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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Herald, 1907-05-10, Page 2THE PAY OF BISHOPS. The I-Iigh Clergy of England Complaining of Magnificent Poverty. Not so many years ago the Bishop of tendon was more than contented with We plutocratic lot; now he is complain- tg that his pay of $50,000 a year is not ttaarffeent to keep him and the palaces which. are thrust upon him. The present Wallop is a bachelor, and has no plea - awe upon the rows and rows of rooms the has to keep in order; but an unso- phisticated one would think that $50,000 .year would would do it. He is not ai1asne, however, in his complaining. The 4irehibishop of Canterbury is with him, and mourns because $75,000 a year will first sustain him. The Bishop of Win - &ester has $36,000 a year, and cannot ip his own big palace on it. All this naplaining is heard. on the intimation that Parliament intends cutting down the y of bishops—a reform being threat - akin to that which was helped ,along by Anthony Trollope's clerical elutes. When the Bishop of Winchester ilitt instance, was able to buy from the !eeerenues of his sees, without feeling the ks o, the necessary miles of fresh car- s every year or so, he had au income elf something more than $200,000; and stew what has he got? Nothing but a mltry $36,000. The late Mr. Harcourt, himself the son rs£ a dean, was wont to talk about rsheps in a. way that indicated that their %'Id -time wealth did them no spiritual good. His conversations on this subject have pleased John Morley, but court had to be discreetly silent in the presence of Gladstone. The bishops theemselves had another point of view. ewe day the Bishop of London, not this clue, was driving in the suburbs in his •tiaplendid carriage, when to him, from an esndient cottage, approached an old wo- ken, who exclaimed: 'Cita me lud, me lud, what would St. Paul say if he saw you now?" "Why, my dear woman, he'd say, eWhat a blessed change.'" —Harper's teekly. oto Tantalizing Man. see by the paper," said Mrs. Blinks ell the breakfast table, "that a delegation mfr women suffragettes is conning to this country." Mr. Blinks said nothing. "And they're going to invade Wash- !nton and make a epeehch to the Presi- shenit, and all." Blinks still silent. •"..I declare," snapped the lady. "You're the most tantalizing man in existence. There yon sit like a statue never saying e, word to show that you don't know drat you're talking about."—Atlanta •iaanstitution. �• n '"� . Fo d Products Libby's Vienna Sausage unequalled for their delicious taste. They are put up in most convenient form for ready serv- ing, requiring only a few min- utes preparation. They have a fine flavor and freshness which will please every one. An Appetizing Dish.—Drop a tin of Libby's Vienna Sausage m boiling water until heated (about r5 minutes) and serve as taken from the tin on a small plate garnished with lettuce leaves. Ask your grocer for Libby's and !mist upon aettlzax Libby's. Libby, McNeill & Libby, Chicago 1 tE1.1r7M DRESSMAKINGSCHOR Teaches Dress Gut- ting and Making in all Its branches by mall (8 lesson). The best system ever in- troduced in Caudda. Cost of full course is now out), e1&, includ- ing one of the most perfect fitting systems in use given free. Adopt this method and increase your in - c o m e. saitistaetory bank references given as to your safety lu remitting money to us. For full particulars write to -day, ELITE QHESSit1AKINO SCHOOL Miss Valens, Instructor P. O. OIC 411 RIDDLES. What light could not possibly be seen in a dark room? An Israelite. Why is St. Paul like a white horse? Because they both like Timothy. Who first introduced salt meat into the navy? Noah, when he took Na.m into the Ark. What is the sure sign of an early spring? A eat watching a hole in the' wall with her back up. Why is a Chinese never perplexed? Because no matter where he finds him- self he always has his cue. Why is a fly the best one among the grocers' customers? Because, when he comes for sugar he settles on the spot. If a taro -wheeled wagon is a bicycle and a three -wheeled wagon is a tricycle, what