HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Herald, 1907-03-15, Page 2Accidents to your horses
may happen at any moment.
GET READY for emergencies.
Buy a bottle of
Fellows' Lee hg's
Esse et
For Lameness in liiorses
Only 50c. a bottle — and saves
dollars worth of time by curing
lameness of every description.
At dealers, or from 12
National Drug & Chemical Co., Limited, ,{
MONTREAL. ,"�9
17ECALOGUE OF HYGIENE.
Rules Which, if Followed, Insure Good
Health.
Dr. Decornet, of Fierte sur Aube, France,
eras anouneed as the winner of a. prize of-
fered by a well-known publishing house for
the ten beet maxims for preserving the
health, which were to be published in the
"Annual Almanac," issued by the firm.
These are the prize maxims:
(1) General hygiene.—Rise early; go to bed
yearly, and in the meantime keep yourself
eecupied.
(2) Respiratory hygiene.—Water and bread
sustain life, but pure ,air and sunlight are
indispensable for .health.
(9) Gastro-intestinal hygiene.—Frugality
and sobriety are the best elixir vital for a
long life.
(yi
.Epidermal by giene.--Cleanliness pre-
serves from rust; the best -kept machines last
longest.
(5) Hygiene of sleem.—A sufficiency of rest
repairs and strengthens; too much rest weak-
ens and makes soft.
(d) Hygiene of clothing.—He is well clothed
who keeps his body sufficiently warm, safe-
guarding it from all abrupt changes of tem-
perature, while at the name time maintain-
ing perfect freedom of motion.
(T) Dwelling hyglene.—A house that is clean
and cheerful makes a happy home.
(8) Moral hygiene. The mind reposes and
resumes its edge by means of relaxation and
amusement, but excess opens the door to
the passions, and these attract the vires.
(9) Intellectual hygiene,—Gayety conduces
to Iove of life, and love of life is the half
of health; on the other hand, •sadness and
gloom help on old ago.
(10) Prefeseional hygiene.—If it is your
brain that feeds you, don't allow your arms
and legs to become anehylosed, Do you dig
for 1ivlihood, don't omit to burnish your
'intellect and elevate your thoughts.
! 4 0.rpo..00-4.4-x'44«' 1
= Poultry Institute, a
5prtaag Pointers. f
lion.- 4 °+ 4°°?i°°°d,°444,,..°;-: y, o :,00e:,..u° ,......1 oro,
(Press bulletin from the Ontario Agri»
cultural College, Guelph, Can.)
The various speakers at the Institute
strongly emphasized the 'necessity of
having vigour in the flock. With strong
healthy birds the best results could be
looked for if 'properly fed. and housed,
but with stock that lacked that brisk
appearance so characteristic of the lay-
ing hell, there was not much hope for
profit, The selection of a few of the
best winter la;vors of good breed type
was strongly recommended as one of the
very best methods for improvement in
breeding. The selected hens need not
be in large numbers, a half dozen real
good ones are plenty and these should
be mated to a male from vigorous,
heavy laying parents. Selection has
been advocated by many for years but
in not all cases has it proved satisfac-
tory, owing largely to the fact that the
farmer confined the selected hens to a
small pen and allowed the large flock
free range. The speakers at the insti
tote were all of one mind in' regard to.
free range for breeders. Practically ev-
ery one's experience is that eggs from
free range hens hatch best, therefore, ev-
would seem good business to allow the
small flock the range of the farm.
Much time was spent on incubation
and breeding. Mr. W. H. Day gave a
very pleasing and clear talk on'the sci-
ence of incubation, or how a hen hatch-
es eggs. It was shown that the size of
the air cell in the large end of the egg
might vary greatly in different eggs,
even in eggs from the same hen and yet
the percentage hatch would be about the
same. The weighing of eggs was re-
commended to those who wished to
hatch the best chicks, for the reason
that it was thought by many that
chicks hatched under normal evapora-
tion had a better chance to live, .A
hen sitting out of doors upon the ground
evaporates about 11. of the weight of
the eggs during the process of incuba-
tion. It was demonstrated that the
average incubator evaporates the water
from the eggs in larger quantities. Where
one wishes to know exactly what evapOSS
ration is taking placerj a simple mat
ter to weigh the eggslaWlio beginning,f
at the ninth day of incubation when th.
first test is made, and also on th
eighteenth day or about the time til
machine is closed. Experiments appear';
ed to indicate -that moisture in 1dre
quantities was necessary in many ma-
chines right from the first day of,incu-
bation until the last day, to keep' the
loss in weight as low wain. the aittural
i•
A
tit
Before deciding where to locate
in the West, let us tell you about
these lands. The best wheat fields
—the richest grazing land—are in
this Province.
