Crime of the 'Ages.
g MERCHANT.
tr�.e t� ppii (Cor. N. Y, Herald.)
SENSIBLE ii7 f6�t ANT. We laugh at the ludicrous blunders of the
Bear Island, Aug. 26, 1903, statesmen of the mediaeval times, with their
emargoes, drawbacks and otbor binderances
MTNARD'S LIND/E1 T CO., LIMITED. to commerce, but the evil effects of their
Dear Sirs,—Your traveler is here to- P economic ignorance were trivial compared
day and we are getting a Iarge quantity 1 a9itjongtin prractioef.itTthiepcountry, is rtbe
Of your MIN ARD'S LINIMENT. We moat monstrous economic crime of all hie -
find it the best Liniment in the mar- tory. and, in Mew of the seeming enlight-
ket making no exception. We have been moil of tba ago and the nomrinaily high
standard of oducation in the United States,
in business 13 years and have handled 1 causes one to almost despair of the success
all kinds, but have dropped them all but popular
etdlytilder
and despotigoverrnmnsequalguity
Signals Fail in Foggy Weather.
The loss of the firstielass battleship Mon-
ISSUE .NO. O. 39, 1906
PICTURE POST CARDS
15 for 100; 50 for 50c; 100 for 80e; afi dtf.
ferent; 500 for S3 assorted; 1,000 envelope%
50o and 60o; 1,00 foreign stands 25o. 'W.
R. Adams, 401 Youge street, Toronto, Ont.
Mrs, Winslow's Soothing Syrup would tele
veaye be used for children teething. It
soothers the child, soothes the gulps, ours
wheel collo and ie the best r'emedY far Dlvr•-
rhoea,
DR. Le OY'S
FEMALE PILLS
A safe, anrc and reliable monthly reguir.
tor. These PIM taro bean need In Franca
for over at•ty years, and found invaluable
ler the purpose designed, and are ga;aran.
teed by the burkors. 'naluso stamp for
sealed etreular. Price 01.00 ex bolt of
nal's • er y mall. ,emaeiy sealed, on receipt of pa xe
LR ROY PILL CO..
Box 43 Hamilton, Canaan.
THOMPSON VS, SIMPSON.
A Neighborly Correspondence Tilt Be-
tween
e.
tween Two Britons.
The following correspondence which
recently passed between neighbors in the
north of England, may not exactly rank
with the famous Shuekbrugh linters, but
it is certainly words reproducing in, this
column:
Mr. Thompson presents his compli-
ments to Mr. Simpson, and begs bo re-
ques that hliewplgkeshiods.:the i. ,j
quest that he will keep his dogs from
trespassing on his grounds.
Mr. Simpson presents his compliments
to Mr. Thompson, and begs to suggest
that in future he should not spell "dogs"
with two gees.
Mr. Thompson's respects to Mr. Simp-
son, and will feel obliged if he will add
the letter "e" to the last word in the
note received, so as to represent Mr.
Simpson and lady.
Mr. Simpson returns Mr. Thompson's
note unopened, the impertinence it eon -
tains being only equaled by its vulgarity.
—London Mail.
your's; fbrtt sells itself; the others have
to be pushed to get rid of.
M. A. HAGERMAN.
tagu on Lundy Island in the Bristol channel
has started in the English papers a discus
Identified. 1 elon of the well-known tact that a foggy
"This," remarked lir. Softs, "is my 1 wean with aaney degree ofan not be
`V
ehlied
Where -
photograph with nay two Fruth poodles. l ever a complete study has been made of
You recognize ane, eh?" I fog signals it bas been found that atmos -
"1 think so," said. Miss Caine. "You i and Ibconditions,
ate itity of the
leg make a great wind
d
are the one with the hat on, are you ference in the distance over which sound
not 2"—Cassels Journal. will carry. It has been shown that a vessel
approaching a fog signal after hearing it
inn' it for a while may miss it,
although gradually growing nearer to the
source of the sound.
Minard's Liniment Cures Burns, etc.
ARTIFICIAL ICE MAKING.
Five Million Tons Turned Out Yearly--
$iso,000,000 in the Business.
Few American trades have grown as
vapidly in recent ;Years as artificial ice
making. The conditions of ice supply
• and the number of factories requiring
pee in enormous quantities seem to pra-
Imise a further extension of the busi-
ness. It is limited to no particular State,
i but has been most generally and most
largely developed in the south.
