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The Herald, 1907-02-15, Page 2
New Problems for Marriage. 141arriage presents problems at the present day which were neverencoun- tered aa the past. Here is a case in point. A young man and his betrothed were schoolmates and became engaged during their last year in the high school. The understanding was that they should wait until he was able to marry. He left home and plunged into busi- ness life. It was hard sledding for some years, but recently he pushed his salary up to the $2,000 :mark, and was ready to marry. But, meanwhile, his Rosalind, has not seen fit to sit down and wait for .seven gears for him to get ready to marry her. She had gone into business her- self and as she had both brains and good family connections she is now confiden- tial secretary to a house which pays her $1,800 a year. The man must ask her to cut her in- come in two if she marries him. He does not blame her at all for going to work, but he does feel that his position is not an inspiring one to contemplate, for he must either ask her to cut her income in two to marry him or else let her go on working for a salary after the 'wedding. Cupid and Pecmria have not yet set- tled their differences in this case. In similar cases they have settled it in a variety of ways. A few years ago one of the big dry goods stores employed a woman as buyer for one important department. ° She went to Europe four times a year with all her expenses paid and a big salary. In one of her trips she became acquainted with the purser of the vessel, and they made a love match of it. The business woman was delighted to give up ler fine position and Ltj salary to marry the man she loved and to live with him in a tiny place they purchased out on Long Island. She was charmed with her little home and raised chickens and flowers galore; and when the baby came their happiness would have been complete but for one great trouble. That was that her husband was away from her nearly all the tine. She wor- ried: so about that that finally he gave up his place as purser on a liner and tried to get a job ashore. Like a good many other men who leave their own line of work, he did not succeed. Finally she said: "Now see here, Johnny, you can't get a job, and if you did you wouldn't earn more than one-third of what I can. If you are to go to sea I might about as well have no husband at all." "Now if yeai'll stay down .irere`in-the cpnntry and leek afteritl„e haby and th . ehickens and the roses; Ili 'ea; book into my old place again ;it's always waiting for me.” It was fixed up in that way, and the household is now running on that plan. The man is the housekeeper and the woman is the bread winner. In one of the largest and oldest clip- ping bureaus In the world the proprie- tor's wife has entire charge of the reading department. It began in 1808, when a foreman left him suddenly and and she came down to help hint. She liked the work and has retained it permanently. "You couldn't drive her away," says her husband, `and it .suits pre all right; for she brings an intelligence end devotion to the business that I couldn't hrr "-. --Washington Post. BETTER T AN RRANKIN r. Spanking does not cure children of bed- wetting. There :s a constitutional eause for this trouble. Mrs. M. Sun:niers, Box W S. Windsor, Out., 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 chance, are It Can't help it. Thi+ treatment also curet. adults and aged people troubled with urine difficulties by day or night. Japanese Sardines. The sardine is caught in such numbers ali along the coast of Japan that hither- to the surplus catch has been used for manure. Attempts are now being made to turn the fish to some more profitable else. Canning establishments have been started at various places—notably Chiba. and Noyago--•with a view to ascertain- ing whether the Japanese product can- not, in far eastern and American mar- kets at least, compete with the Medi- terranean product. At present the olive tree, a Most' important factor in this in- dustry, isnot cultivated by the Japan- ese' andat the pane time the customs levy a duey on imported oil. This draw- -back could, of course, easily be overcome by the trovernttient allowing a rebate to calming establishments. As far as taste and quality go, there is not much to choose between the Japanese product and the European. ---London Daily (gra- phic. ,Minard's Liniment Cures Clilds, etc. Each Taking a Chance. Dr. Phaker---•Take this prescription; it ill either kill or erre you. Patient -lint suppose it 'kills me? Dr. Phaker•---Nothing ventured, noth, g gnin"cl. .ley motto is, "No cure, no ay," so IM faking, a chance as well as au.