HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Herald, 1907-05-03, Page 2elhiloid
asaussmasmatsmasecnaugsansomeassoes
Starch
Easier ironing gives
better finish on things
is starched with Celluloid
Starch, the only no -
boil cold -water starch
that can't stick. You
will like it best, once
you try it. Buy it by
name. Any good dealer.
Saves
• 1 9183 e
s
Li.nerk, Too
see
An Improvement in Texas.
(Boston Herald.)
They* go at the -thing in very simple tash-
fla'a In Texas. There is a 2 -cent -a -mile bill
bore the Legislature there, and the rail -
Minds meet it with an offer to spend $15,-
400,e00 do extensions land Improvements
enftl&in the next fourteen months If the bill
to defeated. If the bill passes the projects
trill be indeflntely postponed, There is
Iresne° in this way ,of meeting objectionable
Segislatlon. It is open, fair and above board.
.6� surest improvement on maintaining an ex -
"evasive lobby of shyster lawyers to work
estoretly and underhandedly against any and
emery measure the railroads regard as harm -
AIL Why not copy Texas up north?
YOUR SUMMER OUTING
le you are fond of fishing, canoeing, camp -
'ism or the study of wild animals look up the
Algonquin National Park of Ontario for your
stonier outing. A fish and game preserve
2.000,000 acres interspersed with 1,200 lakes
and rivers In awaiting you, offering all the
attractions that Nature can bestow. Mag-
rAficent canoe trips. AItitude 2,000 feet above
esaa level. Pure and exhilarating atmosphere.
$axst the ,place for a young man to put in his
•ezentner holidays. An interesting and pro-
uaa& illustrated descriptive publication tell-
.rseg you all about it sent free on application
'Lis 1. D. McDonald, Union Station, Toronto.
Ont.
DN HANDLING CHILDREN.
,t.1hildren should be handled as little
possible. When they get bigger they
won't stand for it, preferring to handle
themselves.
The handling of children has now been
reduced to a science, of which there are
time distinct branches, viz.; IiCndling.
joggling and chucking.
To handle children properly, first
i orAte. To fondle, encircle the child twice
with both arms and press tightly against
the breast or some other part of the an-
atomy. Continue until the child shows
,:gns of suffocation. Then joggle.
'T‘o joggle, face the child, leering, press
`the thumbs firmly into the child's trunk
'ta:niay between the pit of the stomach
,anthe short ribs, with the fingers deep-
'IF imbedded in the small of the back.
liege shake the child vigorously up and
down and sidewise, until the child froths
At the mouth. Then chuck.
To chuck, extend the fingers of the
eight hand and strike the child sharply
,en the face, preferably under the chin.
' itis may be done with perfect safety to
1.Fery young children, as they can neith-
er strike back nor, having no teeth, bite
Eche tongue. Continue until the child tem-
awrizes and grows red in the face. Then
ffsndie as above and repeat ad libitum.
This rule is for your own children or
vice versa. For the children of others or
• versa, add fifty per cent. —Ellis 0.
,,,Tones in the April Bohemian.
8-ricilli
i essge, Prairie Scratches and every form of
csantssgious Iteb on human or animals cured
l`2 36 minutes by Woiford's Sanitary Lotion.
t never fails. Sold by druggists.
®o♦
Boys' Love for Sunday School.
10r. Edward Everett Hale, whose
eighty-fifth birthday has just passed,
...mid at a dinner in Boston: "In my
las about birthdays I am like a certain
,ax;;boolboy.
"'Which do you like best,' I asked the
i oy: 'day school or Sunday school?'
"`Sunday school,' he answered prompt-
ly.
"'Why?'
"'Because it only comes once a week."
Minard's Liniment Lumberman's Friend.
STORY OF THE TOOTHBRUSH.
dlz ee Regarded as a Luxury Fit Only for
Woman's Use.
Colonial diaries and letters make it
rg$xin that our unfortunate ancestors
:afsffered much from jumping toothaches,
,swelled faees and the early loss by fore -
;We extraction of teeth which at a later
Ineriod might have been saved. to render
'.heir owners many years of further ser-
:aiee. No wonder, since the care of the
-,teeth was little understood and that lit-
tle often but negligently practiced.
