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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Herald, 1907-12-20, Page 6ioraw Z,A,UK CURES CATARRH A Young Lady's. Testimony. Miss Ruth V. Carr, of Grantley, Ont., says: "We have known for some time how good 'Gant-13uk is for skin 9 I es and diseases. For these 1 believe it to be the best healer nettle. Recently, how- ever, 1 proved its value in another con- nection. 1 had a sore on the inside of nay nostril, and at the sante time was suffering with catarrh. I put some Zam-Buk inside my nose to cure the store, and was surprised how the eyelet. rating healing essences gave Inc ease from the catarrh. So I continued to use Zam-Buk for both purposes, anti it answered splendidly, effecting a com- plete cure. In the winter time I suffer very much with chapped hands. They crack and bleed and are very painful. Zam-Buk I find gives me quick relief, and heals the cracks and sores better than anything I have ever used.' Zara-Buk also cures cuts, chapped hands, ulcers, burns, sore legs, abscesses, poisoned wounds, boils, eczema and all akin troublue. Rubbed well in it is a splendid embrocation for rheumatism, neuralgia and sciatica, etc. $Oe. a box of all druggists and stores, or postpaid on receipt of price from the 7..am.I3uk 0o., Toronto, 3 boxes for 41.35. • o John Gets His Orders. A Newmilins woman was economical to a degree that pressed rather unpleasantly on her guidman John. One fair night a neigh- bor called at their house, requesting his com- pany for a stroll through the fair. John, aappreeiate the contingencies of such a cir- cumstance, made advances to his spouse, "tae gee him twa three bawbees to keep his pooch." "Oh, rs warrant ye'lI be wantin' that," she replied testily. "Hae, there's throe -pence, and tee and come hame like a bast." Minard's Liniment Cures Diphtheria. Alone in His Glory. kn a friendly chat with an old miner the other day the question of the railway strike cropped up, and in the course of subsequent conversation I enquired If he had ever been on strike. "I was once." he replied, "and the experi- *nee taught me a valuable lesson." Pressed for particulars, he said: "It hap- atened a good many years ago, when I was eeorking in a pit in Blantyre district. Up to the time I speak of, strikes had been ex- tremely rare in this particular district; in cant, not a tingle miner In the pit where Worked ( orked had ever experienced one. Per- haps this was the reason of their anxiety to Quit work; In any case, they decided that their grievance admitted of no other solu- tion. ""tit wee arrangc,i at a meeting held one evening that all heads would remain at home next morning and await the manager's in - entry as to their absence from work,when a deputation, which was selected, would in- form him how matters stood and request a settlement. "From certain knowledge in my posses- sion I was of opinion that the manager would not capitulate without a struggle; and, as I :was not prepared for this, I left the place that night to seek for work elsewhere." "Anti the result?" I asked. "I was the only striker," be replied, grim- ly. "They all showed the white feather, and appeared ae usual at their work in the nioraina." BETTER TSA\ SPANKING. Spanking does not cure children of bed- wetting. There is a constitutional cause for the' 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. c.e. Taken at His Word. Master Walter, aged five, had eaten the soft portions of his toast at break- fast. and piled the crusts on his plate. "When I was a little boy," remarked his father, who sat opposite him, "I always ate the crust of my toast." "Did you like them?" inquired his off- spring cheerfully. "Yes," replied the parent. "You may have. these," said Master Walter, pushing his plate across the table.—Flarper's Weekly, Minard's Liniment (ores Colds, etc. •,e NOT POPULAR, Squire Hawkins—So you won't spear; to me, eh? Mr's. Jorkins--I never speak to my husband's enemies. Squire Hawkins—Then ye must talk to yourself most c' th' time. COMPLIMENTARY. Miss Sweet--•IIow old do you think I am* Mr Please).- I don't know, but what- ever it is, you don't look it. BEER° HELPS DIGESTION WHAT little alcohol there is in Ontario -brewed beer greatly aids the stomach to digest its food, — ask your own doctor if beer with meals • wouldn't be good for you. Beer increases the flow of gastric jukes, and so helps much to curo dyspepsia. The right use of beer tones the whole di- gestive tract,—makes the system get ail the good of food instead of but part of that good. *rum lea terra which corers laser, ales, porter, and ateut; and, la the pint Use of Ontario brewers, Implies beverage§ elude under Mott hygienic tdndltlene, from Ontario barley QAhe beet lu tho.warldl malt, hops, and puri rotator. 