The Herald, 1904-11-04, Page 6DON'T BOIL THE WATER.
The 3peration Robs' it' of the Beneficent '
t. Germs.
Abse comes a Faris pllysxiian who says
that It is all wrong to boil drinking 1"t-
ter, as the municipal doctors direct when
there is a danger of typhoid fever epi -I
demie,, Professor Champ, of the Col- ,
lege Of France, is the learned authority'
who is quoted as denouncing the popular
theory that the fever germs being de-
stroyed by cooking them well, the danger
of siokness is avoided. Professor Char-
rfn'e doctrine is that in boiled water not
only is the deadly microbe destroyed but
also the microbes which even more than
the dog or horse deserves to be called
the friend of man. The beneficent mi -
cake °is that which assists at the diger-
tion of such substances as cellulose and
a buinen. If he is boiled out, these in-
tracable substances set up irritations
ethich; end in enteritis and other mal-
adies. Another eminent French authority
M. Pages agrees with M. Charrin in say -
Sag that boiled water seriously impeds
digestion and attacks the assimilative or-
ga,ns. "It may," he says, "save you from
typhoid fever, but the risk of typhoid
lie in any case very small, while, if it does
save you. it exposes you to a host of
other ailments no less mischievous." "If
you do boil water," says M. Pages, "ex-
pose it before you drink it for some
hours to the open air, and agitate it."
This is probably to let the microbes all
in again.
•
1
Both Talking at Once.
Mrs. Jawkins—I've been trying to talk to
Mary over the telephone, but I couldn't un-
derstand half she said.
Mr. Jawkins—You'll find It easier if you
were to talk one at a time, my dear.
Those whom neglected coughs
have killed were once as healthy
and robust as you. Don't follow
in their paths of neglect, Take
t Mum
rytion
t Tonicseeta he Lung
right now. It is guaranteed to
cure. It has cured many thous-
ands.
Prices: S. C. Wszzs a4: Co. 308
25c. 50c.11 LeRoy, N. Y., Toronto, Can.
A MASTERPIECE OF COMPRESSION.
According to the New York World, a
prize was once offered for the shortest
history of the causes and results of the
Mexican war. The winner produced the
following treatise:
Chapter L
Cause of the ..fexican War.
Texas.
Results of the _liexiean War,
Texas.
THEY RADE THIS
ODUPLE HAPPY
Dodd's Kidney Pills doing (good
Work Around Fort Arthur.
Kr. Dick Souvey and Wife Both Had
Kidney Troubles and the Creat
Canadian kidney Remedy Cured
Them.
Port Arthur, Ont., Oct. 24.—(Special),
—That Dodd's Kidney Pills cure the
Kidney ills of men and women alike
Paas been proved time and again in this
aeighbprhood, but it is only occasion-
ally they get a chance to do double work
in. the same house. This has happened
Ea the case of Mr. and Mrs. Dick Souvey,
a. farmer and his wife, living about seven
miles from here. In an interview Mr.
Convey- said:
My wife and myself have used Dodd's
Kidney Pills and have found them a big
taenefit to our health. We had La Grippe
two winters and were exposed to much
Brost and cold. Our sleep was broken on
account of urinary troubles and pain in
the kidneys. We each took six boxes of
Dodd's Kidney Pills and now enjoy good
health."
Real Estate by the Gallon.
(Philadelphia Press.)
"What did your property in Swamphurst
crest you"
"Four dollars a foot."
"What'll you sell for?"
```Oh + I'll let it go fror $2 a gallon."
taaAsiss,r
6h:z
armin
Two Tears for $1.00
That's less than lc. a week.
The ]Earniing World is the
brightest, best Ag ricultural
Newspaper and Iionie 1VIag'aziue
in Canada. levery page se full
of interest to the farmer, the
farmer's wife and the farmer's
children.
Full of practical talks by
practical men on Breeding,
Feeding, and care of stock—
Crops Machinery, and other
live topics.
Pointers for dairymen a n d
poultry `raisers. Reliable mar-
ket reports. '
A legal and veterinary, question
box. A religious page and one
especially for children.
end $1.00 sized receive the
paper, for two years; or let us
send you a free sample copy.
Address—
THE FARMIHC WORM, TORONTO, ONT.
.'"
a4�z
Signets
Not every kind of ring
seems in keeping on a
man's hand. Our Signet
Rings however are at
once handsome and char-
acteristically masculine.
Our reputation of fifty years
assures satisfaction in deal-
ing here. Maul -order cata-
loguewillbe sent on request.
A special Gold Signet
Ring set with Bloodstone
is No 17705 at $7.00.
RY1IE BIROS.
"DIAMOND HALL"
118 to 124
Yonfe Street'
TOR.O14To
The Cult of the Kite.
