HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Herald, 1901-02-15, Page 44
THE ZURICH F-IER.ALID
the Zuricb lbetitbi
_ _
Z. ZELLER, 1) UBLISBER.
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY, 15 1001
One or two changes in the Ontario
14! game. laws are aic1 to be under the
P consideration of the Provincial au-
thorities as a result of last 'week's
0 meeting at Montreal of the North
re American Fish. and Game Protee
Associatione After a lenthy
e,,j4S discussion at that meeting, -which
was attended by half a hundred re-
p* presentativemen from Canada and
ads1 the northeastern States, a recom-
146ti mendation that the deer -hunting
ae '
season extend from September 15 to
November 30 was rejected, and a
thirtyday season between those
Itt b dates favored. In Ontario the season
etat
Via) is only 15 days and the possibility
ksoi of extending it is being considered,
' wise
este but action is by no means certain.
n" In regard to other recommendations
disci •
by the committee, such as the
stere abolition of spring killiuig of game
delnI
eat, birds, a close season for beaver un -
liken til 1905, the exportationof trout
Platt and a $15 bounty on wolveseit is
them found that Ontario has already led
its 3'L in progressive legislation.
vine,
es
to s( Surprise has been expresed that
tae Princess of Wales was referred
ttt to on the death of Queen Victoria
a!' as "Queen Consort," the second
rem.
y c word appearing superfluous. The
a- fact, however, is that when a
ne
oul married King occupies the thrcne
le
ic I his consort holds a specially privi-
leged position, having her own of-
ficers distinct from the King's, and
t
t being in a legal point a single
intrather than a married. woman. She
hlit has her personal revenue from
lee
reserved portions of the rents due
to the Crown, as well as from a
as
as, variety of perquisites. She is
crowned on the same occasion with
6. the King himself if already married
X@ or by special ceremony if married
after the King's accession, but in
e • either case the act proceeds as per-
", formed at his injwiction, and not
w. by the will of the people. The
6 Queen Consort's crown is one of
the regalia to be seen at the Ancient
II Queen's Crown. In it general
construction it resembles St,
Edward's Crown,
Mr. Borden, like Sir John Thomp-
son -whom he resembles in many
respects -from the outset of his
Parliamentary career commanded
the respect and attention of the
House of Commons. And each
succeeding session has only streng-
thened that respect and confidence.
.A member of Government told the
writer about a year ago that Mr.
Borden was then recognized on both
sides as the highest legal authority
in Parliament, ana if that were true
in the last Parliament, it will (Tr-
] tainly be none the less true in this.
But the new leader is a good deal
more than an eminent lawyer. He
is a gentleman of the highest char-
acter and ability. His strongest
political opponent will not for a
moment question his integrity, sin-
cerity, or veracity. In these re.
speets he is absolutely without fear
and without reproach. Nor by
those who know him will his abil-
ity be questioned. He has up to .
this hour showed himself able to
perform, easily and well, every
duty that has devolved on him,
And there is no reason for doubting
that he will continue to 'do so.-
Halifax Herald.
ister Murtha who owns up to smok-
ing eigarettes, decided to ward off
an avalanche, so he introduced a
bill regulating the sae et cigarettes,
which compels all dealers to pay a
tax of $50 a year, to .be turned into
the general fund of the different
counties. Failure to make a report
leach year and pay the tax is made
punishable by a fine of $200 and im-
prieonment not exceeding 6 months,
We are meeting with the usual
difficulties which follow a policy of
expansion. It has always been sup-
posed that Canada was the proprie-
tor of the north pole, and that we
could have the article whenever we
chose to call for it. But DO sooner
do we propose to go and bring that
pole home than claims are made by
other countries which taper off in
that direction, and it is said now
that we are entitled to only one-
quarter of the pole. We are strong-
ly opposed to jingoism, but there
are some things we are not prepar-
ed to stand, and we give 'due notice
that we will wade knee-deep in ink
before we will give up any part of
this birth -right of every Canadian.
-Globe.
2% percent
Discou t
Off Fancy China
LAMPS
We have a choice assort-
ment of fancy parlor Lamps
and this is a Grand Oppor-
tunity to get one at such
a Small Cost.
You must see them, to
appreciate the Values.
F. A. EDWARDS
Bayfield
ggil•E•Ililli.1113.i1011111•1•110
The departure of the Duke and
Duches of Cornwall and York for
Australia will be the occasion of a
great naval display, at which the
King and Queen will be present.