107 eiereeeefeeereScie onateicoeche ONE -MILLIONTH QF A SECOND,. Chronograph Which Measures Infinitesi- mal Parts of Time. A chronograph has been invented whioh is said to excel by far all former achievements in this field and to ad- mit of measuring one -millionth of a second and even smaller spaces of time, The apparatus is based, on the follow- ing pl'iuciple: At the end of a tuning fork of a very high number of vibrations, a hole is pro- vided, through which a pencil of rays falls upon the case of a revolving cyl- inder, whose circumferential velocity is 30 metres per secon. In consequence of the quick vibration of the tuning fork and the rotation of the cylinder the said luminous tuft describes upon the cylinder (which is covered with paper sensitive to the action of light) a curve whose dimensions correspond to certain particles of time. ®.e Living in the Tombs of Egypt. It is surprising to strangers to find Egyptian families occupying some of the tombs which have been excavated and abandoned. It seems uncanny to see babies playing cheerfully about the doors of the tomb houses and to watch chick- ens running in and out as they do at the mud dwellings. When questioned about the tombs a dragoman said that those occupied at hones had been tombs of ordinary citizens and were of no value as show plaices for tourists. 4s some of them have several rooms extending into the rock, and as they are cool in the hottest days of summer and warm in the cool days of winter, they are al- together desirable as homes. The Egyp- tians do not share the horror of dead bodies felt by Europeans. Children run about with pieces of mummies, and if they cannot dispose of them to tourists they play with them. A mummified foot or hand is so common in Luxor that one may be purchased for a few cents.— Harriet Quimby in Leslie's Weekly. 'F .00 5 Th tSti� R ofed The strongest wind that ever blew can't rip away a roof covered with self-locking "OSHAWA" GALVANIZED STEEL SHINGLES Rain can't get through it in 25 years (guaranteed in writing tor that long—good for a century, really)—fire can't bother such a roof—proof against all the elements—the cheapest GOOD roof there is. Write us and well show you why it costs least to roof right. just address 206 The PEDLAR People .tail Oahaw . Montreal Ottawa •loronto Loudon Winnipeg Profits From Alfalfa. Here is what one farmer—Rude Asper —did. with thirteen acres of alfalpa on the D. F. Deck farm: The thirteen acres averaged five bushels to the acre, 01' a total of sixty-five bushels. This he sold at $8 a bushel, or $520. Besides this he sold the hay for $50, realizing $570 off of thirteen acres, or a little better than $43 an acre. This in itself is remarka- ble, but when it remembered that this was done by Rude Asper, who admits that he is the poorest farmer in Osborne county, it is little less than miraculous. If the entire 100 acres contained in this farm were sown • to alfalfa and made such a yield the value of the crop would be 46,880.—Downs News. ENGLISH SPAVIN LINIMENT Removes all hard, soft and 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. Warranted the most wonderful Blemish Cure ever known. Sold by dr tg- gists. -► Important Medical Discovery. Dr, Plimmer has discovered a drug avhich is far more effective in the treat- ment of sleeping sickness than atoxyl. Dr. Plimmer's researches have been car- ried out for the Tropical Diseases Com- mittee of the Royal Society of Great Britain. iso. a. Mniard's Liniment Cures Distemper. et .• A BOX OF GOOD BETTERS. , Better die too early than live too late. Better to lose by buying than to save by borrowing. Better too much. fun than too many frowns in one's house. Better a home a bit too strict in gov- ernment than a home a bit too lax. Better dollars spent for toys and tip- top times at home than pennies spent for prison postage and stationery. l3etter to have the confidence and af- fection of your own family than to have the praise of a'whole town. Better too great freedom of speech at one's own table than silence, stiffness, and restraint in the interest of "propri- ety." Better to have in the hearts of others grateful memories of your service and self-sacrifice than to have y'4nr. home filled with masterpieces of art and lit- erature. Better the noise of a jolly gang of youngsters at hoine than the silence and solicitude in which` mother at midnight waits for the sound of footsteps on the pavement: --Bishop J. 11. Vincent. J TAT TURNING. De Smith—flow old did you say you were? Miss Old--7ust turning twenty-three. De Smith --I see. Thirty-two. GALBRAIT i "MIRACLE" ['ATM CNfIRMLD Additional Evidence of Its Perman- ence • and Its Absolute Reliability. Many miracles have been reported from S. Anne de Beaupre and other shrines, but Canada has had no such remarkable rescue from the grave as that of Mr. J. A Galbraith, of Forest, Ont., who was pronounced a hopeless consumptive and given only a few days to live by his physicians. Everybody has heard of the Galbraith miracle. One of the leading business men of Forest, a well known and highly respected public man, writes ua: 'I 'know that Galbraith was in bad shapeand his case pronounc- ed hopeless, and that something had pulled him together. I have only just learned from himself and his pastor, whose wife's life also was saved by the same remedy, that it was PSYCHINE that did the work," He further says: "The miracle was genuine. I saw Mr. Galbraith in town yesterday; he is look- ing the pink -of health; says