HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Herald, 1908-11-06, Page 6I. Jii�.'llW,a'.'pt,•�^A
:ta ?t.
Mia should
look for this
Tag on
Chewing
Tobacco. It
guarantees the lugh quality of
The Big Black Plug.
2272 l
PALE
Sallow Complexion
The Blood is impoverished
and needs iron. This is best
suppled'by Fr.rrozone, which
contains lots of iron in an
easily assimilable form. Fer
rezone makes blood—the kind
that brings a rosy color to the
cheeks and a ruby tint to the
lips. To enjoy perfect health
you must use
FERROZ 'NECURES
A young lady well known in society
eircles of Springfield, who derived excep-
tional benefit from Ferrozone, says: "1
felt it my duty to make known the value
of Ferrozone. My trouble was poor,
weak blood, and as a consequence my
lips were pallid, and my cheeks had no
color. I wasn't at all strong, and re-
quired a bracing tonic. Ferrozone soon
brought color to my cheeks, improved
my appetite and made me stronger than
I had been hi years. I favor Ferrozone
because it is so simple to take and works
so quickly"
Won't you try Ferrozone?
Concentrated euro in tablet form,
that's Ferrozone. 50c. per box, or six
boxes for $2.50, at all dealers.
That Famous Swim.
"It is a very dangerous thing, I
have found, to tell stories to the present
younger generation," a Sunday sebool
teacher recently remarked.
"Now, I hare always been fond of il-
lustrating the gospel lessons with utile
stories which helped to point the moral
and a favorite with me was one of a
young Roma.n athlete who used to swim
the Tiber three times every morning.
This generally made a hit with the boys
in my class, but one Sunday a new lad
-with Irish eyes appeared, and at the con-
clusion of this story he snickered aud-
ibly.
"'You seem to think that this story
is rather funny, Patrick,' I remarked
severely. `Will you tell us in what res-
pect?'
"'Seems like he might have made
one more trip and got his clothes, Miss,'
he replied with a cheerful grin."—From
The Bohemian Magazine for November.
BETTER THAN SPANKING.
Spanking does not cure children of
bed-wetting. There is a constitutional
cause for this trouble. Mrs. M. Sum-
mers, Box W. 8, Windsor, Ont., will send
free to any mother her successful home
treatment, with full instrutions. 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 dif-
ficulties by day or night.
• *
A Shifted Burden.
"So you sold that miserable old mule
of yours!"
"Yassir," replied Mr. Erastus Pinkley;
"fah reel money."
"Doesn't it weigb on your conscience?"
"Well, boss. I's done had dat mule
on my mind so long it's kind of a relief
to change off an' git 'im on my eon-
seience."—Washington Star.
D 9
Any perscir who drinks 25c tea and
once tastes 30c "Salada" will see that
it is not only finer in flavor, but that
as one pound makes many more cups,
it is economical to use.
Out of His Roach.
"At last!" exulted the ex -bicyclist as
he soared aloft in his aeroplane. "I've
found a public highway now where 'there
is no sprinkling cart demon to come
along and turn it into a sea of mud!"
Repeat
it: —"Shiloh's Cure will always
cure my coughs and colds."
e o
Two Helps.
The Orator—My friends, I repeat m5'
question, What two things are helping
zoankind to get up in the world? •
Sailor (in the gallery)—The '!arum
clock and the stepladder.—Marine :Jour-
nal.
rV inard's Liniment Cures Garget in cows,
o9,r
Nell—I never saw such a woman as
Mrs. Buggins; she is always spanking
her children. Belle—Yes. she doesn't
have to rye to a palmist to have her
palm red.
NEGRO OWNERS OF FARMS.
Some of the Most Successful --Their
1 Great Tracts of Cotton Lands.
The biggest negro farm in South Cai'o-
lina is in Marion County. It used to be
Tracy Alford, but Tracy has invested in
town property and cut his farm down.