Write us for full information
about crops, climate and special
railroad rates, etc.
Local representative wanted in
each county.
IfIJ[R & OSGOOD
Eantern Selling Agents
216 CORI STIfr9E !sUILDU G
MONTREAL
Denmark's Care of the Aged.
"v'eterans of industry." A pretty
phrase and prettily employed. It is what
the Danes call the old people of good re-
cord who are forced to apply to the
authorities for help. No shame attaches
to such application; no ignoble depend-
ence, corrosive of self-respect, attends the
life which follows. Such a person enters
the home as a sort of government pen-
sioner.—Cleveland Plain Dealer.
••
.Minard's Liniment for sale everywhere.
®,
Rules for Good Carriage,
If you are walking along the street
and wake up to the fact that you axe
carrying yourself poorly take the mental
attitude of standing straight as well as
the physical one. Look at the men you
meet and imagine that each of them
owes you a dollar. Put even a sugges-
tion of arrogance into your position.
Holl your head well back; look people
,squarely in the face. This will not only
give the impression to others that you
possess the power you want but it will
actually tend to bring that power. Keep
the neck ngailrst the collar. --World's
Work.
o -m .
Minard's Liniment Relieves Neuralgia.
When China. Shall Be Strong.
Those who lova peace as well as jus-
tice will rejoice in, the military refor-
;nation of China. As a defen:nine as,.
tlon it has already been productive of
many wars, and, continuing under the
game conditions, would be responsible
for ori many more. But a strong China,
eSrnned for the protection of her rights,-
will
ight's,will give a quietus to those very &inlet-
tfons that her utilitary weakness has
fuvitpd.-.-Werlcl To -day.
lle< brr
4
SFR
BILEA
LOOD TROUBLES
�j ;i:2,EAR TEE SXIN OF
PIMPLES.
Amnio § • .ad ,impunities in the blood
$arse theist wiry to the surface in the
spring Illy ad, cause eruptions and un-
sightly
nsightly so, kis. Nature has provided a
rollledy ip: tlilesns, which are ' pleasant
to take, sic ( unpleasant in operation, and
aro purely,, vegetable in composition.
Women with skin blotches anderuptions
simdnid prove how speedily Bileans re-
trieve them. One or two Bileans taken
just before retiring for the night—that
is all! Morning sickness, debility, indi-
gestion, 'biliousness, _heartburn, head -
constipation, piles, and female ail -
molealt disapppeee before a short
oo 'Tse of I3ileane. All druggists and stores
at ;50 cents a box; or from Bilean Co.,
Toronto, for price. Six bores sent for
$2.50. Send lc. stamp for free sample.
` Neither Easily Weaned.
It often happens that a farmer has
much difficulty in weaning a calf, and
the longer the baby cow is permitted to
draw its substance from the maternal
fountain the greater the difficulty be-
.eomes and the more pathetic is the
spectacle presented. So it is with human
beings who are compelled to surrender
any special privilege in the enjoyment of
which they have been uninterrupted for
a long time. They lose the capacity to
distinguish between a 'privilege and a
vested right, and they set up a whine in
which grief and indignation are so mixed
as, to make a tear -pumping blend.—
Washington Post.
Minard's Liniment Co., Limited.
Have used M•INARD'S LINIMENT for
Croup; fouhd nothing equal to it, sure
cure.
CHAS. E. SHARP.
Hawks'haw, N. B., Sept. let, 1005.
Cost of Living in Germany.
There is a wide.prsad complaint in
Germany over the 'high cost of living.
