The Herald, 1907-11-01, Page 3• B EER'..1S. A FOOD
.LAGER
9s a mild apliottetng pro-
duct of tools and hope,
with ;esualcohol than
sweet actor, which can-
not ferment in the atom•
ach. Itis specially suited
to women as a @goner
drink.
ALES
as brewedirt Onkario are
goo rich in the food ele-
ments of malt that they
rank above milk as an
item of diet, and are far
purer than most milk is
wbeacity-dwellers get it.
PORTER
•differs from ale in that
the malt is roasted (like
coffee) in the brewing
process, and this makes
porter so nourishing that
at is a real specific for
atencmic and run-down
people.
STOUT
'iis the richest and most
strengthening of malt
beers; it contains nearly
s' as much nourishment as
eggs, and digests easier.
Thin people will find it
builds healthy flesh.
EER*, used
withmeals
and before
bedtime, increases
digestive pow a r,
gets you more good
out of the food you
eat—and is itself a
food.
if, Beer does not
contain enough al -
collo' to react upon
the system— just
enough to induce
the stomach to do
its work better.
111 Beer is not an
intoxicant—it is a
beverage with defi-
nitevaluefor
almost every
grown person.
Il, A 5k your own
doctor whether it
wouldn't be good
for you and the
adults of your
household.
*melt is a term wbkh cover; lager. Was, portur, and ,tont
and, In the practise et Ontario hrenera, implies beventbe=
mado under moat hygienic conditions trout Ontario barb
(tba brat In the Kornis milt. br,.,, nn;
How to Clean Sewing Machine.
Sew x*t*' is riot balf as hard as some
areople filial It if the sewing machine is
,.ei,,, in good running order, 1'Vben the
sewing machine works hard and heavily
take the needle and shuttle out and give
every joint and bearing a generous bath
of gasoline. Of course, there should not
be a lighted lamp or fire of any kind in
the room. Turn the wheels briskly for a
few moments, to enable the gasoline to
penetrate every part and to loosen and
wash away the old oil and grime. When
all the grime and oil has been removed
oil with proper lubrienting oil, running
the machine for two or three minutes
before inserting the needle. Now, with
a piece of chamois skin, wipe away all
superfluone oil. It is a pleasure to sew
on a machine treated in this mariner.
COST OF A 'POSSUM DINNER.
A tourist in Georgia stopped overnight at
the Palace Hotel, in a little village, and e*
preened a desire to taste Georgia 'possum,
acording to the Atlanta Constitution.
A whole 'possum cooked In genuine Geor-
gia style, with 'litters on the side, was plac-
ed before him.
"Two dollars extra for the 'possum," said
the landlord, when the .guest came to set-
tle.
"It's en outrage!" said the guest.
"it's 'cordis' to the 'tvay you look at it,
stranger," said the landlord, "but it took
mo sox nights' swnanp wnddu' to ketch that
'Possum. an' when I kotched him I koteliod
the rheumatism with him."
4,*
LITTLE LAUGHS.
(From the Smart Set.)
"Man to see you."
"What does lie want?"
"Wants you to take back something
which was printed in yesterday's paper."
"Tell him it will not be necessary for
him to come in; we've already taken
back everything we printed yesterday."
Pendally—Now, candidly, what do yell
think of my book?
Grimshaw--Weil, I always did ad-
mire the courage of a plan who, with-
out knowing how to write, writes on a
subject of which he knows nothing.
. Some so-called friends are like burglar-
alarms—they ga off when there's trouble
around.
"Uncle Bill, what is an affinity?"
"Oh, 'most anybody that you are
not married to, Willie."
Blood Tonic is a pure, sale, pleasant cure for
nervous exheeat en, pelpitetioci of the heart,
variable appetite, sour stomach and other disorders
cawed by bad broad or overwcu':,
Don't meta enc ae I. Clear the poison vitt
of your body—lay wag Nara Blood Toa:o.
Every detail of ilk raarmfadture is personally
supervised by eapeecnced ehentilts. piaci from
the purest and host sedientaoft the most effective
formula offered by modern science. $1 a -bottle,
At drug-Stores—or from The Chemists' Co. of
Canada, Linv:tad, Hamigton Toronto. With
4fira Tablets anal Ointment—a triofe k•.tlik.
Fudge for Hallowe'en.