—.,a'til'Jalphio L.vilgrr. • fnard's Liniment Cures Distemper. Broad Enough at All Three. Was Vera Stout--ego:ea people may think e dull, but Mr. ladder, at any rate, was meal to sol hp nev.er mot'anyone so wide- ke aa I am: yes tinea 'rips, but, of 'cou.rae, he might V6t added that You're.. -just tra Save Your Money, In saving money, many persons say that they earl save so little that it is not worth while to save at all. If you eau save but little you ought to be the more anxious to save, and if you perse- vere you will presently be surprised at the amount of your savings . Many a millionaire has said that the first thou- sand dollars was the hardest part of his fortune to get. You are not likely to be millionaires, but it is possible for many of you who are not doing so to save very considerable amounts, which, if safely invested, will work for you day and night, and will add to your comfort, your self-respect, and especially give you the feeling of security against illness or loss of position, Determine, then, to save your money, and be even more deter- mined to invest your savings conserva- tively and carefully, not with the ex- pectation of receiving a large rate of interest, but only of so much interest asbringa safe. investment of the prinpical will Man the Only Animal That Kisses. (Harriet Quimby tan Leslie's Weekly.) Why a salute of the lips, ordinarily known as a kiss, should be given such prominence in the literature and drama of the world both biblical and historical, cannot be solved by recourse to any written authority; yet during all these years since the beginning of time this peculiar salutation does not pa - near to have Iost in value, nor is there any immediate prospeot of its so doing. What the playwright, the novelist, and the poet would do without this peg upon which to hang a moat It would be difficult to say, and this applies especially to the playwrights, for dozens of familiar dramatic productions, sev- eral of which have graced the New York etag'e tbis season, have found their greatest factor, the wheel upon which the machinery of the scenes runs and the 'plot depends, in a kiss -+that of a man and a woman. 11:3 $.11. 1-1 asik K A Dollar Bente of Pio _ l&s's Rheuniatis will be sent free to any one suffering from any form of Rheumatism. The express (about 25c.) is all we ask you to pay. Send a post card for it to -day ---and begin your cure. Dr. II. H. Mack, 60 Yonge street, To- ronto. The Man Who Did. Mrs. Susan Young Gates, the daughter of Brigham young, is a trustee of the Salt Lake University and a lecturer of note. "Woman must work for ber own advance- ment," she sald in a recent address In Salt Lake City, "but she must not selfishly neg- lect her other duties for this work. " 'Is there a man present.' a female lec- turer once shrieked, 'who ;has ever helped in the slightest degree to lighten his wife's burden? Is there a man here that has even gotten up at 6 o'clock, leaving his tired wife to sleep on undisturbed, and, dressing, quietly gone downstairs, hiked up the fire, cooked i enkfaet washed and dressed . thee children, e' rel 'rat b, • t. 9 an'& ±la4.;lrtsb0 1pr"t '.,t rlakk r �i felt teen if tela,.. err , iirani^ (Let "•i b compia nt?. Tba lecturer looked her audience over w.ah disdain 'If there is such a man here,' she said, 'Iet him rise. Let the man rise. tbat all may see and praise him.' "Then a mild little man in a hack seat rose timidly He was the leo:tit•er's hus- band." GIRLS hifffilikIG WOMAN OOD FIND BILE,g;NS A BOON. Mothers who have daughters just on the critical borderland °leer which the girl passes into ;the fuller life of womanhood, will find Bileans n great boon. They make rich, red blood, and strengthen and invigorate the internal organs involved in the great change. Mrs. T. Beadle, of creme Place, To- ronto, says: `•sly- daughter, Elsie (13), was feeling far from well this winter. She complained of frequent headache and was always Weakly, tired and drowsy. She seemed a altogether with- out energy or etre/tebth. Each morning her tongue was ..corgis and her appetite failed. She 'wee is(+metimes .so dizzy that on stoo linge�iielte almost fell, and she was also troubliil, a great deal with' constipation. One single box of Bileans made a world of difference in her, -and so I continued to ,give her this remedy. Within a few *eeh they built her up wonderfully and they are keeping her in the best of health!." Bileans also euster Anaemia, green sickness, debility, eir:k" headache, consti- pation, piles, 'r)at+.uinuCetism, sciatica, and all liver and kidney iµilinents. They tone up the system and ettnbie it to throw off colds, chills, etc,;: ,.1,UL druggists and stores sell Bileans rtit elle, a box, or ob- tainable from the Wean Co., Toronto, for price. 