Toothpicks were known, the tooth -
1 trash was not, although rough suhsti-
Wan.tes were employed, shade of flattened
s,Sicks, •split and pounded at one end to
It stiff, fibrous fringe, Toothbrushes
when first introduced were regarded as
1;1. iso means important accessories to
the toilet, but rather as minor luxurids
and suitable for women only.
J he diary of a London merchant trad-
ing to the colonies has this entry:
"553nngh1. a toothbrush for my wife,
vilhich, used together with salts water,
.r-er;y strong, and was.sfie from herbs, she
told will keep h er teethe from falling
•.c+nt or getting hollowe. The salt and
;l?aerbes may well prove strengthening to
Ieler gum no's wch. are tender, but for the
,farnsn. It seems bet a silly toy, hardly
ike to Wear t}3e worth of its price and
earee cleanly save when new. But she
'nut have it, Dain;; a new thing late
Orem ;`,err'. • Y u 1.'1's Companion.
The Baby Said "Goo."
A woman, carrying a baby in her
arms, boarded a car at Colfax and Broad-
way the other day and took a seat in
the front end. When the conductor
came for her fare the woman put a nickel
in the baby's hand and said:
"Dive it to de conductor, sweetness."
The baby said "Goo!" and waved its
arms.
"Hand de conductor de money,
peaches," said the woman.
Another "Goo" from the baby.
'Baby is a bad child," said the woman.
"Dive de conductor do nickel."
The conductor was becoming slightly
exasperated. "Goo, Goo," said the baby.
The woman caught the baby's wrisp
and the conductor held out his hand for
the fare. "Goo," said the baby. Then
the nickel fell to the floor. The woman
picked it up again and put it in the
baby's hand again.
This time the baby waved its arms
and then put the nickel in its mouth.
"Fare," please," said the conductor.
The woman tried to get the nickel, but
BETTER THAN SPANKING.
Spanking does not cure children of bed-
wetting. There Is a constitutional cause for
this trouble. Mrs. M. Summers, Box W. 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 day or night.
•••
Feared to Disturb Her.
In the village of Poitou a woman fell
into a trance . After the Poitevin cus-
tom, she was wrapped in a sheet and car-
ried to he cemetery, but as the proces-
sion was passing through a narrow road
a thorn of the wayside eerced the
sheet, wounding her so that the blood
flowed, and she awoke. Fourteen years
latex the woman really died, and again
was borne toward the grave. As the
procession passed through the narrow
road the husband cried, "Not so near the
hedge, friends! Not so near the hedge!"
To keep baby's skin soft, and
pink, and healthy — all you
need is
Witch -Hazel
Toilet Soap
It's a medicated soap and a
toil et soap—two soaps in one, for
the price of one.
roc. a cake. 3
cakes for 25C.
Ask your Druggist
for "Royal Crown"
Witco-Ilazet Toilet
Soap. a
Big Bounty on Coyotes.
The depredations of coyotes on the
sheep ranges have become so frequent
in the Montezuma district, in the eastern
part of the county, that sheep owners
are offering $30er head for the scalps
of the destructive little animals.
It is thought that this will be an in-
ducement for the hunters to have a lit-
tle sport and at the same time earn re-
umnerative wages.—Suisun correspon-
dence Sacramento Bee_
' foot, gnat toe, the muscles of the calf,
the knee or even the hip. The busy prac-
titioner notes these symptoms in a hur-
ried/ casual way, attributes' them to
tumatism, - u ser-ibes sa a-' a'tes and
hat not, 1 t.iartkhgr flat x4
aduad pled;: ,1 + *cry way. +p .
Increasedj.'eformity is ' 'o` ". -fhat
may.have been merely fool'atrain in the
lint place. A curable cane has 'become
wellniak intura'ble, and,:'the medical pro-
fession; xs again justly liable to well de-
served censure.