would you call a five -wheeled one? A V-hicle, of course. Why is it that whenever you are looking for anything you always find it in the last place you look? Because you always stop looking when you find it. TRADE: MARK REGISTERED. Ointment quickly cures itching Piles, Eczema, and other skin troubles. Leo Corrigan, 475 F . n Ave., N. Hamil had Eczema since childhood. He consul specialists—lay weeks and weeks in hospital:— and despaired of ever getting better.' "1 thought Niro would be like other remedies! had tried," he writes, "but, to my delight, n few hours after the first a) lication I'felt great ,re It has worked waad,ers•lor ase." Don't put it off—get a box of Mira Disorient al once and be relieved. Price 50c.-6;6 $2.50. At druggiSis'—or from The Chemins' Cw e i Canada, Limited. !-$amnion—Toroato. What an Aeronaut Lacks. • The trouble with Mr. ,:,Santos -Dumont ie'th= e, trusts ,; : nee and rat in- "; !fele e l elect fly unless .he' has o, ''kn ..ca'n'' . oo '.and determine to flv and fly. `T.o fly and• to make a go 1 of it one must feel an impelling desire to kick tlge earth away frons him and Igrab hold. of the circumambient atmos - phere and pull himself into another and pleasanker environment without unneces- sary delays, procrastinations or what the old Latin writers used to call mon- key business. Given that impulse to move and the laws of gravitation become void and a man can track around a streak of lightning and go on for thirty or forty yards without much trouble. What San - 1 toe -Dumont needs is less science and more enthusiasm in his work.—Emporia, Kan., Gazette. Alma-Tadema's Lucky Number. Sir Lawrence. Alma:Cadema., the distin- guished painter, is a strong believer in dhe luckiness of numbers. His lucky number is 17. His wife, he will tell you, was 17 when Ise first met her; the number of the house do which he took her when they were sa.srried was 17; his present house bears the same number doubled, and the first ireade was put to the work of rebuilding ft on August 17 1886. It was on Nov. f.7 that he and his family first took up 6 e 9 ll'Iinard's Liniment Lumberman's Friend. He Knew the Others. .An up -country business man was once fSstredueed to Abbot Lawrence, says the Boston Herald. "Mr. Smith?" said Mr. Lawrence, with a. musing air, "I don't think I know you, �o 1?" "Well, you ought to," was the reply. "I've traded with you for 20 years" "Always paid your bills, perhaps?" "Of course." "That accounts for it," said Mr. Law - mace. "I know the others." ®" a 1.1 IiSang°, Prairie Scratches and every form of contagions Itch on human or animals cured tut SO min::tea by Wolford's Sanitary Lotion, Id never fails. Sold by druggiste. An Aristocratic Young Person. (Cieevland Plain Dealer,) °'Mabel is a perfect aristocrat when ft domes to pride." liow "Why, she 'wouldn't engage hetselt to efeeng Winkler until she had asked him how its got alt his money. And when he told her seat he got it from his father she said that eves ail right --she was afraid he might have earned some of It." Town Swallowed by a Lake, Irl the eastern portion of Law.'cnoei County is a lake, covering about twentyacres, which hal; a history of intertest. There are still living a number of old citizens who remember when it was dry land. 1!ifty yoars or more ago a prosperous country village stood on the spot where the lake now is: The town was Balled Oale ille, and it was one of the most im- portant places in this edetic of the State in thoee days. uddeufy the land on which the town was located commenc- ed -to sink, and finally about twenty acres went down, carrying with it all the buildings, and many stocks of goods wore entirely lost. It is said that the town sunk almost in a night avid that the merchants didn't have bine to re- move their••stocks of goods. • The lake where the old town formerly stood is teeming with many kinds of fish and many fishermen visit the place dur- ing the spring and summer•. Fish fries and picnics are held there, but the ma- jorit yof the people who attent these ga- therings little 'dream that a half oen- tur yago a large village stood on the ground which is noes covered by the lake. —Decatur, enrr eedence Nashville Am- erican. urses' and Mot -'rs' Treasure —safest re colic and vo —cures di effects of in or other inj Cures Diarrh for for baby. Prevents —gives healthful rest ea without the harmful cines containing opium us drugs. 