The Herald, 1907-02-22, Page 2110 !a'". 1 RAlY3h n
R eld 611 ti
asses gee en tea to d
Cures Rheumatism --and cures it to st4y
cured,
To prove. it, Dr. Mack will give you a
bottle to try, asking you co pay only the
express (about 25e).
Write to -day --bo Dr. B, 1.1. Mack, 60
Yonge street, Toronto—and get a full
size $1.00 bottleabsolutely
.MEEM
•
The Favorite Girl.
She is the girl who is not "too bright
and too good" to be able to find joy and
pleasure all over the world,
She is the girl who appreciates the
fact that she cannot always have the
first choice of everything in the world.
She is the girl who is not aggressive
and does not find joy in inciting aggres-
sive people.
She is the girl who has tact enough
not to say the very thing that will cause
the skeleton in her friends' closet to rat-
tle his bones.
She is the girl wha, whether it is
warm or cold, clear or stormy, finds no
fault with the weather.
She is the ,girl who when you invite
her to any place eompliments you by
looking her best.
She is the girl who makes this world
a pleasant place because she is so plea-
sant herself.
ftp
Minard's Liniment Cures Diphtheria.
•
Self -Sacrifice of the Stage Kiss.
,Stage kisses! No .one but au actor or
an actress can. fully atppreciate what t$ey
mean. The picture as presented to the
audience is very pnetty, but the vision
which looms up t,etorr the eyes of the
poor player is something like this: A
ease covered with a boating of coed
cream, whieh has. been poweered over
with a thick layer of pearl -white or
brunette powder, as the case luny be.
On the cheeks are daubs of rouge, which
at that eluse range in no possible: man-
ner suggest, as they do to the duaience,
the rosy cheeks of a country lassie.
Over the eyes are rubbed a little dark-
blue powder to make them poetieal. The
under lids are heavily panelled and a
mark extends ,a quarter of an inch,fromr.
the eye at the end. This makes them
laurger. Upon each separate lash is a
beadof black cosmetic, which has the
effect of making them heavy and long.
Tho -cherry lips, which to the audience
the hero is eager to press to his own,
are to bis distort d vision at such close
range only a gash of carmine painted
into a Cupid's •bow. The actress sees
More her a picture even less attractive,
for ten ce,anees to one the hero, in ad-
dition to his grease -paint, wears a false
mustache, and is also "smelly" with
tobaeco. The glare of the footlights
tones down this conglomeration of
paint send at. a »lis$ante tkte, panne ,r'„
actually prefiy, iitit'e'tipleliaitiOdeeitfspae=
tion they resemble nothing more than
a very bad oil -painting out of focus.
Taken from this viewpoint, some of the
very impassioned kisses, featured in
plays such as "Zara," "Sapho," etc., re-
quire iso little self-sacrifice on the part
of the players. --Harriet Quimby in Les-
lie's Weekly.
The Nova Soetia. "Lumber Ding" ea. •s:
"I consider; INARD'S LIXIMENT the
BEST liniment in test'.
I get my font badly jammed lately. I
bathed it well with KIl'; irD'S LI\I-
371:1 T and it was :is well as ever next
Yours very truly,
T. G. Mc3IGLLEN.
Shifting Tracks Nothing New.
Somebody has suggested to Commander
pears the idea of buildiag a railway over
the Ice toward the pole that would keep him
in touch crtth his base of supplies at all
times. The eommaudr:C thinks the builder
would need a lively eJetton gang, because
parts of the track would be shifted every
hour. But Peary mustn't be as hasty in con-
demning the suggestion. There are certain
railvrays tht seem to be built under exactly
the same conditions.
Minard's Liniment Cures Distemper.
The Thaw Evidence. •
(London Advertiser.)
There were portions of the evidence of
:Kra. Evelyn Thaw yesterday which no
newspaper should have printed. The
Advertiser, like the Toronto, Hamilton,
and 'vetroit evening newspapers,
deleted these paragraphs, and perhaps
incurred the displeasure of readers who
want every salacious detail of the trial,
It is possible, however, fora newspaper
to give the outlines of the stores told
by the with eyes, without filthy partic-
ularization Only the prurient minded
want more, and their 015.11115 are not to
be Weighed as inst the danger of pois.
ening the imaginations of the young
and :mum lure..