Stir three cups of ugar and one cup
of thin cream over the fire until the sug-
ar is melted. Then boil without stirring
to the soft. ball stage. At the same time
stir one cup of sugar over the fire until
it becomes caramel. Pour the first mix-
ture into the caramel, and let boil up
once. Take from the fire, and beat until
thick, adding at the last half a cup of
Aron, candied cherries, pineapple and
plums cut fine, and one cup of pecan -nut
meats. _
Mniard's Liniment Cures Distemper.
d v ar
TROUSERS OF RECENT ORIGIN.
LEARN DRESS -MAK MM BY MAIL,
in your spare ~hire t home, or
Take a Personal Co +, ie, at School.
To enable all to lie 4) we teach on
Instalment. cash cr ' al ent i.�cn, ' W e also teach a
at m l
persol,al class at wile +once a month.
Class cotiamencing lasttaesday .of each
month. These lessonst' ties how to cut,
fit and put together any srmeut from the
plainest shirt waist suit, t he most elabort
ate dress. The whole fat y can learn from
one course. We have t ~gist overseven
thousand dress -making, d guarantee to
give five hundred do la : to any one that
cannot learn between the age of 14 and
4o. You cannot learn dress -making as
thorough as this course teaches if you
work, in shops, foryears. 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 other country. Write at once
for particulars, as we have cut our rate one-
third for a ti. —
BANshortOER8' DtheRESS,OAddVlTfresslflli SCHOOL,
91 Brie St.,Stratford, Ont., Canada.
On Seeing "The House of auiia"
Herculaneum,
Not great Vesitvies. in a1 his ire..
Ncir'.atli the centuries, cuttld hide your
skeane;
('here a the little window, where you
came,
With eyes that woke the demon of cde-
sire,
And lips like rose leaves, feelan led out
of fire;
Anil fi'um the lavas: leap; the molten
1Iasue
0f .your old sine. the walls cry out
your name
Your face seems rising from the funeral
Pare.
!'here must have dwelt, within your
fated town.,
Pull noway a virtuous dame and noble
wife
ylefere whose hlooen yours was as
star to sun;
How strange the centuries have handed
down
Your name, fair Julia, of immoral. life,
And left the others to oblivion.
•
at ISSUE IN 0. 44, 1907.
According to Scripture.
"Young man," said thsis'lerical-looking
custcmer to the clerk at the book coun-
ter, "that purebase of mine amounted
to enc, dollar and fifty cents, I believe."
"Yes,"
"Well, I gave you a ,two dollar bill
at least twenty minutes ago, and I have-
n't received my fifty cents back yet."
"Very sorry, sir," replied the clerk,
"but you know what the Good Book
says on this point." And politely hand-
ing the customer a Bible, he pointed to
Job, fourteenth chapter, fourteenth
verse: "All the days of niy life will a
}wait till my change come—Prom the
October Bohemian.
A Hundred Years Ago Methodists
Thought Them Immoral.
'lhe modern custom of wearing trou-
sers was taken from the military dress
introduced into the army by the Duke
of Wellington during the Peninsular war,
says the Tailor and Cutter. In early
days these were known as Wellington
trousers, after the duke.
When they were coming into general
use at the commencement of the nine-
teenth century, the religious world and
the fashionable were most determined in
their opposition. A clause :in the original
trust deed, dated 1820, of a Sheffield
Nonconformist chapel provided that
"under no circumstances whatever shall
any preacher be allowed to occupy the
pulpit who wears trousers."
But this was not all. Some doubts
were expressed in many quarters con-
cerning the. .question whether a man
could be religious and appear in.trou-
sers. One of the founders of the Primi-
tive Methodist body remarked to a cal -
league in the ministry 'that "trousers
wearing, beer drinking so and so will
never get to heaven:'
i
,Father Il.cce, a famous biothodist n-
a►u
later, twice president of the cdnference
(born in 1765, died:; iii 1850), could not
be induced to adopt trousers, and among
the Methodists was, the last to follow
popular fashion in this respect.
t: ---
ENGLISH SPAWN LINIMENT
Reproves 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.
-a
Had Heard the Sound Before.
Mrs. Knicker--Weren't you frightened
when the bull bellowed at you on ac-
count of your new dress?"
Mrs. Bocker—No; it was exactly the
way Henry bellowed when he got the
hill.—Melbourne Times.