Marion yet holds the belt, regardless of
the claims of Sumter and Orangeburg
Counties, and even of William Murry, of
Wedgefield, who has 180 acres in cotton
and will make far aver a hundred bales,
and even our friend Bob Babb, of Gross
Hill, who makes 100 bales a year.
Butler General, a quiet, unassuming
looking negro, who lives about five miles
from Marion court house, is truly the
biggest negro farmer in South Carolina.
General has 200 acres in cotton in one
level field without a flow or a washout,
and 100 acres in another lot, 300 acres in
cotton as fine as any man's, from which
General says he will gather at least 280
bales and he expects more. This is his
own land, for which he would not take
$75 an acre.
It is one unbroken field of as fine
farm land, level and all stumped, as
Aycock or any other white farmer owns,
and it's paid for, costing him seven years
ago $25 and $30 an acre. He has 200
acres el valuable timber land and sev-
eral hundred acres ou his other places,
about 1,000 acres in all. He runs eigh-
teen plows on his plantation and used
140 tons of guano, costing him about
$2,000. His farm supplies cost $3,000,
making his outlay $5,000. General is
an open-hearted, progressive negro. Ile
has a church and a school house on his
place and gets all the labor he wants to
work his farm. Anderson General, a
brother, works one of the plantations,
keeping it up to the acre mark. Both
the General's are good, Christian -hearted
men, lovers of the acre and loyal citi-
zens.—Columbia Sun,
Lakefield, Que., Oct. 0th. 1007.
Minard's Liniment Co., Ltd.:
Gentlemen,—In July, 1805, 1 was
thrown from a road machine, injuring
my hip and back badly and was obliged
to use a crutch for 14 months. In Sep-
tember, 1906, Mr. Wm. Outridge, of La -
chute, urged. me to try Minard's Lini-
ment, which I did, with the most satis-
factory results, and to -day I am as well
as ever in my life.
Yours sincerely,
lass
I ' 1 MATTHEW x BAI_NES.
marls
Concrete and Steel.
An interesting series of experi-
ments, says Engineering, has been
carried out at the National Physical
Laboratory, at the instance of Sir
John Brunner, to test the protective
effect of cement concrete or steel; fl-
inch speciments of mild steel bar,
both turned and with scale left on,
were embedded in blocks of good Port-
land cement concrete measuring 12
inches by Tee inches by 7,14 inches.
The blocks were covered with water
several times a week for a year, and
for three months afterward were left
in the open exposed to the weather.
After 16 months one of the blocks
has been broken up and the embed-
ded speciments examined. No trace
of any action of the cement could
be detected, the scale on the rough
specimen was undisturbed and the
bright specimen showed no altera-
tion on examination under the micro-
scope. Further tests are to be car-
ried out with the remaining blocks.
O -O
His Safety Valve.
Morse had perfected his telegraphic
alphabet.
"The dots are all right," said his
friends, "but why do you have so many
long dashes?"
"Those dashes," he responded, "repre-
sent the Ianguage I used while I was
struggling with the pesky thing, and I
had to employ so many of thein that I
just let them stay and worked 'em up
into the alphabet"
Which explanation clears up a long-
standing mystery.
o . 0
Repeat it:—" Shiloh's Cure will al-
ways cure my coughs and colds."
Dust -Swallowing Automobile.
An automobile that swallows its own
dust is described in Popular Mechanics.
Pipes suck up the dust from the rear
wheels and draw . it into a box from
which it is again deposited on the road
in granulated form.
o+�s•
Minard's Liniment Cures Colds, etc.
It Does.
Jack—I hear you are engaged to that
homely Miss Gotchips.
Tom—Yes; she has a million in her
own right.
Jack—But money doesn't always lead
to happiness, old man.
Tom—True, but it ought to help in
the search.
"Silent Sas the Sphinx 8"
THE MOST PERFECT HATCHES YOU EVER STRUCK
Always, everywhere in Canada, ask for Eddy's Matches
WHAT NEGLECT
OW R1
Jas. E. Bradt; Seoffered Torme :94
from Kidney Diseases.