The Mayor of Stuttgart recently gave
a publie a.c'dress on th$ subjeet, present-
ing ca tions showing a decided in-
crease he cost of meat and provis-
ions " 7 withif a year—to say
nothi le increa`e 'within several
yea, , vane in the price of ne-
c has ooi peeled the city
to r °'es of mufuelpal employ-
ee ht of the ., taxpayer,
wq 1.11S tywtse ' S' fe
A eomuCk
publican..
8 0 0
ras'a. coitrznbs idrai''ala ing bhe;;sped ii
that chicks should be reared on new
ground every year if possible, and un-
der no circumstances should young
broods of chicks be put upon the
ground where other broods had ranged
that year. Many weakling and sickly
birds were due directly to the common
practice of •putting brood. after brood
in the same brooder and never moving
the brooder to fresh ground, when a
new lot was put in the' brooder.. For
food for brooder chicks, many of the
commercial chicken foods were recom-
mended and when these could not be
had, dry bread crumbs, cracked wheat,
small cracked corn, and pin head oat-
meal, were strongly endorsed by men of
experience. The idea was advanced by
one speaker that some artificially hatch-
ed chicks lacked for the first few clays
of their lives the instinct of telling what
was good food and subsequently would
eat anything. For this reason it was
advocated not to litter the brooder with
anything undesirable for a chick to eat.
Cut hay and straw were considered best.
W R. Graham.
Manager Poultry Department.
ENGLISH SPAVIN LINIMENT
Removes all hard, soft or calloused lumps
and blemishes from horses, blood. spavin,
curbs, splints, ringbone, sweeney, stifles,
sprains, sore and swollen throat, coughs,
etc. Save $50 by use of one bottle. War-
ranted the most wonderful Blemish Cure
ever known. Sold by druggists,
*m•
Too Much of a Hurry.
There is nothing like being stylish,
even at funerals. An example of this
comes from the Back Bay, where investi-
gation of the reported death of a mil-
lionaire's wife, known to be very i1]°was'
found to have arisen through her hus-
band having ordered mourning livery for
his butler, coachman and footman. --Bos-
ton Herald.
ik o S
Minard's Liniment Cures. Burns, etc.
In Doubt Part of the Time.
"There aro times when machinery seems
almost human."
"Yes," answered the man who melts of
gasoline. "I am frequently unable to be
sure whether I em fooling with my auto-
mobile or it is fooling with me."
Then It is Murdered.
"How long is the lite of the average
so-called popular song?"
"Till the girl who lives next door to us
gets hold of it."—Houston, Tex, Post..
B'IRAN .SPANKING.
Span es not cure children of bed-
wettin: pre is a constitutional cause for
this fre. Mrs. M.,<Summers, Box W. 8,
Wine' sent., will send free to any mother
her :ecessfulborne' treatment, with full
inetruohons. Send ria money but write her
to -&y if your children.;, trouble you in this
way. Don't blamee ` child, the chances
are it can't help it. T•s treatment
troubled also
s cures
adults and aged peep
difficulties by day Or night.
The Part That Willie Gets,
When we have turkey (ain't it nice,
All cooked so fine and brown!)
My pa he eats each one a slice
And passes dt aroun'.
They pact to
they setof 'em ecbut me,)
,An' when I pass any plate, says he:
"Ah, Willie—Here's the neck!"
gigs always gives her ho, anything."
nyth ng "
But pa.. g .
Aa Uncle Joe he takes the wing
(The part I like b,est;)
An' gran'pa. says: "Oh, I donna,
I'll tako a lag, T s'peo' "
An', .pa, al smiling, says: 'Jes' so.
Come, 'Willie.—liere's the neck!"
When pa asks Susan ,hat's her ch'ice
She says: "I'll have a thigh."
Then brother George be gets his slice
'With stuffiO' a high.
An' so it go
That turk is mos' a wreck,
When pa at last says: "Willie! Here!"
—An' 'Willie gets the neck,
Now, I've been tbinkdn' quite a while,
(I hope it ain't no sin)
Jes' s'.pos n turks went out o' style
An' ether 'Herds cum in.