he never felt better, and that he is doing his share of the work on the farm instead of being under the sod, where just one year ago the doctors told him he would be. Por the man or woman who is weak from any cause, or constitutionally run down, whether the cause be the lungs, stomach, throat or any other vital or- gan, or whether it is from unaccount- able cause, PSYOHINE, the world-re- nowned tonic and lung restorer, is the safe and certain remedy. Fifty cents and one dollar at your druggists, or Dr. T. A. Slocum Laboratory, 179 King street west, Toronto. Your Own Master. Now and then I hear a boy say, "11 I could only be my own master, then I would be happy." Did you ever know anyone that amounted to much who was his own master? The only one I ever read about was Robinson Crusoe, and he was bled to quit. You have heard of the "indpendent farmer." He is dependent upon wind, water and frost; he must be at home every morning and night to milk the COWS. The physician must buy his clothes and groceries of Ms patients. No one can be his own master, unless he goes out of the world, into the wil- derness, and then he will find himself dependent upon the berries and animals. There is, however, one way of becom- ing your own master. Let me tell you. It is to stay rigtt where you are, and begin by ruling ,youreelf. That is .the first step. Mir begirt to' help other people, and after a while you will. find thein willing to do anything for you. Your workshop will become a throne.— Selected. • I was oured of terrible lumbago by 14IINARD'S LINIMENT. REV. WM. BROWN. I was cured of a bad case of earache by MINARD'S LINIMENT. MRS. S. KAULBACK.. I was cured of sensitive lungs by MIN- ARD'S LINIMENT. MRS. S. MASTERS, A HARD TASK. "Hello, Jack, old boy, writing home for money?" "No," "What are you taking so much trou- ble over, then? You've been fussing and fuming over it for the last two hours." "I'm trying to write home without asking for money" Mange. Prairie Scratches and every forth of contagious Itch on human or animals cored In 30 minutes by Wolford's Sanitary Lotion. It never fails. Sold by druggists. Garments From Woven Wood. Wooden hats, coats, carpets, towels, as well as "wooden shoon," are promised by Prof. Emil Claviez, of Dresden, who is Said to expect to ' teach all human beings to wear wooden clothes. After being ground into pulp as. for paper and the wood is impregnated. with, chemicals and woven into yarns and threads of various thicknesses. This is. called zyzlin and is woven by ordinary 'looms into wooden linens, canvas, etc.. The clothes made from these are from three to ten times • as cheap as the woollen or cotton articles. By varying the treatment of the pulp the garments can be made as warm as Wool and as cool as sheerest linen. In a few months he promises to put forth a'garntent that need never be washed nor cleansed by - any • agency but fire. The first to use these fireproof garneents will-.. probably. bo the doctors and nurses in the .German hospitals. . For cleansing these garments, a metal clothes hanger is used with a gas burner. The suit is, hung over the burner, and when the gas is lighted gleams '•like• a huge ineiitulescent gas mantle. A second of the White heat ,kills every germ, and a minute or two reduces spots and stains to gas and ashese After the gar- ment is cooled ea few strokes of the clothes brush completes the ,process.— Chicago Tribune. The Yarn of the Mameluke's Leap. It is a pity to spoil a good story, and the story of the Mameluke's fam- ou 1 leap, whioh is recounted to every visitor to the oitadel of Oairo, is a good one, But it is a fictions founded on the fact that only a single Mame- luke of the seven hundred and odd who were mustered in Cairo on that fatal morning survived the massaore, but he survived because he was on the sick list at the time, and was con- sequently unable to attend the parade in the citadel, and the Pasha, hav- ing nothing to fear from a single man spared his life. A story never loses in the telling in the mouth of an Egyptian, and he is quite capable of inventing one to account for any incident or appellation that he does not happen to understand. There were formerly two gates to the cita- del of Oairo, called respectively the Gate of the Janissaries and the Gate of the Azabs, from the titles of two Turkish military corps to whom their charge was confided. But the exis- tence and the very name of these corps have long been forgotten by the Egyptians, and they eocounted for the name Bab elAzab by inventing a story of a saint called Sidi Azab, around whose name a whole legenr4 of marvels and miracles has grown up, while the little chamber in the gateway formerly occupied as the guardhouse is pointed out as the saint's hermitage. -By and by, Mr. Knight-Adkin in his stirring an t spirited ballad has represented the massacre as occurring when the Mamelukes were entering the cita- del It was when they were leaving it that it really occurred. The whole of them had entered into the lane which was their death trap before the gates at each end were closed before and behind them. The spot pointed out as the scene of the Mame- luk c leap is on the terreplein of the citadel.