Then He Used Dodd's lleidney Pills and
Became a Well elan -..eels Experience
a Lesson for You.
Athabasca, Landing, Alta., Oot. 26. --
(Speeial).—That Kidney Disease, neg-
lected in its earlier stages, leads to
the most terrible sufferings, if riot
death itself, told that the one sure
cure for it in all stages is Dodd's Kid-
ney. Pills, is the experience of bit.
James E. Brant, •a farmer residing
near here.
Mr. Brant contracted ICidney Di-
sease, when a young man, from a
strain, and, like hosts of others, neg-
lected it, expecting it to go away it-
self.
But it kept gradually growing worse,
till after thirty years of increasing
suffering the climax came, and he
found himself so crippled that at
times he could not turn in bed, and
for two weeks at :a time it was im-
possible for him to rise from a chair
without putting his hands on his
knees:
He could not button his clothes. He
was troubled with Lumbago, Gravel
and Backache, and "tried medicines
for each and all of them without get-
ting relief, till good hack turned him
to Dodd's Kidney Pills,
Dodd's Kidney Pills started at the
cause of his troubles end cured his
Kidneys. With cured Kidneys his
other troubles speedily disappeared,
and to -day he is a well man.
If you cure your Kidneys with
Dodd's Kidney Pills you will never
have Lumbago, Rheumatism, Heart
Disease, Dropsy or Bright's Disease.
Died for His Country.
There is a young man in Boston who
can trace his family back several gen-
erations. His failing is a desire to be
thought a descendant of one of "the
old families." One thing in which he
takes particular pride is the continental
uniform. He was showing this to a
young lady the other day. "My great-
grandfather wore this suit when he
gave his life to his, country during the
brave days of the Revolution," he said.
The young lady inspected the uniform
carefully, but could find neither bullet
hole nor sabre cut. She turned to him
with a charming smile. "Oh! Was the
poor old gentleman drowned?" she
asked.
Draggi g 'Backache
Painful back trouble indicates
diseased kidneys.
Don't neglect, the first symp-
toms.
When you can't stoop or bend
without suffering pain—
When you notice urinary dis-
orders, dizzy spells and. constant
headaches—
When your back aches, morn-
ing, noon and night, when langour
and restlessness oppress you
Then will the telling merit of
Dr. Hamilton's Pills make you
feel better in one .day.
•Dr. Hamilton's Pills exert a
wonderful influence on the diseas-
ed tissues of the kidneys. They
heal and soothe, give vitality and
tone, put new life into the kid-
neys, and thus prevent a return
of the trouble.
D. HAMILTON'S PILLS
A SURE CURE
Kidney sufferer, health awaits you and
happy cure is right at hand In Dr. Ham11-
ton's Pills. Note carefully the above symp-
toms; if they fit your case, don't delay, but
go at once to your dealer and procure the un-
failing Dr. Hamilton's Pills of Mandrake
and Butternut, sold in yellow boxes, Sac
each, or five for 21,01).
Heaven Forbid!
"Why don't we see men like the nov-
elists describe?"
"I give it up. 'Why don't we see girls
like the illustrators draw ?"—Louisville
Courier -Journal.
Repeat it:--"Shiloh's Cure will
always cure my coughs and colds."
4 *-4*
How It Seemed.
"Gillet says he's saving up for a rainy
day„
"His wife thinks he must be saving
up for another flood," -°-Life.
Minard's Liniment Cures Distemper.
From Bad to Worse.
A miner iii Scotland was visited by a
friend, and among the places of interest
shown was the pit mouth. Seeing the
cage lowered with the stout steel rope,
the friend exclaimed: "My word! 1
shouldn't like to go down there on that
rope f"
"Wily." exclaimed the miner, "Aw
wadna lik' to gang donut there without
it!"—London News,
Too Unkind.
".Didn't you say there Was a statesman
in your family?" queried rey deaf friend.
«Oh, no," I cried, hastening to correct
his peculiar impression "I merely said
that a relative of urine was one of the
United States senators from NOW Yori.,
—Bohemiar. lelagazinc.