The reports of the bestowing of the
Order of the Golden Kite on. Japanese
officers for conspicuous gallantry read
rather quaintly, sandwiched, as they
generally are, between items of news
which show how very niuoh abreast of
the tunes and Western ideas is the
Land of the Rising Sun. Still they
serve to recall what a very large
role kite -flying plays in the life of the
East. According to ancient Chinese rec-
ords, the •first kite was invented about
200 B. C., and since that date the na-
tional pastime has advanced to a very
fine art, indeed.
THE CITY OF ISLANDS.
7 ne eity tof Venice] proper huddles its
population, of 103,060 within a circumfer-
ence of seven acres. It is sq built and
•
bridged with - artificial streets that one
may walk where be will, and that is
sure to be first td the Place of St. Mark.
He takes the street route from his hotel,
a passageway so narrow that his extend-
ed arms may touch the buildings on
either side, winding reviously into the
shopping distrit leading to the square,
where •booths of shell, bead ornament
and every conceivable trinket to ensnare
the beauty -lover are attractively dis-
played.
Happy is he who sees the Place of St.
Mark in its evening dressablaze with
electricity and thronged with promenad-
ers in. superb costumes. The shops are
invitingly open. Beautiful St. Mark,
with its four big bronze horses which
Napoleon took over the Alps to Paris
in 1797 and which were returned by Em-
peror Francis I. of Austria in 1815 to
guard the principal entrance to St. Mark,
where they are poised to -day, seemingly
ready to spring over the red and grey
monolith pillars and bear the church be-
yond the reach of falling campaniles and
toppling greatness.—From "Venice as she
Is and Is Not," byEmily Frances Smith,
in Four -Track News for September.
Minard's Liniment Cures Colds, etc.
• Extenuating Circumstances.
(Kansas City Star.)
A Topeka jury awarded $6 for damages due
to a negro who filled the role of "wild man"
in a circus one week. Tho jury took into
account that he ate about $100 worth of raw
meat during the packing house strike.
Giants in These Days Too.
Minard's Liniment.Cures Diphtheria.
PEOPLE MUST BE TOLD.
'A writer on advertising says it is the
aim of nearly every business concern to
have a special and original feature. "But
when such a specialty shall be found it
must be advertised. No article can sell
itself without "the aid of advertising."
?i
• ?J
Who Knows Anything About
CC
G
All buyers, sellers and users of
EDDY'S IMPERVIOUS
are interested in
7 7
Will every reader
'WHO KNOWS ANYTHIN
please drop a line o
THE Et B. EDDY COMPANY,
Shirt waists and ,dainty
linen are made delightfully
clean and fresh with Sun-
light Soap. . 5B
The "Labor Vote."
(Gunton's Magazine.)
In referring to the labor vote it is
very often understood to be organ-
ized movement. This is an error. We
find in the labor political movement, and
supposedly representing it, the working-
men s clubs and socialists. These two
forms of organization represent about all
there is to the organized labor movement
in politics. The remainder, is without
such affiliation and is governed by' what
ever directly affects each person. The la-
bor organization political club, or what
stands for it, does not amount to much.
It is generally a shadowy affair, out for
office for a few of the promoters and
a share of the "coin" for the remainder.
The Socialist movement represents the
serious vote and is has effected a tang-
ible combination.
Twitchy Musclesand Sleep
1esSness.—The hopeless heart sickness
that settles on a man or woman whose nerves
are shattered bydisease can best be pictured
in contrast with a patient who has been in
the "depths." and has been dragged from
them by South American Nervine. George
Webster, of Forest, Ont., says: I owe my
life to it. Everything else failed to cure." -44
Use of Picture Post -Cards.
It is said that 45,000 picture post -cards
were sold at a fashionable watering -
place last year, says London Country Life.
Why people should regard the taste for
sending these cards as a "craze" it is dif-
ficult to see. It is very natural that
those Who are enjoying a holiday should
wish to let their friends, especaily chil-
dren and young people, know what the
places are like that they visit, and to
give them some idea of their beauty and
attractions. Very few people are good
at writing descriptive prose in letters,
and if they are, it takes too much time.
Letter writing, during holidays is rath-
er an unfair tax, as a rule, so they buy
picture post -cards, and for a shilling, can
tell half their family and imitate friends
more about the objects of interest and
enery than they could on reams of
tter-paper. Children rejoice in receiv-
g picture post -cards, as they carry out
1 the details which is so dear to them,
d even the windows of the rooms where
teir friends sleep can be duly identi-
ed.
A Modern Darby and Joan.
(London Telegraph.)
At yesterday's meeting of the Glouces-
ter Board of Guardians, Mr. G. Bennett,
workhouse master, stated that when
the resolution of the board that aged
couples on entering the institution could
have a sepatate room to themselves was
in force they asked every married cou-
ple over sixty if they would like to live
together, anti while some said 'Yes," the
majority replied "No."