Any factor which tends to diminish
the muscular power sof the foot may
cause flat`foot. A great increase in
the weighi borne by the foot may cause
it.
This increase in -weight may be actual,
such as decurs in people who put on a
great deal of fat, or it may be relative,
such as occurs in athletes, jumpers es-
pecially. ;But by far the most common
cause is a;erampsng of the foot, brought
about by improper shoes.
For treatment of this condition me-
chanical support to the deformed foot
is practically all that is necesssary. This
mechanical°•'suppont is best afforded by
means of the footplate made from high-
ly tempered.asteel;and moulded upon a
plaster cast of the foot.
The fooilate Should be worn as long
as it is r red, but no longer. Addi-
tional we4g'of ,the plate beyond the
time neces,`i`fy as indicate by the
symptoms; s simply an additional cause
of harm. ', •'With the footplate a shoe
should be *In fitting the normal con-
tour of the foot.
4e•
Ask for Minerals and take no other.
• . •
VEGETABI:E CROPS IN ONTARIO.
DRES MAKING SCH OOL
Teach4ty' ]ot'osa Cutr,
timg and::1Vtaitlas In
al.l tts branehee by
mail (8 lessons), The
best cyst lee ever is-'
trodueed la Canada.
Cost Of full; course • is
now only 1$15, includ-
ing one o : the most ..
perfect fltt�ng systems
in use given free.
Adopt this: method
and increase,„ your in-
0131
n-om e. Satisfactory
bank references given .
as to your reatoty in
remitting motley to us.
For full, ;particulars
write to -dale.,
ELITE . DRESSMAKING SCHOOL
.1[is8 Valetas, rttstritotor
-P. o. BOX -!91
I LJr ASy ONi-
That Was Too Much.
' (Scotch American.)
It is told pf a, Jura Highlander who
had been drafted, into, the Glasgow po-
lice force, and had "tot his instructions
about not <allowinig, people to obstruct
the thoroughfare, that he accosted a knot
of young men, who had gathered on the
pavement, with the words, 'my lads, if
you'll be going to stand here you'll have
to be moving on." The young men began
to chaff him, and very spdedily roused
his temper. He repeated his warning in
sterner tones.
"But why?"''ticlemanded one of the
young men. "Isn't this a free country?"
"This is not tit country at all, you
pig sheep's head," retorted the enraged
policeman. "Thin is one of the largest
cities in the town of Glasgow."
�-s-
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 $GO by use of one bottle. War-
ranted the most; wonderful Blemish. Cure
ever known. Sold by druggists.
off
FLAT FOOT.
A Painful Affliction Remedied Only by
Wearing a Support.
Flat foot,is a very common affliction.
It is also', one which is frequently over-
looked by s physicians, says the Medical
Brief.
The patient complains of pain in the
heel, the 7ankle. the inner border of the
Minard's Liniment used by Physicians.
Diabolical Cruelty.
(Cleveland Leader.)
"The meanest fiend I ever knew," said a
member of the Century Club, "was a fellow
who used to belong to this club. He used
to bore us .for hours telling of the smart
sayings of hie children. It was something
tierce. 'Finally ho left town and we discov-
ered that he had no children—he was an old
bachelor. He'd bean springing that lino of
stuff for years ,just to watch us writhe."
Accidents to your horses
may happen at any moment.
GET READY for emergencies.
Buy a bottle of
Fellows' Lee
Essence
gas
For Lameness In Horses
Only 50c. a bottle — and saves
dollars worth of time by curing
lameness of every description.
At dealers, or from
National Drug & Chemical Co., Limited,
MONTREAL. A
The crop eorrespondents of the Ontario
Vegetable, Growers' Association report
that the market gardeners are planning
for a good seasonthis year. Weather
conditions so far, however, have not been
conducive to active work. For work
with hotbeds, the weather has been par-
ticularly bad. The season, as a whole,
has been late. Not much plowing has
been done. • lyven greenhouse crops have
not done as well as usual, but there is
a good demand, especially for radishes,
lettuce and rhuharb.