An` e'poa'n 'stead o' turkey, Pa
Had ostrich to dlesee'
I weeder would he say, „Aha!
Here, Willie --take the neck!" —Puck,
Polly Life of the Waiter.
"Why do the young men of America
sneer at the waiter's •calling?" said the
quiet pian in the' black swallowtail coat.
"A waiter can tlitvel all over the world,
become a modern linguist and can easily
earn from $25 to $50 a week, yet the
young clerk or salesman with `eight per'
and no future sneers at him. As a waiter
I travel wherever I wish, One winter
I'm in Egypt, the next I'm on the
Riviera, the next in Rome, Spring finds
rile in Paris, and thence I leap the Chan-
nel in time for the London season. In
the autumn I am back in America again
with full pockets. I have learned French,
German and Italian. I have made friends
with many rich, intelligent, amiable
people. I have seen the world and earn
$2,000 a year. Occasionally while I am
serving a meal I ant given a good pointer
on the stock market. Yet clerks and
counter jumpers think they can sneer
at me. They had better learn my trade."
—Pittsburg Despatch.
Dear Ms Cher
Your little ones are a constant care is
Fall and Winter weather. They will
catch cold. Do you 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 314
This remedy should be in every household.
"Invalid Crawl" the Latest Walk,
(Philadelphia Telegraph.)
Alas! Somebody in England with
nothing better to do has invented a new
walk, and it is being taken up here. At
the start of practice a girl must tie
weights to the bottom of her 'skirt. In
walling she must appear to be so weary
that she scarcely can drag one foot after
another. Her steps must be long and
creepy, without the slightest hint of en-
ergy. Thus walks Queen Alexandra, who
adds a slight limp, as she has been lame
since infancy. It is hinted the languid
movements were designed to hide that
defect. Gowns must be of stuff that
gives a clinging effect; then the slow,
long step, with a bending of the neck at
every stride, will be the most effective.
Nurses' and
Mothers' Treasure
—safest regulator for baby. Prevents
colic and vomiting—gives healthful rest
—cures diarrhoea without the harmful
effects of medicines containing opium
or other injurious drugs. 42
Cures 25c.—at drug -stores.
National Drug & Chem -
Lail Co.,1,imite
. • Isrontrest.•:
No Death Penalty in Russia.
The statement may appear surprising,
in view of the actual frequency of the
death penalty in. Russia, that there is
no capital punishment there under regu-
lar law. To inflict death on political
offenders the practice is to declare mar-
tial law and try prisoners before mili-
tary commissions. A notorious criminal,
famous for the number of murders he has
committed, is now under arrest, but as
he is a non-political offender, he cannot
be hanged. Russian jurisprudence is a
strange mixture of lenity and barbarism.
—Baltimore News.
Minard's Liniment Cures Dandruff,
Ten Good Things.
There are ten good things for which no
one has ever yet been sorry. These are:
Doinggood to all,
Speaking ovil al none.
ItearIng before judgins,
Thinking before speaking.
Bolding an angry tongue.
Being kind to the distressed.
Asking 7rai'dans fox o.11 wrongs.
Being patient toward everybody.
Sta,belie the most oars to a r the in -reports.
bearer.
Disbelieving
•e0
idleness as a Cause of Gossip.
"Do women gossip more than men?" asks.
an exchange. They do„ but that's because
they have more time and not because they
hove the stronger inclination for it. An Idle
man can beat a woman gossiping seven days
out of every week.
ISSUE NO. 11, 1907,
HELP WANTED—FEMALE.
VET yW ANTIDD, A GOOD GP!Nk71tAL 8108,-
vent, no washing or ironing, wages
$15. Apply to Mrs, Pawls, corner Aberdeen
avenue and Ness street, Hamilton, Ont.
MISCELLAIilEOUS.
iggis
DR. Le OY'S
FEMALE PILLS
A care, sure end reliauie monthly recut&
ter. These Pills have been used 1n France
for over fifty yuaro, and found invaluable
for the purpose designed, and aro gnats*. ,
teed by tho :nakors. Enclose stamp for
scaled circular. Price 51.00 par box of
o; yr y ,nail, *namely sealed, on rusolpt or pace
LB ROY PILL 30., "
Box 42, Hamilton, canmlls.