In 1870 there were four artificial ice
making plants in the United States. In
1880 there were thirty-five. In 1890 there
were 200. In 1908 there were 800. There
are naw considerably . more thou 1,000.
The capital invested in them is more
than $50,000,000, . and the aniountt of
iee they turn out in a year is in excess
of 6,000,000 tons, of which 1,500,000 tone
is manufactured in the Southern States.
The original artificial ice plant es-
tablished in the United. States wait in
New Oelealrs in 1800, and the intention
of its Draped:ors was declared to be to
supply artificial ice in the torritary south
of the ice line, whish is south of the
North Atlantic, New England, Middle
and Northwestern States. By degrees ice
plants have been established in the tclri-
tory supplied with natural ice, breweries,
hotels, restaurants, packing houses and
hospitals having refrigerating plants.
She Landed Hifi% ;
"You see it was very late, and doe nstatrs
in the parlor her elder slater was entertain-
ing a young man, She naturally felt a deep
interest in the entertainment. She was wait-
ing to hear how it would terminate.
And at last there twa ea sound in the
hall, a crash of the closing door, and it
was lain to the impatteet .giri that the young
AM had gone.
Well, Mande,' she aaid, `did you land
him?'
"There was ne Immediate reply to her
question. There was a stigma, a lacouliar
silence, a silonoo with a certain attained
,r ,,fie. t14., „
The Chemists Company
is an association of Ontario O7emills, formed to
make pure, safe, thoroughly reliable remedies.
Each remedy is made from carefully -selected
formula, on Ottidtly scientific principles.
For skin troubles and bnmetheir Mira Ointment
is quick in cure. While Mira Tablets and Mira
Blood Tonic sitrengthen the nerves and cleanse
the blood. Ointment and Tablets, each 50c.
Blood Tonic, $1.00. At druggists—or from The
Chemins Co. of Canada, Limited, Hamilton--.
Toronto. Zook for the trademark,
.'-•'t
l'.
0W1ga0, 1 cillo 1%'rkVM00OSt,.;s.t,.:.r
TRAP& MARX WS -MRCSs.
Cost of Little and Big Wars.
So far as it hes been figured up at Tokyo
the total money cost of the war with RuseIa
amounts to e1,10D,000,000. This does not f
elude the interest on the war debt to
lip
paid hereafter. It cost Great Britain little,
if any, less than that to conquer the small
Boer republics of South Africa --some 5700,-
000,000 being added to the principal of Eng-
land's public debt alone. Little Iess amazing
than Japan's averwbelnaing of Russian power
in eastern Asia is the comparative smallness
of the money coat.
BETTER TP1 N SPAN'`,�,,
Spanking does not cure children of bed-
wetting. There is a constitutional cause for
this trouble. Mrs. S. M. Summers, Box 8,
Windsor, Ont., will send free to any mother
her successful home treatment, with full
instructions, 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 difficulties by night or day.
Had Good References.
(Detroit Free Press.)
"Did ,Stiffleigh know his wife long before
they were married?"
"No, but he says she was very highly
recommended to him."
tstlet A
1 e
To Secure Subscriptions on a Commission
Basis. No one but a LIVE Agent
need apply.
THE CANADA FIRST MAGAZINE, now in its second year, is an all Can-
adian MONTHLY Magazine. Devoted to CANADIAN SUBJECTS and SHORT
STORIES. The magazine of the Canadian Preference League. Of interest to all.
WE WANT YOUR subscription. If you send your name in now for one year's
subscription at one dollar, we will mail you the magazine FREE for the bal-
ance of this year.
Address,
Canada First P blishi g Co„
Room 19, 43 Scott Street.'.lORONTO
�atneynmcrosav oefm,w
cvDs�,�,pfeoytq,.yrsrra:a9'�ha'aAPotrtR ,
Farmers d Dairy
When yeas requiem
Tub, Pail, WM Basil OF Mak Pun
Ask 7m'm' groom. Cor
EA Bin ED
Fi E
Yes
RE ARTIC7.ES
You wlil find they give you Batts-
facttiioonn� every nixie.
TFIERE IS NO 5l1J BS ]L R SL W JQ, M
luaus' on being supplied with EDDY'S every time.
klimaiiiiiiiiigitoopoorakow~woromerowery,.. taAlS^OtttRIl�trFs+ormido~blopos