6 boxes eel:t for $2.50. LESSON'S ME. LADIES. (From "A Finanakrsi r ourtship," by Frank W !;mitre.)• WHAT 1$ `A BOND? "A bond. is a protease to pay. It may be issued by a tows jells, county, or the government, in wblthadatee. the faith and credit of the munieteery, * governemnt is Pledged for the paymt 5 : er it may be issued by a corporation, ,likes * railroad, an electric light company or a nett.. le which case it is generally secured by j. ,mortgage, but not necessarily so., for th, taaredebenture bonds which frequently, Ince t' „u specific security behind then ou wblt f.+' Sec, can levy. It is usually a promise • As; a Sum of money (say $1,000) at a cer n s led time, with an agreement to pay; he i rest every six months. Por convert nce are attached to the bond little obi°bug not or promises to may. for the amount of <geh six months' interest, so that all•:ou ha q 'to do when the six months rolls •aeound i '.,to cut off one of these little so-ozliled eau ns and present it to your bank, w)ch will a• j feet it for you. Minard's Linin t Co, Lilt t.: ed. m.e all had a lira attack of QuinzySoe which l�i i'),rie up far? two . weeks and cost a lot of mon^y. Finding the lump a iG ' f rming in my throat, a bathed fi to , ith,'1i12;LNARD'S LINIMENT, and sitlts! ti_*'k loth with the lit `trig i •tt thbt a rift, GINSENG CRAZE. Cultivation Fever Followed by Disap- pointment to Many, The ginseug cultivation fever, which was at its height four or five years ago, like most other agricultural fads, proved a disappointment to the enthusiast. A representative of the Rural New Yorker, "who recently visited three ginseng plan- tations of considerable size, three or four years old, reports that they were all suffering from a disease peculiar to this plant. It will be remembered that it takes the ginseng root five or six years to ma- ture, so that when a plantation, after two or three years of care and waiting, is affected with blight, the resulting crop failure is much more serious than with almost any other crop. The productiveness of two of the plan- tations was so seriously affected that they had been practically abandoned, while the third plantation, although damaged to a less extent, had not be- gun to pay expenses. • Giving Valuable Information, It is an inestimable 'privilege in these high-priced times to encounter, even semi -occasionally, a really good thing which doesn't cast a cent. We are moved to this grateful reflection by the ap- pearance in our exchanges of an article entitled "Present Day ' Makeup of a Well -Groomed Man," for if there be one boon which the average American voter longs for more hungrily than for an- other it is a dead straight tip on gyre. Every manjack of them all, from the lea- der of the swell cotillon to the floor- walker of the "Daffodil Parlor sociable." wants to do the right 'thing, from his forelock down to his hoofs. — Washing- ton Post. Dear ther Your little ones are a constant care in Fall and Winter weather. They will catch cold. Doyen know about Shiloh's Consumption Cure, the Lung Tonic, and what it has done for so many? It is said to be the only reliable remedy for all diseases of the air passages in children. It is absolutely harmless and pleasant to take. It is guaranteed to cure or your money is returned. The price is 25c. per bottle, and all dealers in medicine sell 3„t ILOI This remedy should be in every household. Science in Dairy Methods. In Denmark the dairymen have suc- ceeded in making ever animal pay pro- fits. This was done by thirty or more owners of dairies employing an official tester to report upon the results from individual cows: After carefully watch- ing and weighing the milk for a given •1A , aa,�, L o o eQ or•reported ,anile le,.. •indir ear r' "herd. The result was that poor cows went to the meat mar- ket, and the producing value of dairy cows increased in one year from $13 to $60 each. Such results came from a system of working everything for profit. That is the spirit that controls in eus- cessful agriculture.