With last weeks issue, the East
An egotist is a man who enjoys
Lampton Tribune. entered on its talkingto himself.
=
second year of publication, and we
I have a woman friend who bas
are pleased to note by Bro. Bryant's given both loving and scientific
remarks, that the Tribune is meet- study to the problem of bringing
up her two children, who are two
little girls,aged respectively six and
fetus They have had many stories
read to them, not of the old-fash-
follows :-"In future as in the past ioned, bloodthirsty, giant -killing,
our polities will be, our own busi- cruel stepmother kind, but the new
ness ; our aim, to get dollars, and order wherein allis sweetness and
our expectation, ditto." We trust
nEi 7.17 oftakleinclinas. ,hatditso
that Mr. Bryant's modest aim and ; cgentle reated things,aof charitPand help-
expectations,all will be handsomelylfuluess. The mother feels that she
realized. The Tribune is one of I succeeded admirably in keeping her
our valuable exchanges, and. we , little ones from being the brutal
little savages children were -when
note with pleasure nits bright pro-
you ancl. I were young. She let me
spects for the future.
steal into the nursery with her one
!day last week to overhear her
According to reports received. at daughters at play.
the Crown Lands Department, the' "I've been so careful to teach
them to be gentle and considerate "
cut of pine in Ontario woods this ."
, she said, "and they are never cruel
year will be. the largest in the his- r
in. their make-believe playing. Let
tory of this province. It is esti- I us listen."
mated at 750,00e,000 feet, board. We did listen. Margaret and.
!Sylvia, sat by the window, with a
measure, or more than a million t
a
l -g tany paper dolls.
feet in excess of last year's cut,r,em
.what'll we play we are,Madge?"
The cut -for the past few years has ; asked Sylvia.
been as follows: 1899, 613,000,000
feet; 1898, 570,000,000 feet; 1897,
503,000,000 feet; 1896, 920,000,000
feet. There are about 17,000 men
employed in the various lumber
camps, and their average wages is
$27 a month.
big with favor by the people of
Thedford and surrounding country.
Bro. B. winds up his editorial as
According to judg,ment rendered
recently, the council of any town-
ship is responsible and open to
action for allowing bad holes,
"Oh," said Margaret, "let's play
we're hunters out in the woods
looking for Indians. We'll find
them, and rob them and punch
them full of holes with the scissors,
and then put them in the grate and
burn them alive. It'll be a heap of
fun, and we'll yell like thunder,"
-Washington Post.
Mark Twain was the leading at-
traction on Saturday at the annual
meeting of the University Settle-
ment Society of New York. He
stumps or stones to remain on the did not, talk- politics, but created a
roads whether or not damage sensation with a recital in which
the themes were pawnshops.suicide
results from the same. The fact and a. poet, of whom he told the
being the existance of such obstac-
les are an impediment to the safety I was looking over sone manuscript
of travellers. Councillors should some of that unpublished autobiota
• raphy whichI gredually
be guided by this warning.
• ing up for the the instruction of the
world, and I ran across an incident
the debate on the address, and. the ago in San Francisco, I had. been.
same inight be done with the de- and was willing to be a reporter,
bate on the budget, which usually! but others were not sufficiently
There is a tendency to shorten up which happened about forty years
! in -
has very little to do with the bud-
inter
!of a jobested methat is, I WItS out. And an I owned was in
get, but is a sort of lumber room the pawnshop. Well, I ran across
for political rubbish, another literary person, a poet out
eseaseee-easse , of s. job. There was a little romance
After carefully looking over thelabout him, a love story -but that's
estiuites of the Ottawa Govern.. the best part of the story, and I
guess I better save it for the auto-
ment for this year we fail to find biography. One day he told inc hel
any amount for the new harbor and thought he was a failure. I agreed
dock at St. Joseph, It may appear with him. Oh, he was e friend ofspeak! !
• Bobcaygeon Independent : Mr,
Bryan has joined the multitudinue
ens ranks of those who imagine
they were born to run a newspaper.