7 -PIECE WATER SET, 1110,00
THE above cut glass Water
Set, composed of one jug
and six tumblers, which sells at
$10.00 is exceptional value.
THE design is one of our
latest, while the cutting
and finish is unexcelled.
EVERY piece bears the
stamp "Ryrie," which is
the best guarantee of both
quality and workmanship.
Send for our Catalogue.
RYRIE HOS.,
7•'c
Limited
134'138 Yonge St.
{TORONTO
D
Mange. Prairie Scratches and every form at
contagious
banana
or
n 30 minutes by VoorrdsSanitayloon.
It never fails. Sold by druggists,
A Lesson of Lessons
(Philadelphia Record.)
England is collecting in her home waters
the greatest fleet ever assembled under one
commander, and is doing it without taking a
chip from her principal squadrons. Tho pa-
1it1cal purptse of this display is to quiet
public sentiment, which the opposition party
has alarmed by representing that the Minis-
try was sacrificing the naval power in an
efort to reduce taxation. Its political effect
in this country will be to incite the President
and the Jingoes generally to demand a vast
increase of our navy, so that we oan mass
110 war ships in front of Oyster Bay with-
out depleting the regular naval stations.
Minard's Liniment Cures Colds, etc.
Social Clubs in Cuba.
There are social distinctions in Cuba
based upon color; there are not ane but
several color lines, though these are not
eternal, hard, fast and unchangeable, as
in the United States. In Cuba social
life is run largely by social clubs. There
are in almost every town and village
negro clubs, two or three grades of
mulatto clubs and white clubs. In one
and at its functions may appear the
husband, excluded the wife; in another
the wife but not the husband; in a third
their children, but neither the father nor
mother, To the world this will appear
incredible, almost incomprehensible; here
it is convention, fixed, settled, accepted
and operative. These distinctions, how
ever, run but for a, lifetime. ]3y crosses._
from generation to generation, though
some deny it, men ascend, A little of
the blood if it but be decreasing is not
remembered against them forever.. --
Army and Navy Life.
How the Rattles Are Worn.
The rattles lie edgewise. It is evident
that they must do so, inasmuch as they
are but continuations of the backbone.
The snake carries the rattles on the
ground except when he raises them to
sound his warning. This will be evi-
denced by the fact that in every snake
of any size that is killed the rattles aro
worn through on the under size.—From
Forest and Stream.
Mr. Samuel Valentine, of Brixton, who
died recently, left ;C3,000 to the Nation-
al Lifeboat Institution, and about £20,
000 to London hospitals and various
charities, IIe loft specific directions for
the payment of a medical man who
should, after the testator's decease, sev-
er an artery or punettue his heart, other-
wise the funeral was to be delayed fif-
teen days.
When a :dorse Gots Hurt
LJ C3 E
Fellow' ieeir's
Essence•
But don't wait until an animal is
injured. GET IT NOW—and you.
have the remedy that 'CtT l,ZS all
lameness in horses. ,a
If your dealer 5t % handle
it, send 50c. to'4 .:
National Drug & C�ert
kgo
ttrr,
tt
ea,
MONTREAL 13
November Smart Set.
Sha tq Use Slziloh's Cure
lLO 11 w for size worst cold,
the sharpest cough
—try it on a'guar-
antee of your
money back if it
doesn't' a c t ua.l1 y
CURE - quicker.
than anything you
ever tried, Sate to
take,—nothing in
it to hurt even a
baby. 34 years of
7, �^l g success coCure—
GJII! lkJ Shiloh's Cttre—
25c., 50c ti. 315
To Cure a Dog's, Fear of a Gun.
C�"'t�ur -
Cures
Cou hs
and Cods
Any dog can be cured of gun -shyness
if you take enough trouble and exercise i
enough patience. The process proceeds
on the inference that, since he is alarm-
ed because of memory- or fear of dis-
agreeable circumstances, he must learn
to associate the gun with the agree-
able.
It is best to apply the treatment when
the dog is on game. In probably four
cases out of five. he will quickly learn
to disregard the gun, or like it, if you
let him hunt up the game and chase ti,
shooting when he is at a distance and
in hot pursuit. Often gun -shyness dis-
appears the very day. he makes his first
solid point and becomes deeply interest-
ed in the business. In the midst of this
new delight, he disregards and forgets
other matters. -
Sometimes the fear, is too strong,
and a regular treatment must be under-
taken. Oftener the owner will have a
short shooting season and does not caro
to take chances on a quick cure. His
dog must be ready for business when
the season opens. So, it is necessary to
know the systems which have been suc-
cessful in dealing with this trouble.