—Seattle Post-Intel- ligencer. a mica, 3e,, :.i5dl:a�If�iia64aaadrt;Td"' ,: a r s$i,tf Nurses' & Mothers' Treasure —most reliable medicine for baby. Used over 50 years, First compounded by Dr. P. R. Picault in 1855. Flakes Baby Strong Restore.: the little organs to perfect health. Gives sound sleep, without resort to opium or other injurious drugs. i�x as At drug& st, lSc 6 bores $1.25. National Drug &ChernicalCo Ltd.,Montreal ,rsnlf�taeaa•.,ssas� vaxt •, The Thaw Trial. (New York Sun.) The court, its whole appanage and person- nel is handed over, from its opening to its close, to a horde of photographers and draughtsmen. Every development of the case is posed for tbe press, precisely as 1f it marked a stage in a prizefight or an episode in a vaudeville show. The unhappy talesmen are pictured in eurry quality of ridicule and degradation; they are exbibited to the public and to their families In all the merciless ex- posure of alleged cart'ioalure! they are drag- ged from their privacy and their liberties are pilloried in tatoksrable parade as if they wore the blackest criminals ine•tead of decent citizens performing a public duly. This, we submit, cannot continue indefinitely if the System of trial by jury Is to .endure. Scaly S IiStaraei —Eczema, Salt Rheum, Tetter, etc.—yield quickly to the healing power of Mira Ointment. Why suffer with the burning and itchintl? Why let the thing go on ? Don't be miserable? Mira costs only SOc. a box -6 for $2.50. Get one to -day. At druggists'—or from Tit, Cliemias' Co. of Canada, Liznited, Handl/ea— Toronto. Afro how,s after the first app:us(n." avrito• Leo Carrigan, 47 Ferv"soo Ave,. N, lii,mildon "I feetgreat refry, Maris has mantra! r attelo afar pie.” (Iii had Lczema for years )lutist on getting dui/atrium, with this trademark— NAUd MARK P.tici rcaab. Explaining the Comni.otion. (Laurel Democrat.) 8'or fear some of our neighbors may think that an unseemly noise in this office during the last week was a disturbance of the peace, we hasten to inform them that the unseemly tumult was only tbe effect a subscriber had upon the ,settee force when his remittance for five years subs,ert-tion reached us and in his letter be did not request his paper to be discontinued; That man is a gentle- man after our own heart. header, go thou and do likewise. ,Fayurerrt by a subscriber though he is in arrears for many years reuses more rejoicing in a newtspaper office them the ninety and nine who never pay. Minard's Liniment Cures Diphtheria.. plant a woman likes to get into .rine at' AFDS Ll. St. John,, l�C of 111.ORDEN. TRAINING:AOR WITH. Dr. Wight, S State Commissioner of Charities andrCorrt~.ction, New Jersey, has ideas of his own regarding the treatment of consumptrile patients i;Xte says that there are 6,000 or " 'ore c'a" sumptives tun that State; that t tuii rculosis sani- tarium cannot ho]d . peri°.ver one hun- dred. 3n vie* oft a oto• he says: If the design is g t e; the patients such assistance as th r i riends are un- able to render, and' x<y 4raks their last days as comfortable a';.goossible, that can be done at their hone '` at less cost, and perhaps much more a fictively I sug- gest that a practical •il'se:°of the institu- tion would be to snake it a training school as well as a sanitarium. Fill it v-itlr patients from the 'several counties, amu teach them by expert physicians and trained nurses what it is possible for them to do for their' own relief, what kind of clothing to wear,, the proper food and how to prepare it, the kind and amount of exercise they should take, and, in fact, everything relating to their condition and recovery.: After three or four months of training; these patients could go home and make room for others, to be instructed in a "like manner. In their own colnhiunties::some of these graduates, as we may dillthem, would become important helpers in the care of others. A Bad Case. An iron founder of 1'eensylvania, hav- ing risen from penury to opulence, sent his son to Harvard •Uniaersity. The boy was bright, diligent and; graduated with honors. Three weeks a-fi;er the boy's re- turn to his home in Pittsburg the iron founder sought his pastor- "I'm great- ly worried about '1;ilIi tin John since his return from Iiarvgrd," began the father. "Ah, I warned you agar' Qt,,' Harvard. He has become a drunkardfl'interruptedthe good man. "No, no; I afed 'him to take a drink with me sever times and he wouldn't." "He has become entangled with some creature of the chorus?" "No; be known no such women," "Ah, he gam- bles?" "No, he doesn't kpow one card from another." "I see -4 "see—it is far. far worse, Harvard is :Y Unitarian uni- versity He has come back a heathen?" The unhappy father "roaned. "Worse than all that. Doctor, lie believes in tar- iff reform. Journalists Made to Order. They are talking about