Mistakes in Measuring Age.
Age is not a. question of years, but
of experience amid of the effects thereof:
on 'body, brain or heart. A man may
be "old" at 30 or young at 70. The
fact of measuring age iii years Leads
to dismal consequences. One who counts
his 'years becomes the victim of a dread-
ful autosuggestion, HIe thinks that he
should' begin to decline at .70 just be-
cause he is 70. and not from any in.,er
ant reason. So fir provneds Ica c& lime. Itis
vigor is sapped by o dote. Perhaps 'it
would lip well to abolish ell- reeves of
births and never allow any one to know
his own age in tears: --St. Louis Globe-
Democra t.
PASS 'TIE W l NTitt IN SLEEP.
Starving Russians Endeavor to iImitate'
A St. Petersburg deepatelt announces
that in several of the provinces of Rus -
51a, the peasants, as a result of the
famine, have taken to their beds, lying
motionless for days at a time in order
to weaken the pangs of hunger, This
exigency may be akin to tiie pseudo -
hibernation habitually practised by Rus-
sian peasants in the northern ;provi:ncce,
notably in the Pskov district. If such
is the case, the hardships endured by the
peasants this winter may not be as great
as the casual reader may be led to be-
lieve.
True, the pseudo -Hibernation which is
general in Pskov has resulted from the
fact that famine is well -night chronic
there, but by practice from time imme-
morial the peasants have become accus-
tomed to imitate the habit of the bear
anti marmot in winter, until now the
custom is regarded by them as one of
the normal conditions of human exist-
ence. They have a name for this winter
sleep. It is called "lotska."
In the brief autumn the housewives of
Pskov prepare a sufficient quantity of
hard, black bread to last until spring.
When winter se'.s in in earnest the fam-
ily lie down around the stove and go to
sleep. Once in the twenty-four hours
everyone wakes up to nibble at a piece
of black bread, which is washed down
with a drink of water. Then all go to
sleep again. The members of the family
take watch and `watch about to keep the
fire going.
This pseudo -hibernation lasts until
spring, or upward of six months, when
the peasants take up their humble tasks
again, and are busy until the succeeding
winter, when silence reigns oven the
frozen land once more.—New York Times.
Animals Which Hibernate
....,..ear. ...m. .o...,.mamma.,
75-41
eifp
e
IT CLEANS AND 11'
CURES
'Royal Crown"
e st ;Til izd
Toilet Soap
it's a toilet soap and a
medicated soap — for the
price of ordinary soap
Only ICC, ac ai c 4 >a
QR A
, eileatte
,y
„Howe
with thee
eb eartbun
th'kese trap:
it is becdu
given. Teti e
upon itis tea
Bileans jxw
dissolving.,
herbal co
the g'lgtx',e,
pass into'.
the "deliea
All aloe
benefieial;
are gory
opened-:
and reran
from the';)
poisons;
and relit
healthy 'g
digestive:,
also cure','
ailment•,;;: p
kidney etteid
stores send
or post fr
onto, for p
Light on
There hes'
A. von Le C
scientific pa
the Gelmran
tan in Septe
work of exe
town of Tie
these discos!:
least ten die
ings on,: hex
wont
There are g see in a tongue that
is declared tip ' y.erly unknown. These
last will Trot, tract the notice and
s.
interest of ; iia...:, lets throughout the
world. :A'. entire,: this language is a
variation. Syriac ti
Althoti neost ofetli.ese manuscripts
must ela back to theeighth and ninth
centuries not even kearlier, there is
no papyr; among thein, all being writ-
ten on . ''.trchmene two • or three kinds
of Chinete paper or leather.
Other escoveries made by this expedi-
tion weer of a more gruesome nature.
In one t pie ;unearthed from the sands
that 1ued , long covered :11 Dr. von Le
Coq found some lairds of dead bodies
o£ Bali:this monks a,, The place was
crow ,ed vwth tees to 'tire very doers,
ndl�ev ese
Eli?; s ; `nr nto Ilia templebyheenting of bg
o o •.. i are of "il.a + f, Citta and
1 at es'
se .enef
4
BURN ?
lINGSQ:�, •yOOD?
li de Symptoms.
