The Herald, 1907-09-27, Page 2THE CANADIAN NEWSPAPER
DIRECTORY FOR 1907.
We have just received from the pub-
shers, A. McKim, Limited; of Montreal
Hand Toronto, a copy of the 1907 edition
40$ the Canadian Newspaper Directory.
This is the fourth edition of this valu-
able work, which is filling a very real
steed in Canada, and deserves a place on
the • desk of every business man, It is
the only Newspaper Directory published
in Canada that has gone beyond a first
edition, and it has now become the
standard work of reference for all in-
formation about newspapers.
n not only lists and describes fully
every periodical in the country, giving
fall particulars, but it supplies, as well,
s4 comprehensive Gazetteer of the Domin-
ion.
Comparing this edition with former
ones, we note a large increase in the
ktumber of papers which have supplied
detailed statements of circulation sup-
ported by affidavit and thereby received
the Star of Honor. This is as it should
be, and helps to put newspaper advertis-
ing on a more business -like basis, The
rapid growth of the new western pro-
vinces is very apparent, for they are
credited with fully twice as many
papers as in 1905.
The McKim Advertising Agency, pub-
lisher of this work, has been formed into
et f£mited company, capitalized at $200,-
&100, to be known as A. McKim,
I'.i,nited, with headquarters at Montreal,
e, branch office in Toronto, and repro-
trantatives in New York, and London;
Eng. This change has been made to
facilitate the handling of their steadily-
inereasing business.
Ever since this business was founded
by Anson McKim, more than twenty
gears ago, the McKim Agency has stood
high in favor with both publisher and
advertiser. Their methods are right up-
to-date —enterprising, progressive and
systematic to a degree.
The firm has won a.cz enviable reputa-
tion for fair dealing and prompt pay-
ments, and is undoubtedly at the head
-of the profession in this country.
Ancient and Modern Alchemists.
Berthelot, a noted French scient-
ist who is dead of grief over his wife's
death, claimed to be on -the point of dis-
covering the secrets of the old alohem-
lets. Did 'the'old alchemists know things
=known to modern alchemists? Is not
much of the talk of their knowledge and
mysterious performances akin to witch
tales? The aged alchemist in skull cap
and dressing gown, among his retorts
and crucibles is a familiar figure in ro-
mance and he is always about to do
something very wonderful, but if he
ever did there is no proof of it.—eNash-
ville, Tenn., American.
EFiaard's Liniment. Cures Dandruff.
BISHOP OP INGRAM
OUR GREAT TELESCOPES.
Soon We Will Add. a Wonderful Reflect-
ing Telescope.
One by one thls country Is equipping itself
with a group of the greatest observatorloa
la the world. On the summit of Mount Wil-
son, a peak in southern Ca.l1forniai, is a so-
lar observatory which will outclass any Oth-
er designed for that ,purpose,
It is under the patronage of the Carnegie
Institute at Washington. The lntentton is
to wend at least $300,000 upon its a Lun a
ment. Mount Wilson was selected as the
site because the ani onpherk, there was clear
and tranquil for a greater number of days
than at any other place tested.
Ope of the most important subjects of re-
search wi11 be the apparent decrease in beat
radiation from the sun in the last few years.
Another problem will be that undertaken by
Prof, E, E. Barnard,. who is not satisfied
with the theory of the nebular origin of the
earth and who will try to determine how
much faith can be 'put In the nebular hypoth-
esis.
The popular opinion is that the astronomer
Pres tshishivs ision point dblanktlyacrosse sun and
the chasm
of millions of miles. Instead, says a writ-
er in the 01110 Magazinethe errant sun
rays are lassoed by a coslestat—a great cir-
cular mirror driven by clockwork in such
a manner that it throws its light into an-
other mirror above, and this lu turn sends
the long, concentrated beam far into the in-
terior of the telescope house.