Tie is to publish a paper called Tho
Commoner, and in his published
announcement he says he has foe
several years contemplated the
establishment of a weekly WM'S-
paper. Poor fellow! how much
happier for him had he continued in
the sweet contemplation. The
paper will, if successful, so he
naively observes,provide an income
sufficient for my pecuniary need,
What retiring modesty there must
be in his needs and what sublime
hope is hereby implied, "And this
kind of work," he goes on to say,
"will allow me more time with my
family" Heavens 1 the simplicity of
the man! "1 expect to lecture
occasionally," he says, and that is
an excellent idea. He should
arrange to lecture every Friday
night. It will help him out on
Saturdays and keep the grocer in
better twist. By spending his
afternoons with his family, lectur-
ing i11 the evening occasionally,and
running the Commoner at odd
intervals, he will be able to put in
a remarkable gilt-edged and silver
lined time for a newspaper man.
He concludes his announcement
with the two short and pointed sen-
tences. "The first issue will appear
in January. I shall bo proprietor
and editor." What ,a thrilling
pride reverberated beneath his
chest protector when he wrote that
last sentence! Well, let the thrill
reverberate, let the chest protector
flutter with the palpitations of his
manly pride, for, poor fellow, he
little dreams of the cold hunks of
experience that are before him,
little does he contemplate the. meek
and humble mass of dejection there
will be when The Commoner gets
through mopping eternal space
with the majestic creature, the
paragon of being, that now struts
upon the glaring stage of fame as
Mr, Bryan, editor.
At a meeting held in': Chicago a
fewfdays ago of Boer sympathizers,
the British Empire„ its rulers, and
its citizens came in for a shower of
abuse. According to a report in a
local paper, -the mention of the
mune of Queen Victoria called
forth hisses and. demuneiations
from the erowd.' When the manes
of Roberts and Kitchener were
mentioned there watt an uproar.
"Butchers! Tyrants !" shouted the
men, while the women supplied a
chorus of "Shame upon them :
Shame !" When a speaker spoke
of "England's skilled ambassadors
-another name for liars, they be-
long to the most brutal, the most
deceitful nation on earth," yells of
approval were sounded. The inci-
dent is of interest, as showing that
the Boer envoys, who attended. the
meeting, are not sowing seed on
altogether rocky soil, but happily
they are getting little encourage-
ment from the respectable element
among our neighbours.
AsthmaC(.,.stas
Too many asthma sufferers give up
their search for Ture, believing that
their particular case is beyond the con-
trol of scientific treatment.
It is only necessary to point all
such to a new hope in Dr. Chase's
Syrup of Linseed and Turpentine, the
one great remedy which has proven
its efficiency not only as a prompt re-
lief, blit also as a. thorough cure for
samthrms.a.
George Budden, PutnamvIlIe,
Ont„ says :-"I feel it my duty to re-
commend Dr. Chase's Syrup of Linseed
and Turpentine, as 1 had the asthma
very bad; could get nothing to do me
good, A friend of mine persuaded me to
try this remedy, 1 did so, and it cured
treatment for asthma. than Dr. Chase's
It is impossiate to Imagine a be.tter
Syrup of Linseed and Turpentine. It
soothes .the excited nerves, clears the
bronchial tubes, gives prompt relief to
the frightful spasms, and, when used
I regularly. thoroghly and permanently
cures asthma. cents, all dealers', or
Jildmanson. Bates & Co.. 'nronto,
in the supplementary estimates and it is always woll to
; later on.
THE DANGER OF PILES
Ono of the most important clues- Piles are usually caused by eon -
tions likely to come before the Do- stipation,lack of exercise or sitting
minion Parliament at this session, on wet seats or cold stones, They
frequently develop into turners,
is the appointment of a railway fistulae or rupture of the intestines.
commission, clothed with special Dr. Chase's Ointment has never
powers to regulate the dealings of failed to euro piles and put an end -
the great railway corporations with ing to, the wretched itching and
the miblic. As things are at pre-; uneasiness
has.I'te teid"ITaXa i;e. ?ga7-
sent constituted the railways; can anteed to euro every ease of itching,
practically dictate terms to the gov- bleeding or protruding piles.
ernment regardles of the rights of
., .
the people, who have] contributed Windsor, OntFeb7--Henry
Parent.to their construction and suppott. W yotnlg,, numb 1,111v in
esti, sas so al, y got -
The American commission has ac- I ed by a bull this morning that
complished a great deal in rernov- small hopes are entertained of his
ing grievances and a Canadian recovery. The bull, which has
he toftve been regarded as a
opportunities foe redressing pre- ! the barnayaed this morning when
sent inequalities in freight rates ; Parent went out. Before the young
and guarding the interests of the I man could realize the situation the
people from further aggression. I WI, annoyed evidently by a red
!necktie thet the young Mari had
Commission would find many peaceable animals was standing in
just put on had tossed him several
Tlie war on cigarette smoking is ; 'feet into an,
air, trampled him
ex
ing hot in the Michigan Legis- under foot, and kept goring hira.