Minard's Liniment Cures Diuhtheria.
"Frost has wrriittet a Cs" attse On
bachelors." "What' foes he .call it?"
`Lives of the hunted:"—Life.
ISSUE l' v, .5, 1908
HELP W.fl.:N'1.E,D—k'e.O.VIALk;,
'i,9' ANTED—LADIES TO DO PLAIN AND
light sewing at home, w•holo or spare
. time : good pay; work Sent any distance;
eberge4 paid. Sand stamp 'far full parbicu-
iars. Natloual Manufacturing Go., Montreal,
Decks Strewn With Dead Birds.
Their decks strewn with dead song-
birds, the 'steamers Moses Taylor,
T-iornas Harturii atad Robert Fulton
put in here Friday after a strange
and perilous trip Friday from the up-
per lakes. The boatswere one week
late;
The crews of the boats report the t
for days they crept cautiously along
through smoke from forest fires so
thick that one could scarcely breathe.
Thousands of birds of all descriptions
fleeing before the flames took refuge
on the boats, only to be overcome
by the dense smoke. They were -
shoveled off the decks by the hundred.
though of them were left to substan-
tiate the story when they came to
port.—Ashtabula correspondence Col-
umbus Dispatch.
a.O
Size of the World.
"Who are those young men you are
making so much fuss over?" asked the
man who had just arrived from Austra-
lia.
"They are the famous Cubs, the base-
ball champions of the world, said the
native. "You've heard of the Cubs, of
course?"
"Never before. But that reminds me.
You have heard, of Mblimba Goosh,
haven't you?"
"No; who is he?"
"He's the champion boomerang throw-
er of the world. I supposed everybody
knew that"
alealaleakagellteMellier
14.1
HUMAN VIBRATIONS.
Frenchman Who Thinks He Has
Photographed the Emotions.
Dr. Baraduc, of Paris, has been lectur-
ing, says the Health Record, at the
Theosophical Society's rooms in London
on human vibration. Ile showed many
photographs of those alleged vibrations
by placing a sensitized film on one of
the nerve centres.
He usually places the film at night and
leaves it till morning. The vibrations of
the subject throw the nitrate of silver
on the film into a corresponding form
of vibration, which is found registered
on the film when developed, just as the
light reflected from an object through
the lens of a camera registers the form
of that object.
Dr. Baraduc had also ninny pictures
taken in the ordinary way by means of
the camera. In these various states of
emotion are shown. Sudden anger ap-
pears as a sort of whirling shower of
sparks and vapor. A state of high spir-
itual contemplation produces a misty
globe of light some way above the sitter's
head.
In one picture the etheric double of a
woman kneeling in prayer is shown. Ac-
acording to the doctor the etheric cosmic
forces are continually streaming into us
and becoming individualized, or stream-
ing out, being disindividualized, mingling
again with the general stream.
One photograph showed the vibration
of telepathic communication—some had
lines in ribbons of light, showing attach-
ment. In one, taken as the doctor's wife
passed away, the line or bond which had
always appeared "between them is seen
for the first time broken.
If You Are Lost in the Woods.
Let the man who is lost in the woods
be very careful not to over -exert him-
self. His chief dangers lie in panic and
over-exertion, and, though he may be
in a great hurry to find shelter, I must
warn hint to go slowly. Two miles an
hour, on an average, through the snow
in the woods, is all that a man in his
condition will be able to stand without
over -fatigue and its attendant dangers,
over -heating and perspiration. By exer-
cising caution, a man may live through
a week of what he is undergoing. To
make this article brief, however, we
shall suppose that he regains the road
by the afternoon of the first day. Ile
doesn't yet know, of comae, just where
he is. He should examine the tracks
of the person who last passed that way.
It being afternoon, he must folio* in
the direction taken by the last passing
vehicle or team, as shelter will be near-
est in that direction. Had it been morn-
ing he would have taken the opposite di-
rection, or whoever made the tracks
must have come from the place where
he obtained shelter the previous night.