Ones before I told about the man who
put. his bird do '•'t. , • ie. cats. When
the eat wa'l, tlact Mh a di i w ills,
hands and "felt' iii r A g
attack. At this psychological ''ntonient`
he would fire :blanks 'from a small pistol.
Two or three treatments usually'suffie-
ecl.--From "Gun -Shy and Blinking Dogs,"
by Joseph A. Graham, in the Outing
$Iaeuzinc for October.
For Business Buildinis a fy'1
The only cleanly, the only fire -proof . ��itf�`,
ti
ceiling—the that rays the lest word 11'�f�lii
is deeoentivebeauty ,—the ceiling that shows i�' -
no ocean—that vrill outiastthe buildingiteel4 }i;yf��id)p y.
lf° D -.APs. f;7
ART STEEL CEILINGS 1161;
Coat no more than the • • . a{•'1��:
commonaott,batlookthtice 1f�4�te}��'
refine. Over 2,000 designs, to suit any store
or structure. Side -wails to match. See ftlflybfsrf�!
our newest deal u—nothing like them in kyr
�ri• �,
Canada, either freeboobeauty or variety. ' TrReaueot the free book that shows dstwholn ceiling story. Send f or it to --d 210• I
The PEDLAR. People(1861)
Oshawa Mentre l Ottawa
i'orenty ;endon winntyrg
Carnegie's Test of Respectability.
(New York Sun.)
The Iion. Andrew Carnegie, the professor,
we had almost said. the president and fac-
ulty, of humanity, has just given the world
an infallible touchstone of 'respectability'_.,"
"There 1s no better test of a reseectabe
member of society than a bank book showing
a good balance or title deeds to a house or
farm unencumbered by debt."'
A mortgage is a title deed of disretputabil-
ity. So Is the want of a bank book or the
want of a good balance in ones bank book -
Tho test is simple.
The twelve apostles had no money at all,
and were utterly disreputable. Mr. Carnegie
has all the money that his too generous
heart has not plunged him into giving away
out of his income; and he must be one of
themost respectable persons in the world,
not excepting, the head porter of the Grand
Hotel, Venice.
Regulating Amount of t?erfume.
' Scent manufacturers declare that
ladies nowadays demand very strong
perfumes, which will retain their scent
upon the handkerchief for several days
at a time.
It is to be hoped that they will take
warning from the fate of a, lady who re-
cently entered a Berlin tram ear after
having freely perfumed herself with
musk, a scent which experts declare will
cause polished steel to become fragrant-
if.
ragrantif placed in the same box, contact not
being necessary. On this o, Basion the
passengers were almost overpowered, and
said so with no uncertain voice, with the
result that a freefight ensued between
a gentleman who was accompanying the
lady and the aggrieved ones.
The police were called in, and now, it is
said, a law may be passed by the munici-
pality fixing the maximum extent to
which a woman niay perfume herself be-
fore becoming a public nuisance. --From
the Pall Mali Gazette.
0,
Minard's Liniment Cuees Diphtheria.
Fires, in Vienna.
For a city of more' titan two million
inhabitants Vienna certainly enjoys an
amazing immunity from. fires, The re-
port of the city fire ;department, just
issued, shows 'Mat • the total losses from
fire in 1006 were less than 426,000.1
The department cost the city about
£60,000.
In all there were 1,109 fires, an aver-
age of a little mare than three a day. Of
these thirty-seven were. classified as
large, 156 medium. and 970 small fixes.
Thirty-four were in public buildings, 426
in private houses and 100 in the streets.
The small total of the aggregate loss
is due not only to the activity of the fire
department, but also to the very solid
construction of all buildings in the city
Public and private alike, While praeti.
calls the whole papulation live in flats,
it is seldom that a fire will extend be-
yond the apartment iri which it breaks
out.—Vienna corresenndence Pall Mall
Gazette.
ONLY SAFE PLAN.
Daughter--Pather, -I want a hus-
band . who will not run about every
riifkilt.
stiles—Then ¢you had better marry
the legless woeder.
Vendor—But madame will find it eas-
ier to find another husband than to get
a monkey like that for three piasteist--
Translated for lransat)antic Tales from
Le P.!re.
lilinard'e Liniment Co., litmited.