Poor Christmas Fare.
A delegation of fellow -townsmen re-
cently called on Rufus K. Combs, of Mid-
way, Ky., to congratulate him on the re-
ceipt of a Carnegie medal.
As his friends were taking leave, Mr.
Combs wished .them all a snarly Christ -
MOS.
"And I hope," he ended, "that you'll
have a more bountiful Ohristnbas din-
ner than fell to the lot of a young friend
of mine last year.
"He, poor chap, was stropping at a
cheap New York boarding houses and
on Ohristmas Day, after he had eaten
a turkey neck, a potato and a splinter
of sodden mince pie, the landlady
said to him, as he rose jns't as the weak
coffee was brought on:
"Oh, Oh, don't leave ±Ills table, Mr.
Smith."
"'I must, ma'am,' said Smith, grimly.
'It's hard. wood, amd my teeth are not
what they used to be."
,atintinaSealssaleteass smuts,
MADE MARK REGIS TERCO.
Ointment quickly cures Itching Piles, Eczema, and
other elan troubles.
Leo Corrigan, 475 Ferguson Ave., N. Hamilton,
had Eczema since childhood. He consulted
specialidts—lay weeks and weeks in hospitals—
and despaired of ever getting better.
"I thought MYfira would be lihaother remediesI
Sed tried," he wales, "bul, to my delight, a few
hours after the first ajthlieation I felt great relief
It has worked wondersfor vie."
Don't put it off—get a box of Mira Ointment
at once and be relieved. Price 50c.-6 for $2.50.
At druggists—or from The Chemins' Co. a
Canada, Limited. Hamilton—Toreuto.
New Kind of 'Leather."
They are making shoddy loathed in
New York city now. It is worse than
shoddy wool. They buy up all the old
boots and shoes and throw them into a
machine which grinds them into a coarse
powder. This powder the man, who is
entitled to a medal made from his own
product, mixes with about 40 per cent.
of melted. Inane rubber, and the mixture
is pressed out thin under huge rollers
applying a pressure of 10,000 pounds to
the square foot. The composition is col-
ored afterward and put on the market.—
Pittsburg Dispatch.
0m•
rrcc EMI
Mange, Prairie Scratches and every form of
d
contagious
n 30gminutess by Woi oradn's or
Lotion.
at never fails. Sold by druggist,.
Chief Joy of the Sermon.
(Philadelphia. Paess.>
Miss Jenins—I doa'it see why you oomsider
it a ,pleasure to hear latm preaoh. I umder-
sta.nd he always talks• about fire and brim -
ss Parrn y- .Exetly, and Has. such a pleas-
ure to think of what's In store for some
people you know,
ASK YOU 1'\ 1El EAL1 FO
Duchess and Priscilla Fine Hosiery For Ladies
Rock Rib and Hercules School Hose
Strong as Gibraltar Limit of Strength
Princess Egyptian Lisle For Children's Fine Dress
Little Darling and Little Pet For Infants
Lambs' Wool and Silk Tips All Wool
Fins Hosiery Manufactured for the Wholesale Trade by the
CHIPMAN-HOLTON KNITTING CO.,LIMITED, HAMILTON, ONTARIO.
r, ,.y.,,.- ,
CZ) Fa2
Ask for
61.13ETY neacirts FAYt HOTELS, WATs1]',E'OUSES, HOSITMI,
ASYLUMS, ETC. i
seemeareemerearreaseerreeeeseraereeesee.cesereseseesamerrereeereseserameiamem
dada of High Carbon Wire,—we'll prove 11 to you, COILED—nob crimped. This
makes it still stronger in service. t stays taut, Painted WHITE over heavy
THE PAGE NV 3t 3II'E NCIE,CO)PARTY, LYLAZCII°1F'1 D.
galvanizing-ruet proof, 1C'cperienoed dealers to erect it. Leads all in sales
1109 —as in merit, Got illustrated booklet and 1007 prince before buying•
imll erv31S4'•, Tovc a tak, )t 'ic►as+treed• St. Jolkaaa* Winaliseei