It is probable 'that onions will be
planted extensively this spring. The
acreage will be increased on account of
seed prices. A large acreage of potatoes
also will be planted. Other classes of
vegtables will he planted as usual, but
it is rather early` to estimate the extent
of the crops that will be grown.—H. B.
Cowan, Secretary.
Ontario Vegetable Growers' Associa-
tion, Toronto, Oat., April 22, 1007.
ee®
Exasperating. in the Extreme.
"0111 how suy wife does aggravate mai"
"You surmise me 1; She seems so ,mild al-
"that's
l-
"that's just it�her awful meekness.
Whenever we have an argument and I'm in
the right she always sighs and says. 'Ohl
verY well, dear, hav it your awn way.' "
As the Mere )`!rail Views It.
"What's your opinion, does the man
or the woman have the better, time in
life?"
"That's as cid as Adan ---Find: every-
body knows he :of ,the worst of 'it"—
Cle'eland Plai. ;eater;
Not a Matter for Experiment,
A young man who had inherited a
largo fortune from a rich but very econ-
omical relative decided to live on a scale
commensurate with his greatly increas-
ed income, and was making arrange-
ments to build a fine mansion., buy an
automobile and invest in other expen-
sive luxuries, when an elderly friend
who had always been one of his advisers
undertook to remonstrate with him,
"What's this I hear about your squan
dering the money your uncle left you,
Harry?" said the elderly friend.
"I am not going to spuander it," he
answered, "but I'm going to get some
good out of it."
"It's enough to make hint turn over
in his grave. Didn't your uncle prove in
his own case that a. man could live on
a personal expenditure of less than one
thousand dollars a year?"
"Yes."
"Well?"
"Well, he proved it so thoroughly that
I accept it as demonstrated, What is
the use of my continuing the experi-
ment?"Youth's Companion.
,1.1110.1181111111.1
A SALLOW SKIN
means weak blood, general debility, impaired
digestion. No one need have these—so long as
such an eacellcnt blood and nerve remedy as
salt
TRADE MARK REGISTERED,
Tablets are to be had. They supply the blood
with red corpuscles and restore health, clearing
the skin—purifying the whole system.
They build up brain and muscle, and make life
well worth living. 50c. a -box -6 boxes, $2.50.
Mira Blood Toxic and Mira Os'nlanent are also
excellent for blood and skin troubles. TRY then.
At druggists—orfrom The Chemists' Co, of Canada,
Limited. Hamilton—Toronto.
Toronto Dialect.
(W. Gabriel in Toronto Saturday Night.)
The dialect of Toronto folk sounds more
curious to the ear of a Cockney or true Lon-
doner_ and native of our English home -
counties, than to north -countrymen, because
many words are sounded as in our more
northern dialects, such as "wha-at" instead
of "whet" and "do -ant" instead of "don't;"
the introduction of supernumerary vowels, as
In "agean" for "agen" (again), and ' the -ere"
for "there," and so on; a free rolling of
the letter "r;" and a nasal twang that I,
as a stranger, should roughly style "Ameri-
can." did I not notice that Mr. Dixon In
his article on "Nova Scotia" says the Nova
Scotiaaa rather irreverently term "the On-
tario twang." All these poculiarittes of
speech taken together form what I should
call, for want of a better term, 'Toron-
toese."
Keep Minard's Minard's Liniment in the house.
maw
Bathers Grown More Wary.
(Washington Star.)
"There is as mucks watering railway
stocks as ever," remarked the financier.
"Yes," answered Dustin Stacks, "but
it's a, little harder to convince the small
iftv'ors,that: the water's°fine and they
ought to come in."
ISSUE NO. 18, 1907.
HELP WANTED—FEMALE.
WANTED—GOOD PLAIN COOK FOR.
family of five, on the mountain top.
Hamilton; all modern conveniences; house-
maid and gardener kept; good wages. Ad-
dress Mrs. R. lit. Breckenridge, Hamilton.