Balen food returns
Qr when you have
fie food, or any of
s "eelings orf fulness,"
° . igeetive system has
isle. The "food tax"
,tS• been too heavy.
the stomach, and,
hey liberate certain
sell. at once correct
These essences also
and are carried to
of the intestines.
herbal essences act
b.d`igesbive disorders
leis
are gently
purged—Ale acid
aces • are removed
,, blood as cleared of
F feeling of lightness
ser, with return of
old freedom from all
!,1,the reptile. Bileans
li*n, debility; female
;iclaohe, and, all liver,
t'lt disorders. Os all
l> ;at 50 Beats a box,
1. lie Wilma Co.. Tor -
ea -es sent foe $2.50.
forgotten Tragedy.
•eturned to. Berlin Dr.'
heed of the small
a, etched by order of
;sear t .eieeinese Turkes-
1904, to carry on the
find; in and around the
For the most part
:ansist of MSS. in at
einguages, and paint -
'mud, plaster and
After Skating.
, Yvette Guilbert, the famous French
actress, is an excelentl skater. Talking
about it in New York one day, Mme.
Guilbert said:
"It is only through perseverance that
one learn to skate well. I au: sure no
one ever suffered more than I• did in
learning to skate.
"I remember one day in my girlhood,
the second or third time 1 had ever been
on the ice. I was returning home in a
crowded omnibus, and a kind 0151 man
got up and offered me his scat.
"I shook my head, and the old man
laughed a good deal when I said:
"No, thank you. I've been. skating,
and I'in tired. of sitting down."—New
York Times.
No Need for Ships.
(New York Times.)
Peace between us has quite other and
Immensely better guarantees than the sta-
tioning of British squadrons in the West
Indies. It mar be added, too, that Bri-
tish territory and British interests there,
while safe iron molestation by us, are fur-
ther assumed by the fact that molestation
from any other quarter would lnstautly be-
come a matter of gravest concern for the
United States. Reflection, , wo imagine, will
:measurably diminish Mr. Maclean's regrets
over the absence of British naval vessels
from the Atlantic coast.
For St it"a h s
—of Back —of Shoulder
--of Stifle —of Hough
—of Whirlebone —of Knee
—of Fetlock —of Coffin joint
—of Pastern
Swelji'Rg
and all
Lame-
ness in
Horses
the
Fellows'
Leeufaing,'s
Essence
Two or three teaspoon-
fuls in a little Rum or Brandy,
cures Sprains, Bruises and
Lameness in 24 hours -takes
outfall the soreness—and puts
horses "on their feet again."
roc. a bottle. If your drug-
gist does riot have it, send to
Noland Dreg 81 Chemical Co.
Limited, Montreal, 17
SON? OF TiU SPARERM.,
ethics Editor Moved to Ecstasy by the
Pleasing Prospect,
'behold the hefty shote! See his ro-
tund proportions aglow with oleaginous
agloryv! WaIeh him as he crunches the
grain from the cob, changing, the •riotl-
tlse.as of the field into the incense of the
body, as surely, are gently es the plant
ehanges the sunlight into a flower, It
is a vision as full of anticipation as a
fa1p to the seaside or a visit to the
ttusuntain air,
Behold again that shote in his final
anatllgsist Here is a table spread white
and in the centre a platter filled to tee
brim with spareribs. The scene changes.
Mere is where the heart meanders along
the lanes of delight. Lift a section of
Slat unctuous framework to your plate
and behold the delicious membrane be -
tweets the ribs, as sweet a morsel as a
Mend of honey and cream.
Bela what considerate nature provides
to an offset to these keen October days.
ow, winds, and beat, rain, and sting,
tests—that sparerib eimply makes joy
cid you all. How one thanks the cold
breezes that come tearing around the
cots, with their menace of sleet and ice,
:lie he is only gnawing at a sparerib! His
may concern is that the membrane is
all too slight, But he remembers that
stature is soaring of her richest gitts.
So with that satisfaction tisat goes with
fi terateful heart he nibbles and gnaws
t the last shred of muscle is gone from
that fair bone and he looks anxiously
seer at the platter for more. Will he
lean take more? Wouldn't you?--.Co-
tinsaristna, 0.. State Journal.
ur
if
rece
r
Can cure your. Cough or Cold,
D no question about that. but—
why go to all the trouble and
inconvenience of looking hint up,
and then of having hisprescription
filled, when you can step into any
drug store m Canada and obtain
a bottle of SHILOH'S CURE
fora quarter.