—From "Lost in the Woods," by A. B.
Carleton, in The Outing Magazine for,
November,
Sulphuric Acid in Mine Water.
The quantity of sulphuric acid in
mine water varies according to the
district and conditions of the mine.
Some mine water has been found to
contain only a few grains. while the
water in other workings often contains
over 100 grains per gallon.
C 0 CURED
emby
y
bstitu
sago
An experimental plant for the pre-
eooling of oranges in cars is located at
Los Angeles, Cal,; and consists of two
30 -inch square insulated ducts leading
from an ammonia coil room capable of
supplying from 16 to 20 tons of refrigera-
tion in 24 hours. The cold air is forced
in either direction through the car and
back to the coil room by a motor fan.
In experiments, says Popular Mechanics,
the air was varied from 20 degrees F.
when first entering the ears to higher
temperatures, The air is forced through
the cars at different velocities and in
volume varying from 4,500 to 6,000 cubic
feet per minute.
•
tN 2.4 HOURS
You call palulessly re any corn, either
hard, soft or bleeding, implying Pntnam's
Corn .extractor, It neverburns, leaves no scar
contains no acids ; is harmless because composed
only of healing gums and
balms. Fifty years in
Sol
use. Cure guaranteed, d by all druggists
250. bottles. Refuse su tes.
N
PUTNA's PAINLESS
CORN EX ACTOR
Precooling Ors in Cars.
In eleven successive speed contests
the Underwood typewriter has won the
championship of the world. It has been
first in all the important contests of
recent years.
UNITED TYPEWRITER CO.
Adelaide St. East - TORONTO
Piece of Valuable Carpet.
"There is a small piece of carpet in
the mint in San Francisco that a good
many people would doubtless like to get
possession of," remarked R. H. Smith,
of the California city.
"It is in the adjusting room, where
surplus gold is trimmed from the coins
after they have been stamped. Of course
these little trimmings often drop on the
floor and are imbedded in the carpet,
which is soon to be burned in order that
the precious -filings may be recovered.
Sometimes after a piece of carpet like
this has been burned 85,000 worth of
gold dust is taken from the ashes. The
sweepings from the floor each day are
carefully treasured."—Baltimore Ameri-
can.
o+0
Correct Guess.
Bobby—Mr. Updike, what do you sup-
pose Ceara said about you just before
you came in?
Mr. Updyke--I haven't an idea in the
world, Robert.
Bobby—Well, you've guesed it! That's
just what she did say!" iS.ansas City
Journal.
ONIMOMMOVIMAIIMMIIIMV
The back is the maD' ring of
woman's organism. It quickly calls
attention to trouble by aching. It
tells, with other symptoms, such as
nervousness, headache, pains in the
loins, weight in the lower part of
the body, that a woman's feminine
organism needs immediate attention.
In such cases the one sure remedy
which speedily removes the cause,
and restores the feminine organism
to a healthy, normal condition is
LYRIAIE. ,a, ,:'S
VITALVESETABLE COMPOUND
Mrs. J. A. Laliberte, of 34 Arfit-
lerie Street, Quebec, writes to Mrs.
Pinkham :
" For six years I have been doctoring
for female weakness, heart and nerves,
liver and kidney trouble, but in Lydia
E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound I
can safely say I have found a euro.
"I was continually bothered with the
most distressing backaches, headaches
and bearing down pains, and I kept
growing more and more nervous.
" Lydia E. Pinlcham's Vegetable Com-
pound relieved nee of all. these distress-
ing symptoms and made me a well
woman. I would advise ail suffering
women, young or old, to use Lydia E.
T'inkleam's Vegetable Compound."
FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN.
For thirty years Lydia E.. Pink -
ham's Vegetable Compound, made
from roots and herbs, has been the
standard remedy for female ills
and has positively cured thousands of
women who have been troubled with
displacements, inflammation, ulcera -
tier?" fibroid tumors, irregularities,
die pains, backache, that bear-
-down feeling, fatulency, indies-
tion,dizaineeeprnervousprostration.