lature' Representative McKay in-' His body was ett in 17 places.
troduced a bill in the House prohi-1and rushed out to the barnyard
Parennt's brother hearcl his cries
biting the sale of cigarettes entire-, He
-.
yelled for assistance, and soon
1.3,- and providing a fine ranging tsa-o farm hands with pitchforks
obi $25 to wo and imprisonment I drove off the bull. In addition to
from 60 days to 6 menthe, a.ccordeithe wounds and bruises all over his
itig to the enees zee,, bocly, the man's right arm and
numbe • of off
‘"-Islioulder were broken and his body
fitted by the setae persons. Sen. I Nally eaesbed,
frankly to a friend, Then he saidi
he thought he'd commit suicide. I
approved the idea. I admit there
was a selfishness in my advice. I
was out of a job,and the idea struck
me that if I should have a 'scoop'
on a suicide 1 cot -ad get work. And
that poet could be spared -oh, very
well. So I kept the. idea of suicide
before him -you always have to do
that, suicides are so very uncertain.
Ile had an absurd preferonce.._peo.
plc will have preferenees,you know.
He wanted to blow his brains out.
but that was not to bQ thought of
in our financial condition. Our
joint belongings were not enough
to get a, pistolThen he thought
he wotild drown. himself. I went
down to the bay with him -I didn't
not want anythistakes. But then a
miracle happened. There was wash-
ed ashore, right at his feet, a life -
preserver."
Mark Twain then told how a
pawnbroker was induced to trade a
loaded derringer for the life -preser-
ver, and then he described, in
accents of horror, how the young
man put the pistol to his head and
fired, The audience had not expect-
ed anything so serious, and Was
visibly Shooked. The speaker con-
tinued ;-."When ho milled the
trigger. It eleatea out all the grey
matter -took it alleeand then
he Was just as good as new, He
had been been nothing but a poet
before. He is alive to -day, and an
orament to society. I wish I could
have the same experience with a
lot of other poets, And I want .011
t e poets to knowat.'
Dr, Chase's Syrup
of Linseed
and Turpentine.
Prominent Norseman Swear
BY
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and testify they are as recoirunend- •
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Every remedy Guarenteed, or
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VETERINARY
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Those medicines are put up in
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50 YEARS'
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TRADE MARKS
DESIGNS
COPYRIGHTS &C.
Anyone sending a sketch and description may
quickly ascertain our opinion free whether an
invention Is probably patentable. Communica.
tions strictly confidential. handbook on Patents
sent free. Oldest agency for securing patents.
Patents taken through Munn & Co. receive
special notice, without charge, in the
Scientific American.
A handsomely illustrated weekly. Largest cir-
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rear;four months, $L Sold by all newsdealers.
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;. in the lead.
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k.-3r7r1Vo have inade arrangements
rates with Tnn HERALD:
Daily Globe . . $4.00
to offer the following low chibbing
„Mali & Empire 4.25
Weekly Globe . . 1.50mr
„ Mail & Empire 1.75
Berliner Journal (German) 2.50
Family Herald & Star 1.75
The Berliner
This is the machine that talks—sings—plays every instrument—reproduces
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in fact everything that can be played on any instrument or number of instnitments
can be reproduced on the Berliner Gram -o -phone with the vonderfulindestruct-
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It tells funny stories or repeats a prayer. It can entertaia bundneds-abone
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The Records are not wax, they are Hard, Flat, Indestructible Discs, whiehia
will last 10 years. •
The Berliner Gram-o:phone is made in Canada, it isguaranteed far five years.;
The Grani-o-phone is used and endorsed by the leading clergymen, and4
others throughout Canada.
The Berliner Grain -o -phone received the only medah
and the records counterfeited, therefore be ware of machines
The -phone een
for Talking Machines at the Toronto Exhibition 1900.iittd' Price
Berliner Gratnohas bwidely
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with misleading. names as they are worthless. including
If the Berliner Grani-o-phone is not for sale in your a.10 inch. horn,
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and
FAcTottV : 267-371 Aqueduct St., Montreal.
BleasiesesBr,otrr, General Manager for Canada.. -concert sound box...,
E. BERLINER, 2315 St. Catherine Street, . . MONTREALI
•••".---C:rj="' • 11122Eltalialalfait
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