The two mirrors move in automatic ad-
justment to each other, so that the solar
beams may be shot into the building, no
matter In what ,portion of the sky the sun
may be situated. At the further end of the
building the reflected sunbeam strikes a
concave mirror which catches the light,
and flashing it back toward the opening
whence it first entred recuses it into a
perfect image of the sun.
The greatest reflecting telescope in the
world is to be the climax of the equipment
of this observatory. A;>huge lens fire feet
in diameter, eight inches thick and weigh-
ing a full ton is :being perfected at the
Mount Wilson laboratory in Pasadena.
To such an exact nicety must its surface be
ground and polished it will require three
years to complete it ready for mounting.
The glass in the rouge costs $1 a pound.
With great patience and the highest mechan-
ical skill it is being fitted for its moment-
ous work.
When completed it 'will be transported by
an auto truck up the narrow trail to the
observatory and there Will be mounted
under a rotating dome fifty feet in diameter.
With this monster eye it will be possible to
penetrate further into the depths of space
than by any instrument ever before de-
signed by man.
Thousands of tourists tram: all parts of the
word visit this observatory' every year. So
great is the popular interest in the work
there it has been decided to establish a mu-
seum of astronomical photographs in con-
nection with the observatory, to be open
to the public at all times.
Mob vs. Society.
(Montreal Gazette)
It is a eerious thing when peaceable .men,
because of their color, are lawlessly assailed.
It may be a costly thing when the victims
of mob wrath are subjects of':a government
which has both the power ithd the will to
protect thorn. The nationality, of the viotima
is, however, a matter of no iihportaaee. The
law of the land has been outraged. Its power
should be vindicated, and this not for the
sake of the yellow strangers more than for
that of the white resideat A mob that is
permitted to persecute one class of the people
will soon think it oa11 `,tyrannize over any
class. and will become a public danger that
only the shedding :',ofr'i!lood may check.
From I;oz a0n' 1'uneh,) • '
e rom morningtill evening from evenirsa • tili
night,
I
prance and I organize, lecture and write;
.And all everver a Biisshopnmy so busy it as e? legs fly—
WasWhhen writing my sermons, the best of my
work'll
Be done in the trains in the underground
circle;
I can write one complete, with a fine per-
oration.
Between Csaring Cross and the Mansion
House station..
'Per luncheon I swallow a sandwich of ham,
Aa I rush up the steps of a Whitechapel
tram.
.Or with excellent appetite I will discuss
A halfpenny bun on a Waterloo 'bus.
No table is snowy with damask for me;
My cloth is my apron that covers by knee.
No man -servants serve and no kitchen -maids
dish up
'rho frugal repasts of this Suffragan Bishop.
ENGLISH SPAVIN LINIMENT
"1 emoves 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 drug-
gists.
Damaged Jokes.
Customer to news dealer)—I want to
purchase a book of jokes.
News Dealer—P11 sell you this joke
book for half price because it's a little
damaged.
Customer (examining book)—I'll take
it, but I can't see where it is damaged
any.
Dealer (pocketing the money)—You'll
gee it when you read the jokes—they're
ail cracked.—Somerville Herald.
�-a
lilinard's Liniment for sale everywhere.
herd's Lint neat; Co., Limited:;
Dear Sirs,—I had a Bleeding Tumor on
my face for a long time and tried a num-
ber of remedies without any good re-
sults. I was advised to., try MINARD'S
LINIMENT, and after using several bot-
tles it made a complete cure, and it heal-
ed all up and disappeared' altogether,
DAVID HENDERSON.
Belleisle Station, Wing's' Co., N. B.,
Sept. 17, 1904.
2/raking Telephone Poles Picturesque.
For some weeks past the aesthetic
soul of Epping has been aroused to fury
by a threatened invasion of the National
Telephone Company. It was felt that for
stranger to emerge from the d1')-acl
Imitated glades of the forest upon a vista
atf telephone poles would prove as disen-
chanting as if the Venus of Hilo sud-
denly excip.imed "13y Jove!" A oompro-
ttiise has now been effected by which
only five poles are to be erected and
these will be relegated to an obscurity
where they cannot spoil the old world
charm of the Iittle town. "On Pragmatis-
tic principles," as Prof. James would
say, there seems no reason why telephone
and telegraph poles should remainun-
pieturesque when they might so easily be
wreathed with climbing roses or creep-
ers. Ilop poles, the most prosaic objects
in the universe, are being transformed
into the most romantic beauty at the,
resent montent throughout the hop gar -
dots of •Tient.-From the 'Westminster
si[lazette..