He inquired from one old man who had ,
been married fifty years if he wished
to stay with his wife, and he replied in
the affirmative, but the wife, who had
st wooden leg, when asked, said "No, the
old scamp brought me to the workhouse,
and I will not live with him here"
After conquering Burma the Brit-
ish undertook to carry the great Ran-
gon bell, the third largest in the world,
to Calcutta as a trophy, but dropped it
overboard in the Rangoon River, where .
it defied all efforts of the engineers to ,'
raise it. Recently the Burmese lifted
the mass of metal from its muddy bed
and triumphantly restored it to its old'
place.
Minard's Liaiment Cures Distemper.
Telephone Manners.
The majority of even, when they meet
you on the street, or talk with you at
office or shop, act and speak with the
most becoming courtesy. Even if you
are slightly deaf and have to be bawled
at, they will do the bawling with good
humor and gentlemanly patience. A man
may be 'greatly rushed in his place of
business, but if you step in he is not
likely—unless a veritable bear—to show
his teeth and growl. Courtesy is the
rule, and rudeness is the exception.
But there is a difference when you
confer with a roan over the telephone
—or some men. You are sometimes so
hsocked by a savage voice rushing
along the wire that the receiver nearly
falls from your hand. The most con-
stant user of the 'phone is the central.
Calls come into her eaes almost with-
out interruption. But "Central" is
always accommodating, never inpatient.
You never hear her voice keyed up to
the musical point; but always it comes
--at any hour of the day or night—
sweet and clear, gentle and tolerant,
without a hint even of weariness.
There is not often any need of shout-
ing over the 'phone. When there is,
there is no need of using a voice brist-
ling with all sorts of fire -tipped in-
flections. Distance does not make the
voice grow fonder over the telephone:.
A growl is a, growl still to a sensitive
ear, and there is such a thing as cour-
tesy even at a distance.-'—Spartanourg
Herald. Cure ever knots,
ml
(re
wi
pe
sa
de
wh
th
Ile
thoug
APaD'S LINIMENT and it cured me at
once. I am never without it now.
Yours gratefully,
MRS. C. D. PRINCE.
Nauwigewauk, Oct. 21st.
DIDN'T LIKE NEW YORK,
Charles M. Russell. a Montana cow-
boy artist, who visited New Jersey re-
cently, has returned to his Montana
home, and in an interview says: "I'd
rather live in a place where I know
somebody and where everybody is some-
body. Tho style in some of those New
York saloons is something to remember.
The bartender won't drink with you
even. Now, I like to have the bartender
to drink with me occasionally, out of
the salve bottle, just to be sure I ain't
getting poison. They won't even take
your money over the bar. Instead, they
give you a cheek, with the price of your
drink on it, and you walk yourself sober
trying to find the cashier to pay for it"
'Minard's Liniment Cures target in Cows
IMPORTANT RESULTS.
"What have you accomplished with
your prolonged tests?" asked an .inquisi-
tive Terson,
"Well," answered the Government
chemist, "we have found out that uoison-
ous articles, taken into the stomach
every day for a period of several months,
have a deleterious elTect upon the human
system"—Chicano Tribune,
ENGLISH SPAVIN LINIMENT
Removes all hard, soft, or calloused lumps
and blemishes from horses, blood Spavin,
curbs, splints, ringbone, sweeney, stifles,
sprains; cures sore and sweeten threat,
coughs, etc. Save $60 by the neo of one got-
tle. Waranted the most Wonderful Blemish
Nothing Fast About Him.
Gladys (sighing)—Oh, dear, he hasn't pro -
sed yet.
Ethel—Well, what can you expect of a chap
ho never runs his auto over ten miles an
ur
Wash greasy dishes, pots or pans with
ver's Dry Soap a powder. It will re-
eve the grease with the greatest ease. 36
(Philadelphia Inquirer.)
It is not true that the human race has
dergone a physical degeneration since
e dawn of the history or during the
ousands of unrecorded years which
ve elapsed since its appearance on this
rth. The idea that in their physical
exacter our forefathers were superior
ourselves, is due to the inveterate
ndency of the human mind to idealize
e past and to assume that everything
as better than it is Row in the good
o d days, and it is more justified in this
articular respect than it is in any other.
.here were giants in those days just as
there are giants now, a few of them,
individuals, whose abnormal develop-
ment is the result of a disease which
morbid pathology has recognized and
classified, but that there ever was a
race of giants there is no reason what-
ever to suppose.
ISSUE NO. 45 1904.
Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup should
always be used for Children Teething. Iv
soothe the child softens the gums cures will$
colic and is the nest remedy fo; Dlarrhmu.