42 .—atdrug-stores. tional Drug & Chem- �Lcal Co., Limited Montreal. $ V' 1' ., .,.a Iq ieN s A Lot of Bother The starch that needn't be cooked—that won't stick.. that gives a bril- liant gloss with almost no iron -effort ,.isn't that the starch you ought to have them Use on your clothes ? Buy it by name.. your dealer sells it. 201 Wanted to Get Into Prison. Felix Gonzales, of Socorro, sentenced to a term of two years in the peniten- tiary on a charge of assault with a dead- ly weapon and whose case, upon appeal was decided in favor of the lower court, had some difficulty in getting into pri- son. As soon as he heard that the Sup- reme Court had affirmed the sentence of the lower court he went to the peni- tentiary nem this city and said to Supt. Trelford: "I have been sentenced for two years and I want to begin serving my sentence as soon as possible" Supt. Trelford was unable to accept the man as a prisoner because be had no commitment papers. When so inform- ed Gonzales left the prison and after an Rei lied to Hamlet. hour returned with his commitment,pa- Re duly signed and certified. He 'vas Transatlan is Pales for May contains then placed in a cell to begin serving a a novel by' 9y man. one of whose antes- two years sentence.—Santa Fe New tons was a Shakespearian character and Mexican. 'had a speaking aequaintanoe with Ham- let, though tries were not on very friend- ly terms. Tht is to say, Baron Palle Ros- enkrantz, the author of "The i1Ma'gis- ierate's Own Case," is descended from the learned Holger Rosenkrantz, who came as an envoy from the Danish king to his 'brother-in-law, James I. of Eng- land, and presumably furnished Shakes- peare with the name for the Rosenkrantz of his "Hamlet." Furthermore, the present Baron Rosen- krantz was himself born at EIsinore, where are laid the principal scenes of the famous tragedy. His lino has always been distinguished for its learned men' and Baron Palle has made his mark• in the army and as a magistrate in addi- tion, to being ranked as the leading`;liv- ing novelist of Denmark. "The Magis- trate's Own Case" is considered one of his best works. 4.@ Butter Colored to Suit. So aniline dyes are not injurious to health! We can continue to, eat our "gilt edge" butter without a qualm, but with the commissioners on foods sanc- tion to color eatables the 'table will son resemble the rainbow. For why stick to yellow butter? Why not blue or green to nater the floral decorations? There is already a call for red butter in Washington, D. C., and it would be love- ly to have the tiny golden balls purple ones, for of course the carrot -fed cow• wont care what color the half -fed cow's( butter is dyed, and purple and yellow make a lovely combination,—Boston Herald. Coe Ask for Minard's and take no other. moto- Compliment-tier President Hadley. President Hadley, of Yale, not long ago entertained at dinner the son of one of his classmates, the youth being a Yale freshman. The conversation turned to football, and what the president had to say on the subject was news, to the freshman, who realized the fact with considerable surprise. He listened for some time, and then said to Mrs: Had- ley, condescendingly enough: "Do you know, Mrs. Hadley, that only illustrates the old saying that one can learn something of anybody.