—London Spectator. Shiloh' ' Use Shi's Cure loh. sfor the worstlohcold, Shi the sharpest cough —try it on a guar- antee of your money back if it doesn't actually CURE quicker than anything you ever tried. Safe to take,—nothing in it to hurt even a baby. 34 years of success commend Shiloh's Cure - 25c., 50c., $1. 318 Cure Cures Coughs and Colds QUICKLY The Last Straw. ,When the frost is on th' punkin and the tang is 111 tb:' air, Whea th' sumac turns to yeller anti th' woods is red and rare. When i1tinthov uegsshrill staccato sasses lo It is time fer married fellers t' be puttin' up th' stave! In th' morning bright and .golden when th' haze is over all, Down upon his knees; repentant, every mar- ried man should crawl— When th' grapes is hanging purple and th' •hick'ry nuts is ripe, Ts th' time t' bump his noddle 1a th' attic, hunting pipet When th' wind Is sorter soughia' through th' bare an' naked trees, Is th' time fer married fellers to be thwart - in' of a sneeze— When the ash is made. silty and th' sooty zephyr blows. -That',, th' time fer married cusses to be wipin' of their nose ! When th' atmosphere is warmth', not with sun, but—well. You know— That's th' sycbotogtu moment when th' cuss- ed pipes won't got When t'h' sunbeams dance and dazzle through th' winders soft and rife, That's th' u ime t' cuss creation with th' cam - in' She kin tell you bow t' do it in th' golden tutted fall Whoa th' frost is on til' punkin and th' glint is over all— It's enough t' make a feller want t' quit home and rove To be laughed at by a .woman when he's puttin' up 9 stove!—Byron Williams. Minard's Liniment Cures Garget in Cows, ea,e Doctor (to patient's son-in-law)—She is extremely ill, but it is not a question of moments. Son-in-law—How long will it be, do you think? Doctor—An hour, or an hour and a half, perhaps. Son -in -law --0, well, then I've got time to have my lunch in peace at any rate. —Nos Loisire. ISSUE NO. 51 1907 14k Cuff Links 95.50 OUR. $5.50 pair of solid 14k gold Cuff Links will make a good practical Christ- mas gift to a man. THEY are substantially made, and reinforced in the places where the ordinary link gives milt. Our illustrated Catalogue showing a largo aeoortnta•ett of Ouff Linke will be mailed upon reoluewt. R.YRIF BROS., Litesiited 134-138 Yonte St. TORONTO How the Artist's Model "Happens." Most of our models are not made; they just happen. Girls in moat cases of breed- ing and intelligence, want to make a lit- tle money for some special occasion.. Some acquaintance recognizes, that they have distinction and style and gives them the address of some illustrator who hap- pens to need just such a person. They pose once in this way, more or less from necessity, find they can make an inde- pendent living in a congenial manner, and so come again. In consequence the wo- men who pose for a. livelihood in New York are exceedingly nice as a class. The prevalent idea that the words "artist's model" necessarily means a highly paid, greatly petted, and utterly depraved individual is ridiculous in the extreme. A first class artist's model in New York City receives three dollars a day for six hours' hard work. A photographic model has, of course, a different proposition. She has shorter hours and higher rakes. From "Being a Model," by Charles F. Peters in the Bohemian for October. St George's Baking Powder is best for Biscuits — best fo. Cakes -best for Pies—best for everything -you bake that requires Raking Powder." "Ono can to try, will always make you buy St. George's." Have you a cppy'of our new Cook Book? Sent free if you write National Drug & Chemical Co. of Canada, Limited, Montreal, pi Wireless Words. Across the Atlantic. It is computed that about 14,000 words were sent over the Atlantic on the opening day of the fireless telegraphy service from the United Kingdgm to Canada. Screens for Crushing Tin Ores. In Cornwall experience shows that woven -wire screens in the stamps which crush tin ores are better than punched plates. ' r AJX X it_ A Linitnent—An Absolute Cure for Rheumatism A new Remedy to Canadians, but thousands in other countries have been cured. See what a prominent 'Toronto citizen says of Ajax Oil. • Toronto, Nov., 28. 1907. The Max 011 Co., Toronto;: Ont. bear `Sirs,—This is to express my appreciation for your rheumatism elite. On the advice of a friend I purchased a,'bottle of Aiax 011 Liniment for rheumatism, and can sagely.,. say 1t Certainly Is a specific for rheumatism. I suffered intensely fore years and tried nearly every known remedy, also had the advice of ,tlte lae,gt physicians but withoutany satisfactory results till I used your Ajax Ail,_had .now .I can safely: say I 'am Completely cured. I give this testimonial entirely unsolicited, so that others similarly afflicted May know of your wondehful treatment—Alar 011 Liniment. • Yours very truly, Geo. 14tiltigan, ' . Mfr. "Arabella': cigars. Sold in 8 oz. bottles—$2.00•..ger- bottle. Send $2.00 by money order br registered letter, and you will,reeeive, a bottle of Ajax Oil by return mail. AJAX OIL 00 � TORONTO, CAD] DA nar;wr. a