A. woman is a paradox. It is when
raehr fair that she takes a fellow by
Storm
CT
SKIN ;TROUBLES
Have you on Blaine. part of your body a sore,
or eruption. or eotemous patch, which, hidden
from the gaze oi?olhers, yetcauses,ouhours
and hours of pain arid in convenience F
It so. don, rev 10okthiaeomfortingfact"tbat
Zam-Buk 1e dallyq o' ring just such chronic
caesta as yours i „It heals skin diseases, ulcers,
festering ores,- ringworm and sores due to
blood poison. Write Zara -Bak Co., Toronto,
for free trial bee sending 1e. stamp. All aurae
and druggists sell ab 00 conta a box.
Words of the Wise.
Never giv p to despair. To regret a
wrong is g ; to stop to think of it
too lona, an 'to plunge into remorse, is
to lose the poorer of reparation.—Charles
Wagner.
Sobering, almost; alarming, to some of
us is the thourilt of Christ as Judge. On
the other hard, what judgment could be
kinder or fairer ?: We are to face the
judgment seat, but let us never forget
that it is thA judgment seat of Christ,—
the
hrist—the Christ who i knows man, who sees
and syznpatb e r with every individual,
who, having himself suffered, being
tempted, is 1" snared to make allowance
for human tirmities, who judges us
not so much by what we are as by what
lWoen wBridgant amnti an, strive to be.—Howard Al -
If to be true in. heart and just in act
are the first dualities necessary for the
elevation of humanity, if without them
all else is worthless, intellectual culture
cannot give what intellectual culture
does not require or imply. You cultivate
the plant which has already life; you
will waste your labor in cultivating a
stone. The moral life is the counterpart
of the natural—alike mysterious in its
origin, and alike visible only in its ef-
feots.—J. A. Froude.
The Decay of Glass.
Few visitors to the Metropolitan Mu-
seum of Art in New York are aware,
while 'admiring the iridescence of the
glass bottles, plates and other ancient
articles of ornament . arid use discovered
in Cyprus, that the prismatic hues dis-
played are a result of the decay of the
glass.
When disintegration sets in, the sub-
stance of the glass splits into exceeding-
ly thin laminae which, as the straight
traverses them, gives rise to a splendid
play of ,colors.
Like forest leaves, these delicate
glasses signalize their approaching disso-
lution by becoming more beautiful.
0
Minard's Liniment Relieves Neuralgia.
Carefully Concealed.
Chicago Tribune: --The McSwatts had
returned from their vacation.
"Now, Billiger," said Mrs. McSwatt,
"whore did you hide the jewelry that we
didn't take along with us."
"You hurried me so, Lobelia," he an-
swered, "that I've forgotten just where,
but I know it's either stuck behind some
of the rafters in the 'top attic or buried
in the coal pile in the basement."
Red, Etching' &kms -
Continuous Itching with Eczema, Salt Rheum,
Tetter and constantly scratching until the skin is
saw and bleeding?
Nothing gives relief ? You're wrong. Just try'
vM05 MARif REcASTCRED.
O. such relief, =this wonderful Ointment is
applied l listing stops—red, angryplaces heal—
and in a sho8ttimo you will not have a sign of
skin disease. 50e. box -6 for $2.50—Trial'.
size 25c. ASchuggists or The Chemists' Co. of
Canade,'I.in xlamilton—Toronto. is
LEARN OI'iESS-MAKii3] BY MAIL
The Army Worm.
He's a notable pest.
He ruins the crops.
In 1742, he appeared by millions.
That vra ` in struggling New England.