—Boston Herald. pm a. Keep Minard's Liniment in the house. BE l- ' AN SPANK1N'i1. Spanking $cos not cure Children of bed- wetting, There 'is a constitutional cause for' this trouble. Mrs. M. Summers, Box W. 9, Windsor. Ont., win send free to any mother When Selling Goods. (Kansas City Star. A successful saleseman who was discuss- ing the principles underlying his line of busi- ness made the remark: "Never go into a customer's store and sit down while you are trying to soil him goods. Let him sit down if he wants to, but you stand up and fire the stuff at him. If he offers you a chair say: 'No, I thank you, I have been sitting down too much alrady,' As you stand and ho its he has to look up. And it there is I cured a horse of the Mange with MINARD'S LINIMENT. CHRISTOPIIWR SAUNDERS. Dalhousie. I cured a horse, badly torn by a, pitch fork, with MINARD'S LINIMENT. St. Peter's. C. B. EDW. LIiTLIEF. I cured a horse of a bad swelling with MINARD'S LINIMENT. Bathurst, N. B. THOS. W. PAYNE. her successful home treatment, with full instructions. Send no money but write her to -day If• your children trouble you in this thed way. Don't blame child, the chances aro it can't help it, This treatment also Cures adults and aged people troubled with urine difficulties by clay or night PROPER CARE OF A RAZOR. It is not generaly known that a razor works on the .same principle as. a saw. Un- der a magnifying Bless the edge of a razor is 'found to be made up of litIte teeth, ir- regular and line. 'When a man to done, shaiving, especial- ly if he is in a hurry, he t,Mta up his razor without even wiping it off. Then, . when ho wishes to use it again, he takes it from the case and applies it to his face. The majority of mon who shave them- selvea do not strop their blades oftener than once a week. This is, ruinous to tike edge, tar, being =constnuebed like a saw, the so confined particles of hair clog up the teeth and not only hinder the razor from doing its work properly, but also rust the edge. The proper way to shave le to use a side- wise, slanting, sawing motion. frhere is Less difficulty in the cutting in this way, and practically no "pull," unless the razor is in extremely bad condition. The man who learns to shave .himself will invariably pick up a razor and pull directly and forci- bly down his cheek. The man who has learned from one who knows uses the saw- ing motion, and saves much time and trou- ble, es well as fats skin. The stropping of a razor is more import- ant than more men consider it. On the stropping depends dtroetly the health and longevity of the tool. Most anen know the stropping motion; the only -fault- is thM they do not employ their knowledge often enough, The honing of the blade is of .the highest Lmportance. Nino tenths of the self shav- ers hone thole razors themselves, and nine- tenths of these hone them the wrong way. haven ,the msjoraty of barbers, who are supposed to know, use the old fashioned, laborious, and unsatisfactory method of hon- ing, They draw the razor across the hone with the edge. The proper way is to draw it gaalnet the edge, and thus save time by getting the greatest cutting force from the tool. Here are the proper directions Lor honing a razor; To bring a dull razor to an edge, dip Light side of rub stone in Cold wetted. (do not use hot water), rub on hone until you creat° a thin lather; lay razor perfectly flat, so that both back and edge touch the hone; draw razor across the hone from heel to paint against the edge; hone in thle way until your razor is sharp. (1"ost razor on thumb nail. If it adheres frose heel to botnt, then you have an edge. Honing atter these directions it is tmpesslble to get a "wire edge," which hapens to almost every amateur. Minard's Liniment used by Physicians. i�igg—`9Aid Closeiist take et}rela when he. had the operation performed?" awe a thing as business hypnotism in na- ture that's the time when it gets 1n its h& pea14l tl'e; ranri�nr'p 1ai11•" work." Bad Weather for Tanners. A manufacturer of patent side leather marked: `T can safely state that nev- since patent leather has become the ew iiok I believe it is have finish- er's n'ato coiifiron'te'd With siren 'weath- er cond'itions as during the past winter. "They could not make muck of it dur- ing the excessively hot weather on re- count of the sticking together ,and they could safely finish it in cold weather, but they were nearly two months labor- ing under such unfavorable weather con - could. not finis con- ditions thath it. It they may not be generally understood that finishers must have bright, sunshiny weather to lacquer leather, and when we are deprived of that everything is held under suspension."