f,iunding a college of journal= in Missouri ;and Cornell uni- versity pretende to graduate journalists every year. If you can turn out :4'joureallets"' lila gloves and grubbing hoes, slate penoils, trace chains, jackknives end rather' :articles. neces- sary to domestle •eco• one, it is a •great tiling for the nablest,of .professimis, Irot !you tan no more .make it journalist Sy hand than you ean a poet by band. The place to, Witch and to learn journalism le to a newspaper oftice et may be es little tett ooutltry weekly or a greet, big eft' della aml th:n'the alae must 1•I lie ISSUE NO. 7, 1907. HELP WANTED -FEMALE. eiek V, war IM Ladies to do plain and light sewing at home, whole or Spare time, good pay.. Work sent any distance, charges mid. Send stamp for full particulars. Nation- al Manufacturing Company, Montreal, MISCELLANEOUS. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup should al- ways be used for children, teething.: It [soothes the child, soothes the guars, curets wind colic and is the best remedy for Mar-, rhooa. R. LE OY'B FEMALE PILLS A sore, sure and reliable monthly Midi, tor. These Pills Lave been used In P0010. for over fifty years. and .found Invaluable for the purpose deslguod, aiad are paean. toad by the makers. 1•.t,slose stamp for Riggin a; 6e&led etroniar. Price g1.00 per box or yr by mall. &lourely sealed, ou roeolpt of prase LD ROY PILL 00.. Boa 42, Hanel/ten, fends. 111,7 40164 Mange, Prairie Scratches and every form of contagious Itch on human or animals cured in 30 minutes by Wolford's Sanitary Lotion. It never fails. Sold by druggists. A Race to Beat the McKinley Tariff Bill. A story in the February McClure's describing the race between two English merchant -ships to reach New York Har- bor before the passing into effect of the McKinley Tariff Bill, calls up an inter- esting situation in our recent political history. In the Review of Reviews, of November, 1890, the following extract: apears in an editorial: "The month opened with a sensational race against time on the part of several great Atlantic steamships to reach New York before the fatal moment when the McKinley Tariff became law. The cap- tain of the 'Etruria' was able to save his cargo by a few seconds from the im- position of the new tariff. The saving effected by the difference between the new tariff and the old on that cargo amounted to no less a sum than £200,- 000. "From the Depths of Things" would seem to illustrate the rival power of the, artist with the historian in the task of recording experience. Mr. Perry tells October 1, 1890—forgotten to most of the human side of the story with a vig- or and individuality which give the date us—a new and lively significance. a- 0 Minard's Liniment Cures Garget in Cows. Energy Lost in Lazy Climates. European and Northern American em- igration is rather shy of California and our eastern gulf states because they are lady climates. With all its aversion to work, the human race wants the option of being able to work. A country where in the growing and ripening season a man is forced to intermit his toil all through the middle of the day and where there is no long summer twilight to com- pensate for the noonday heat will never attract a large permanent immigration. For the lazy climates are the climates without a twilight. There is a distinct' relation between twilight hours and ra- cial energy.—New York Mail. �it•�\ice a+ 9t 1111111111. 1rr ,411111l111111r BMW '4111t 111111r:k-V4,7,• 111111rRik 7� 11 r• x -Anila.• ,'\ i1�'1 �i..4a,P"n','t' 0 0 O 1 'a. A trial will convince every housewife in Canada that " Rot Stance Baking; Powder' is far superior to any other she bas ever used, It is prepared from the best and purest materials that moueycan buy, under the direction of an expert manufeetaring chemist, therefore we are able to sell it on a Gault Cpunraantao of tiettlo'aotion. Irr order to introduce dineHance Baking Powder" we aro making wonderfully attractive premium offers to Royal and Girls. If interested drop us a postal. rbrii EEBEAUTIFUL PICTURE POST CARVE o anyy user of baking powder wo will gladly send, absolutelyfr'e , postage:praid, a set of four of our latest edition of picture poet cards, 9129aoeerclpherd in liant colors. Simply writo ns, answering the following questions: tart: Alamo your Grocer. 2nd. 1!iassse tole raper. ternational Food Company, Toronto. Canada. .,Axk for also Purple, Pastia,;,©."' 2 Vtontt,,,,,6\••"1A.of A?),0 t. eq;,,-,419•17,7t,"1:11,,___vm'Ciw` Y^kVWu 3+ Yrs S A '3LTY MATCHES NIP Ask for , FOR HOTELS, WAREHOUSES, HOSPITALS, ASYLUMS. ETC.