Dr. EoutTs.,n, of Vermont, saw ten
bushels in a heap.
The fast very serious onslaught was
made in 189(3.
He feeds on the succulent stalks of
wheat, corn, oats and the like.
Fortunately he has a host of natural
enemies.
His mamma is a light brown moth,
who lays her eggs in meadow grasses.
In his six weeks from egg to moth -
fly ho does his great damage to the pre-
cious' crops.
He's a juicy morsel for the meadow
lark, the bobolink, the blackbird, robin
redbreast and many others. The black
beetle also devours him wholesale.
in your spare time at home, or
Take a Personal Course at School.
To enable all to learn we teach on
cash or instalment plan. We also teach a
personal class at school once a month.
Class commencing last. Tuesday of each
month. These lessons teaches how to cut,
fit and put together any garment from the
plainest shirt waist suit, to the most elabor-
ate dress. The whole family can learn from
one course We have taught over seven
thousand dress -making, and guarantee to
give five hundred dollars to any one that
cannot learn between the age of 54 and
40. You cannot learn dresseriakin, as
thorough as this course teaches 11 you
work in shops for years. Beware of imita-
tions as we employ no one outside the
school. This is the only experienced Dress
Cutting School in Canada and excelled by
none in any ot'lier country, Write at once,
for particulars, as we have cut our rate one.
third for a short time. Address:--
SANfDEfls' DRESS -CUTTING $CH6OL,
CANADA'S FOREST AREA.
The Official Estimate is 500,000,000
Acres.
The forest area of Ontario and Quebec
has been estimated by R. H. Campbell,
Dominion Superintendent of Forestry, at
40,000,000 square acres, or 12,500 square
miles of pine, and 120,000 acres, or 187,-
500 square miles of spruce. The forest
area of New Brunswick, according to the
same authority, is calculated at 7,500,000
acres, or 11,720 square miles of mostly
spruce lumber. In Nova Scotia the forest
area is placed at 5,000,000 acres, or 7,812
square miles. Canada has therefore, in'
chiding the rest of the country unmen-
tioued, a total forest area of 500,000,000
acres. At 3,000 feet to the acre, which is
a low average, there are 1,500,000,000,000
feet. In Canada the forest area is most-
ly situated on rooky elevations.
BETTER THAN SPAM(III.
Spanking does not cure children of tied-
wetting. There is a constitutional cause for
thin trouble Mrs. M. Summers, Box W. ' 8,
Windsor, Ont., will send free to any mother
her successful home treatmont, with full
instructions. Send no money but write her
to -day 1f your children trouble you in this
way. Don't blame the child, the ehancea
aro it can't help it. This treatment also
cures adults and aged people troubled with
urine difficulties by day or night.
Three Great Waterways.
It is reported that the German Gov-
ernment have under consideration the ex-
cavation of three great waterways, one
connecting Grulil, on the Kaiser Wil-
helm Canal, with the River Sohief, an-
other running from, the }mouth of the
Elbe opposite Brunsblittel and thence to
Jande Bay. The dimensions of these
canals will permit navigation by the
largest warships. The third canal will
form a ohannel from Wesel to the River
Ems at Iisibriisch, Silesia.
Minard's Liniment Cures Burns, etc.
o, ee
Don't Sliootl
(By P11a Wheeler woos.) ,
Don't shoot! Consider this one fact.
The lack of manhood in the act;
How oculd a• creature of your si10
Take atm at any bird that small!
and are so helpless,
The very tiniest boy' is tall
Ow: pared with us. Put down your gun,
And eeek some manlier kind of fun.
Don't shoot! Out. there in tree and glade,
Sit pretty nests that 'we have made,
Our hungry little blydlings wait.
5.11, thinkof their ufhasppy fate
If we came not at set of sunt •
Put down your gun, put down your gun.
Don't shoot!' But leave us free of wing
To build, and nest, and soarand sing;.