—Front the Shoe and Leather Reporter. A woman enjoys reading old love let- ters more than a man enjoys writing new ones. ISSUE NO. 19, 1907. Hotel 'Where charlotte Corday Estopped. A good dealof old Paris is disappear- irig just now, and among the latest bits of the antique city to be threatened is 1 the little spot upon which Charlotte i Corday found a fleeting place of rest as she entered the city on hor errand of death. It stands on the street which prior to the days of the revolution had been known as that of the Vieux Augustine. It now is the Rue d'Argout. The building is the j3'otel de la Providence. Charlotte .. arrived in Paris from Caen on July 9, 1703, slept at the hotel on that and the following night, and on the morning of • the 11th walked quietly out of it to slay the monster Marat. The bedroom is still pointed out which the Norman heroine occupied, and some regret is felt that the place has to be demolished. But the march of progress is merciless. The buildings are needed to extend the Rue de Louvre, and seen human feet will tramp on the spot where the Norman heroine slept her last calm sleep of maiden freedom.—London Globe. CdA 111'nff.11ible Cure For Sprains, Ringbone, Splint, Curb, Sweeney Lameness and Soft Bunches, Keandnij's Spavin Cure has coequal. Ilfore rner, P.O., Sept "I have the care of a number of horses and hare used your remedies which always proved Inlelilbfe-".0J. Etailiergerms. Be prepared—beep Kesidall's always in the stable. Our kook "Treatise on the Horse" fret from dealers or SI a bottia-0 far 36, Dr. B. J. Kendall Co., Bamberg Faits, VerBSAmont, se Scientific Farming. It is not sufficiently recognized that agriculture is a scientific pursuit and that in 'order to get the very best re- turns out of it a man could to advantage utilize a special scientific education as truly as does the doctor or lawyer or the engineer. It is not meroly because of the increased material return that such education for the farmer is of value. The intellectual and moral dividends would by means of such training be equally increased. It is a great lags in human power and happiness that thou- sands of men engaged in one of the most scientific of pursuits should go about it without getting the same moral and in- tellectual satisfaction that comes to men in other callings in which the professional element has been more consciously recog- nized.—Boston Transcript. ENGLISH SPAVIN LINIMENT Removes all hard, soft or calloused lumps and blemishes from horses, blood. spavih, curbs, splints, ringbone, sweeney, citifies, 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. Popularity of Baseball. • It La easy to understand why baseball to a game. It is everyone's nationaln ' pular n cryo e a he lar t game, hence !t will never lack supporters and admirers. It is a very democratic pas- t e, It brings together eepresentativos of every calling in the land. Every patron ban- ishes all business from his mind as soon ae he reaches a ball field. There he ie free from all care. The only oolicltude he has is that the home nine will win. Many a married man remembers that he was doubly blessed when he enjoyed single blessedness. ASK YOU DEALE FO Duchess and Priscilla Fine Hosiery For Ladies Rock Rib and Hercules School Hose Strong as Gibraltar Ldmlt of Strength Princess EitYPtlan Ude For Children's Fine Dress Little Darling and Little. Pet For Infants Latta,' Wool and Silk Tips All Wool Fuse Hosiery Manufactured for the Wholesale Trade by tho CHIPP AN-H61.TON KNITTING CO., LIMITED, HAMILTON, ONTAGIO. In three and six-foot rolls, is unexcelled fol' all building and lining put• poses, inside walls of summer houses, refrigerator plants, eta GET OUR PRICES. ! •:.,a .l•J.c„ ; The E. Y C` ". Limited ::.HULL - CANADA Agencies in all principal cities. ;!lade of High Carbon Wire,—well prove it to you. COT'ED—net crimped. This makes it still stronger 1n service, It stash ',taut. Painted WazTl over heavy 704TH: PAGE. WYR.IE: tri 1E414cm COMIis,A'$7r, salvanrzing-rustproof. 11xpertonced dealers to erect it. Leads ell In Wel 209 —as in merit, Geb illustrated booklet and 1907 prices before bmging fwif®1410®arv9i32rb. Tot'osato. Moaastscaal. St. John. '6 iaa►xaiip®gt