MISCELLANEOUS.
isg
f . LEROY'$
FEMALE PILLS
Aeare, sure and reliable monthly regula-
tor. These Pills have bean used in Franco
for over arty years, and- found inraivabib
for the purpose designed. and ars guoYau-
teed by the =km. Enclose doing for
snaiad olrsular. Price OLP) Deer box of
is ; or ay mail. rguurely sealed. on receipt of raw.
LID ROY PILL 00..
Rat 411, iBnmiltoa (Jamb.
Saloon License as an Asset.
(Philadelphia Ledger.)
Under the existing law a license to
sell liquor in London is regarded as a
vested right of which the holder can not
be deprived without compensation unless
he has violated some penal statute.
Many of the London licenses are of very
ancient dates and they have given value
to the premises. The new statute per-
mits the authorities to reduce the num-
ber of inns where they are no longer ne-
cessary, but whenever a license is ex-
tinguished the licensee, the brewers and
the owners of the premises are warded
a certain amount by way of damages.
The list of houses that have ceased to be
licensed shows that many of the resorts
are of no great present value, but the
aggregate compensation ai1owed is con-
siderable . The damage awards are col-
lected equitably from the innkeepers who
are allowed to retain their licenses.
Minard's Liniment Co., Limited,
Yarmouth, N. S.
Gentlemen,—In January last. Francis
Leelare, one of the seen employed by
me, working in the lumber woods, had
a tree fall on him, crushing him fear-
fully. He was, when found, placed on
, a •sled•and taken home, where grave fears
were entertained for his recovery, his
hips being badly bruised and his body
turned black from his ribs to his feet.
We need M.fNARD'S LINIMENT?) on
I him freely to deaden the pain and with
!• the use of three bottles he was oomplete-
ly curers and able to return to his work.
SAUVEUR DUVAL.
Elgin Road, L'Islet Go., Que.
Not the Same Old Name.
(Princeton Tiger.)
Old Robinson (inspecting young R's
"personal expenses" accounts for Last
terns)—What do you mean by $40 for
tennis ?
Young R. (easily)=0h, that's for a
couple of rackets I had to have.
Old Gentleman (severely) Yes, I un-
derstand, but I think we used to can
them bats.
LAMENESS
Whether it is a fresh Bruise, Cut or Strain—or an old Spavin, Splint,
Ringbone or Swelling—you can cure your horse with
Kendall's Spavin Cure
Thos. Castles, of Newark, N.J., bought a horse—lamed with a jack
Spavin—for $100. He cured every sign of lameness with Kendall's
Spavin Cure—won five races with the horse—then sold the animal to his
former owner for $1,000.00.
WELLINGTON, N.Z.,! Nov. 2nd, '05.
"I have found your Spavin Cure a very Lite remedy for
all sorts of lameness in horses and I am never without it."
31 J. WISB$Y.
Get Kendall's Spavin Cure—the remec y used by two
nations for two generations. $1. a bottle -6 for $5. Our
�yf4,t, book—"Treatise On The Hors -"
—will save you many a dollar if
°r 5 carefully read and acted Spon.
Write today for a free col �.
h,y ( '1 C�a■f°^?'�� h Dia. B. J. KENDALL CO., 27
EreoasU110 FALLS, VERMONT U.S.A.
ASK YOU DEALE
u' 011e
Duchess and , Priscilla Fine Hosiery For Ladies
Rock Rib and Hercules school Hose
Strong as Gibraltar Limit of Strength
Princess ELTPlian Lids For Children's Fine Dress
Little Darling and Little Pet For z'nfants
Lambs' Wool and Silk Tips All Wool
Fine Hosiery Nianufaotured for the Wholesale Trade by the
CHIPMAN-HOLTON KNITTING CO., LIMITED, HAMILTON, 6 ITARIO,
E
VI
T
In three and six-foot rolls, is unexcelled for all building and lining pur-
poses, inside walls of summer houses, refrigerator plants, etc.
GET OUR PRICES. i .„,i .,,,:!
The E. Da ED r1;:Y GO. Limited
HULL - - CANADA
Agencies in all principal Cities.
el,aawaaxe , ..... .. ........ _.