Why pay two to five dollars
when a twenty-five cell."
bottle of SHILOH will cure you
as quickly?
Why not do as hundreds of
thousands of Canadians have
done for the past thirty-four
years: let SHILOH be your doc-
tor whenever a Cough or Cold
appears.
'HILOH will cure you, and all
druggists back up this statement
with a positive guarantee.
The next time you have a
Cough or Cold cure It with
12,1
01)01
r
the
.0.511 te,
insist on the. Genuine.
il}(£11tr't'911l t? Q1"f't nE POST CARDS
To anyoalo ve.ling us answering the fol-
lowing questions ree•will gladly send ale-
solntoiy free, 55gatage prepaid, a set
of four of out eeteet edition of beautiful
picture post cards lithographed in brilliant
colors:—
let. tea refyour grocer.
2ntd. feat gao this paper.
INTERNATIONAL FOOD CO.,
TORONTO, CANADA 6
theve•meh a m,oa.110ti11107801,11elie ee,st Ab'ali. eewietp8
When Winter Knocks.
(Baltimore Sun.)
A sad farewell *o summer time,
Good -by to aut(tnin; too.
The breezes of a -balmy clime,
Good -by, good -by, to you.
But though the'*atling winds sweep down
And amen Le, w6 the air,
Why need we sib' when dreams be nigh?
Iso for the reel big. chair!
Ho for the corne,,.;'by, the blaze,
The book, the en.g, the glee,
The sweet deliglti of winter night,
With Goldiopks°tet nay Ideal
Knock, Mr, Winter; at my door! '
Blow, bugle of the storm!
Around sue streams •the; fireside dreams,
The love lighteeleep me warm,
And while the Ibl
T111 summer k
Through all we
.Soft sleeps
'boats Ioud without
Orget
w that neath the snow
let
The
They are two.
Their holier
lumps.
Most ado)1
stomachs.
The first st, deli holds their half -
chewed food
After a rest tied bring it back to the
mouth and1bit) : ho chewilig.
These annuals ,.`e all without front
teeth in the upp
Their long teeth assists the .cutting
teeth of the leseee jaw in ' clipping grasa
from the grand,
These ruminants aolnprise one of the
most important groups, furnishing much
food for man..
Miss Per:A--Wltn is your favorite
tree, Mr. Lashat ay? Mr. bashaway—
Yew.
uiniaants,
fid, hoofed mammals.
ills „grow from bony
they have four
Re Got the Job.
as much amused the other day,"
hardware dealer, "at a small boy
me around for a job. One of the
had dropped a lot of sharp-point-
ks into a drawer of the brass
and had given up the idea of
them out. When the youngster
up wo thought we would try
letting him sort the two articles.
nt at it the same way the clerk
had begun, picking out the tacks with
the fingers, and getting the point of
about every third tack in the ball of his
thumb. He had enough in about Il. min-
ute, and he straightened up. We all be-
gan to smile, expecting him to give up
the job. Instead of that he went over
to the show case and picked out a horse-
shoe magnet. Then he came back to the
box. In thirty seconds he had the tacks
out and the screws were still in the
compartment. He knew that the mag-
net would attract iron and not the brass,
and in a jiffy he had accomplished what
we had been trying to do all the morn-
ing. We didn't realy need a boy, but
this little fellow's smartness appealed to
us, and we engaged him at once.
mea
Minard's Liniment Cures Garget in Cows,
Had a Feeling of Curiosity.
(Washington Herald,)
'I was asked to find out when you would
pay this little account," said the collector,
pleasantly.
"Really," answered the letter'
'"I art un -
"Really," answered the debtor, "I am un -
soothsayer in the next block who throws
a fit and reveals the future at nee a throw.".
"I've no money to waste," growled the
collector,
"Just add the 50 cents to my account,"
continued the other, "for I have a curiosity
on the point myself."
ISSUE NO. 8, 1907.
MISCELLANEOUS.