Gentlemen, --I have used MINARD'S
LINIMENT on my vessel and in my fam-
ily for years, and for the every day ills
and accidents of life 1 consider it has no
equal.
I would not start on a voyage without
it, if it cost a dollar a bottle.
(`AFT. F. R. DESJARDLN,
Schr. "Stroker,' St. Andre, Iiamour-
aska.
Afraid of Them.
(Oakville Record.)
This 'week we had returned to us a bundle
of last week's issue from Omagh, accompan-
ied by a notice from Postmaster , Wilson,
which reads as follows
"please don't send any'inore papers for
a while. The people refuse to take thew,
from office. Afraid of small-rpox."
We wish to assure the postmasters in the
ntt')', who are
always
so tar as the papers
oblig-
ing
og to newspap
In particular, that therere e s no reaand son Record
of n ithe
a
world
out
l,pfor
any
of personbeing
afraid of taking
Minard's Liniment Cures Garget in Cows.
NO, INDEED.
Patient—Doctor, do yott •thinly. that
people are occasionally buried sliver
Doctor (reassuringly—It never hap-
pens to my patients.
IOW
61'191
wiprr
•
wlulIJ
i
rf
;i'
"I can take you to a hundred
homes, right around my store, in
which St. George's is used."
"You can ask those, who do
the baking, what they think of
Sts aking Powder
4151
"And every one of the hu ndred
will tell you the same — that
£t. George's stands every test
and never loses its strength."
Write forfres yoty of our Ceot .Book.
National. brag &.. Chemical .Co. 01
d`avaR zjimitet11lloittreaL
ae
SELFISH SALVATIOW—SEEKINQ.,
To be saved means, not to get some-
thing, but to give something. When we
have given ourselves and all that we
have to Christ and his service, we re-
ceive, it is true, more than we can ever
give; but if that is our chief purpose
in so doing we have not caught the
spirit of Christ's message. "Individuals
who seek religion for heaven alone are
merely bargain -hunters," is the search-
ing way a Chautauqua speaker is report-
ed to have put the truth. Getting saved
merely for what ho can get out of it
for ourselves is a selfish and unworthy
way to seek salvation. But to come to
Christ he joyous aoeptance of His salva-
tion bocau,se only in Him can we live
a life that counts, is to seek salvation
for what it will make us worth to oth-
ers—and that is what Christ wants us to
think most about.
BETTER THAN SPANKING.
Spanking does not cure children of bed-
wetting. There is a constitutional cause for
thus trouble. Mrs. M. Summers, Box W. 3,
Windsor. Ont., will send free to any mother
her successful home treatment, with fuel
instructions. Send no money but write her
to -day if your children trouble you In this
way, Don't blame tho child, the chances
are it can't help it. This treatment also
cures adults and urine difficulties bye d peopled rornight. wh
Don't Worry.
There is only $6,000,000,000,000 worth of gold
left in the Wltwater's Rand in South Africa,
and at the present rate of exploitation it will
all bare been mined and smelted by the year
41,907. Speculators fu futures had better
Dover their "short" sales of the yellow metal
before the inevitable calamity shall come
to pass.
l lade 'ii s .
As a.:dead loss.
Manna et, '"' di
wary
It costs as much to keep a lame horse,
as it does a horse in harness — and the
cripple brings nothing in. 'You can't afford
to support idle stock. That's why you can't
afford to be without
K..F'S 5 &vizi ,ure
It takes away the pain and stiffness from Sprains and Bruises—draws
the soreness out of Strained. Muscles and Tendons—CURES Spavins,
Soft Bunches and SweIli1rgs. Used for two generations by two cations.
NATRZSni STATr0.r, ONT., Dec. 16, '04.
"I leave use ltendall'a Spavin Cure for a Bone Spavin of 4 years
standing, which has entirety cured the lameness and greatly reduced
the swelling. Another bottle of the Spavin Cnre, I nut sure, will
complete the cure," HOWARD BROCR.
MOO a bottle or 6 for 85. Sold by dealers everf'wherc, Write for floc copy of our
famous book—" Treatise On TitoHorse." 'Yon will had a need for 614 every day.
DR. B. J. f4ENt)ALL GO., i J1300IaUi14 P'ALL$. Menu1ONT U.S.A. 24
`t;
irradelle; '11 Wen ',Melo •