NOVELTY MANUFACTURING CO,
Agents wanted for our specialties. Com-
plete outfit does not exceed $2.00. All good
sellers. Write 237 King street east, Toronto.
Increased Demand.
A cigarette company a year or so ago
tried the experiment of a four-page ad-
vertisement in a leading newspaper in
New York. Recently a member of the
company said the effect was more than
surprising; that for weeks they were
wholly unable to met the city demand,
the increase of , which was enormous.
HOW'S THIS ?
We offer One Hundred Dollars' Reward for
any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by
Hall's Catarrh Cure.
F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O.
We, the undersigned, have known F. J.
Cheney for the last 18 years and believe him
perfectly honorable in all business trans-
actions and financially able to carry out any
obligations made by this firm.
WALDING, .FINNAN vs MAavnr, Wholesale
Druggists, Toledo, O.
Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally,a&
ing directly upon the blood and mucous sur.
faces of the system. Testimonials sent free,
Price—'75c per bottle. Sold by all druggietr,
Take Hall's FamilyPllls for constipation,
English as Spoken in Ireland.
An English tourist was being driven
en a jaunting car through the Donegal
Highlands, and after a time the results
of his observation came to the surface
in the following query: "Driver! I no-
tice that when you speak to your friends
whom you meet on the road you invari-
ably do so in Irish, but when you ad-
dress your horse you do so in Enblisb,
How is this?" To which came the retort:
"Musha now thin. Isn't English good
enough for him?"
�sa11Lnslw�
'Omer
Weariest
One never
tires talking
of a good
thing
.Especially
when one is
saved that
tired feel-
ing inci-
dental to
Wash Day.
You don't feel tired if you use a
New Century 7Ba11-lsasar.
lag Wartaaiag I►gachisae.
You can sit and use it effectively—
and five minutes will wash a tuhful of
clothes beyond criticism.
Send for illustrated booklet describing
it and order through your dealer. He
will sell it to you for $S.so.
THE DOWSSWEII. MA3NFAQTURiID co. LTD.
AMILTON, CANADA
4T
..a
1
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'ea imam re
tin
644
!;Y
The Apathetic Voter.
The candidates aro lining up,
The party's ranks are closing.
Their records they aro showing up,
The voters still are dozing;
Wo know that a campiagn is on,
Because we've read about it;
Some day the battle will be won,
There is no use to doubt it.
And yet, while all this may be true,
We'd really be delighted
If we could meet some voters who.
Would seem at least excited.
Speechless and Paralyzed.
—"I had valvular disease of the heart."
writes Mrs. J. S. Goode, of Truro, N. S. "I
suffered terribly and was often speechless
and partially paralyzed. One dose of Dr.
Agnew's Cure for the Heart gave me relief,
and before I finished one bottle I was able
to go about. "To -day I am a well woman."
—43
Chance to Raise a Laugh.
(New Orleans Times -Democrat.)
Humorists should lecture only In churches.
Then thej' would get the advantage of the
frresistible tendency people feel, every now
and then to laugh in solemn places.
r.tl.iw.1
Do you want to add
$320 to your income?
WL.u:,,ali4iS'.
it will only require a few minutes of your time everyday to earn $azo a year. You can
earn it with a Chathim Incubator. A No. s Chatham Incubator will hold from too to rzo
eggs—according• to size of eggs. Eighty chickens is a low average batch—users of Chatham
Incubators will tell you so, Chickens are always in demand and the supply is ahvays short,
so fifty cents is th,e.averago price secured. If you only take off eight hatches in a year, that
gives you an income of $32o.00. Wouldn't that extra amount be useful to you ? '1 Best of
all, you can buy a
Chatham Incubator without one cent
of cash until October. 1905
The machine pays for itself many times over before that time. There couldn't be a fairer
offer than this, We ship a Chatham Incubator to you at once, freight prepaid by us, and
your first payment is not duo until October, loos, Write ps to -day for full particulars. Tho
Chatham Incubators aid Brooders have every new improvement worth while in an incubator
or broader. The incubators
are made with two walls,
case within case, of dry ma-
terial that has been seasoned
in our lumber yards. They
are built solid as a rock and
will stand any amount of
usage ler years. Thesooncr,
you accept our offer the soon-
er will the Chatham Incu-
bator be earning profits for
.111 64r•
We sell for Cash
or on time as
you desire.
Y.' r
tr
.1
TFIE
MANSON, CAMPBELL '
CO., Lrntrrsn
DEPT. 33 CHATHAM, . ONT.
Manufacturers of Chatham 'a
Incubators and Brooders, S'
Campbell Fanning Mills,
and Chatham Vann Scales
Distributing Warehouses at
Montreal, Que„ Brandon, `
Man., Calgary, Alta., Now
Westminster, B.0.,Iialifex,
:
..0
9
. ,tE'iCffd r4v El+n�,�l
7