W5 ask so little, lust` to live—
And for ths., privilege we Ole
Our souls in song, tin 1110 is done,
Put down ytur gun, put down year gun,
Don't shoot! sBartit has .enough of joy,
De apace, and fob& for bird and boy;
Enough .for both et .light and sun,
Put down y , r gun, Nut down your gun.
4•A
"Dear fatter," wrote a youngster of
twelve,. "we'are .all well , and happy. The
io
' RIG
1''ll�°W
There is one roof that saves money
because it will last 100 years.
Guaranteed inwriting
i for 28 years.
.e OSHA V'�A9'
GALVANIZED
STEEL SHINGLES
This roof saves you work because its
so' easy to put on (do it yourself with a
hammer and snips), and save you worry
because they fireproof, windproof and
weatherproof the building they cover.
Write us about it and hear all about
207 ROOFING RIGHT. Address
The PEDLAR People (2
Oshawa Montreal Ottawa Toronto london Winnipeg
OUR IMMIGRATION.
The immgiration statistics show that in
1904 immigrants camp from the British Isles
numbering 50,374; to 1903 the number was
65,359, and in 1906 the number was 80,790,
made up as follows:
loot.
English and Welsh ... ... ...86,894
Scotch ... ... ... ... ... 10,552
Irish ... .. 2,128
50,374
1905.
English and Welsh -.. -.. -.49,617
Scotch .. .... ... ... ... •.-
65,859
1906.
English and Welsh --- .., 65,932
Scotch ... ... ... ... ... 16,846
Irish ... ... ... .. 5,018
88,796
C EIOSIdiaif �- - r° Restorer
Will restore gray hair to its nature
color: Stops failing hair, causes 1,
grow oh bald heads, aures dandruff
itching.and all scalp diseases. Contains
no oily or greasy ingredients. Nota dye
Price 75 cents—To Introduce will unh1 Era
order for Se cents, coin or postal note.
Address THE MERWIN CO., Windsor, On
deo
baby has g - wn ever so much and has
e great de here sense than the jrsckl,
3lLlrieSt.,Stratford,Oat„Can,dala. I to have. Hoping the same of you, 1 re-
main your ,affectionate sail, James,”
hat Papa Said.
Tommy was stubborn, and his . teache
was having a hard time explaining
small point in the geography lesson.
"Tommy," teacher began, "you ea
learn this if you make up your mind. It'
not one bit smart to appear dull.
know," she continued, coaxingly, "th
you arejust as bright as any boy in t
class. Remember, Tommy, where there
a will there's "
"Aw," broke in Tommy, "I know a
dat, I do. Me fadder's a lawyer, he i
an' I've heard him say it lots o' times
"You should not have interrupted me
reprimanded the teacher, "but, I am gin
that your father has taught you the of
adage. Can you repeat it to me?"
"Sure," said Tommy, confidently. '
fodder says dat where der's a will—der
always a bunch o' poor relations."—Li
pincott's Magazine.
Mange. Prairie Scratches and every form
contagious Itch on bureau or .animals cur
fn 80 minutes by Wolford's Sanitary Lotto
It never fails. Sold by druggists.
os
Changeable Electric Signs.
Brilliant effects for electric eign
are now to be readily obtained with iii
tie cost' by the use of small color
s
transparent caps , which fit over th
rounded ends of the incandescent bulb
.
This permits the owner of a clang
able electric sign to alter the legend
will and to indudge in the use of colo
without the necessity of keeping on hal
a large supply of colored lamps, some
which are very expensive.—Scientif
American,
coins"—From the WasiLmgton Post,
.'41,rs Aoki, Outff.'s ,8gi ',°1054 . 1Xo..,Fs;it'hidi'12
Are the VERY BEST values going. WE invite oorapariton sus
QUALITY and QUANTITY ' of paper supplied. Compare by *Anal ceeu
the number of sheets in the so -called -cheaper papers with the Eddy nsals%
and you will find that you get moreefor the same money isai Eddp'a.
Always Everywhere in ,Canada, Ask for
EDDY'S k A; C S
4 .'