Mrs. Winslow's Soothing ;Syrup should wI-
ways be used for children teething. It
soothes the child, soothes the gums, cures
wind collo and is the best remedy for diar-,
rhoea,
DR. LEAOY'S
FE1VI.A.LE PILLS
Ante, aura and rellaulo monthly regale -
tor. Theca eltle have been used In 1'n,nQd
foe over 507 years and found tnvaiaabie
for tho purpose designed, and are gaaraa.
teed by the makers. Enclose stamp for
oenlea circular. 11'tce Bt•00c box of
9r y man, a isuroly sealed, on receipt of pre*
LB ROY PILL GO..
Box 42, Hamilton, Oan'waa.
Mange, Prairie Scratches and every term of
contagious Itch on human or animals cured
in 30 mio-•tes by FTolford's Sanitary Lotion.
It never fabs. Sold by druggists.
yummy
WHITELEY, UNIVERSAL PROVIDER.
How He Found a Wife for an Anglo-In-
dian Official in London on Furlough.
"Anglo-Indian" writes to the N. Y.
Sun: With reference to the death of
the great dry goods prince in London,
Mr. William Whiteley, I should like to
relate an incident which came under my
own observation when 1 was in India
many years ago. It was Mr. White-
ley's boast that you could get anything
in his store, from a pin to a plough, and
he endeavored to live tip to Isis position
as a "universal provider." In the 70's
there was a civil officer in the (ventral
Provinces who occupied the position of
a commissioner, or chief civil officer of
a division, and consequently he was pro-
minent socially.
During a furlough in England he had
patiently looked for a wife, but has not
succeeded. When he was about to re-
turn to India he went to Whiteley -s
store and made some large purchases,
and as he was leaving the store elr.
Whiteley accosted hire and asked if he
had found everytlue,.,,g
he wanted. The
commissioner replied: "Ves, Mr. 14hite-
ley, you have thoroughly supplied me
with everything I want but one article,
which it will be impossible for you to
find." "Don't be so sure of that, sir!"
replied the merchant. "State your wants,
sir, and they shall he sueolied." 'i''
Mr, Whitely, I am in search of a wife,
and I scarcely think you can supply that
article." Mr. Whitely said: '•sauced 1
can. A young lady has just become a
saleslady in one of our departineuts, and
she is altogether too highly educated
and too refined for such a position. She
is a clergyman's daughter, and has been
left an orphan. If you will allow me, I
will introduce you to her, and I will
take care that she does not know about
the bargain!"
The commissioner went to the depart-
ment and was introduced to the young
lady, of whom he made large purchases.
The result was that he eventually ask-
eteeseretee ibeebrne bis Svtte: .They Were
married in due time and went to India.
During my residence this lady was the
leader of society in one of the divisions
of the Central Provinces. It is said
that after the marriage, and before he
left England, the commissioner called on
Mr. Whiteley and told him of his suc-
cess. "0h," he replied, "that is eon
amore. Simply a labor of love!"
NERVOUS DEB I1UtT'
—muscular weakness—all wastingblood and nerve
diseases—yield quickly to the tonics contained in
Mira Tablets.
They lacrosse tho red corpuscles in the blood
and oxygenise the system. Most helpful in many
forms of female weakness, anaemia, pain in the
back, loss of rnetn•aty—and other evils attendant
on a debilitated condition of the body.
At druggists' -50c. a -box -6 for $2.50—or
from The Chemists' Co. of Canada, Limited,
Hamilton—Toronto. Note the bademar -.-
T55D0 MARK RE6tsTERED.
Would Need It.
In a little town in Scotland the grave -dig-
ger has been induced to give of his babtt bf
bard drinking and sign the pledge, At a pub-
lic meeting he gave his experience. "I never
thocht to tell ye," he said, "that for a whole
month I havna' touched a dram of anything.
I save enough to buy a brew oak coffin wi'
brass handles and brags natle—and if I'm a
teetotaler for anither month I shall be
wantin' it!"
O -O
Minard's Liniment Cures Colds, etc.
Increasing Average of Life.
(Savannah, Ga., News.)
A writer in the London Lancet finds that
the average of life has been increased from
"a trifle under forty years In 1854 to a trifle
over forty-eight years in 1800." A man of
eight years in less than half a oontury fa
tremendous. Should the progress continue
the world will again see Methuselahs.
•
n :L,0 t. , ,. ...,
�1..�
.stair for
� K!
SAFETY MATcir s Fo4R ROT11CLS, WA1R•1>:HeiOUS&S, I OS IITI M,
ASYLUMS, ETC.
Ittsw.Ax