HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1909-05-27, Page 3$ In His Own Way .s
(By J. Louis Engdaltl.)
An unhappinesa, deep, irritating
and diseouraging, pervaded hinn
Yet she was with him, joist Orr the
other side a the table. She. Was
pouting just a little because of the
willful inr that pensieted in slipping
from her right ehoulder. She caught
itis gaze, the pout turned to a smile,
andthen the waiter came hurrying
up,
Geo. Adams, et odds with the world.,
wrote the order very .earefally and
correctly, the slip was torn from the
xnany others on the pad, and then
they were alone anain, the man still
very discontented, while the piquant,
delightfal specimen of approaching
womanhood appoeite to him, became
The fountain pen was now moving
across the papet.
interested for the inornent in..several
new arrivals. They had the choice
nook of the cafe. Shielded by the
big palms they could flee, but yet
not be seen,
CORN CURED
HI 24norje
x04 eauPfilldesslY remove env corn, s Ler
hard, soft or bleeding, ay emptying teatime's
Corn gxtraoter. itpeeeranwns, leaveano sear,
contains no acids,: narodess beeause composed
only of healing genie eutt Daiwa Tatty mire to
use. iSuroeuerantecti. Bold by till drugglete
es.c.bottlea. Refuse substitutes.
PUTNAM' S PAINLESS
CORN EXTRACTOR
looked uP for an instant and she was
silently watchinn him. But hie hand
never wavered. Two, three or four
years age, was it, since he hail lent
dove this. It -mattered not. It
seemed but as yesterday. And then
it was all dime, ali except that eon-
tral vacant spare. lime was a place
there te write something.
"Joy or Borrow I am by thy vide,"
he remembered the words distinctly,
from. the play. They had made it
great impression upon him and he
wrote them withoat a falter.
Tho Blip was torn hastily from the
others, slipped gently across to her,
and then he was writing again, fast'
er, more entimeiastically, more beau -
Millie then ever. The passion of his
entire being was behind it all.
-"It is never cold beneath thy
smile," He had, remembered that
also, and he made it his own. mess
sege and it reached her the same as
the first, but be dared not look up
to see what effect it was having.
For the third time, he was filling
a piece of Paper with the objects of
his imagination, inspired VII the
substance of all his dreams. This
was to be the last, he decided, and
the words were to be his truly own.
The soft, cadent, ravishing music of
the orchestra nerved hint tee
"I love you," he wrote, forgetting
that the words were not new., but in-
deed more ancient than all of the
others. •
The pen dropped to the table, and
with both arms outstretched he. lift-
ed the diminutive piece of paper to-
wards her. Her two Winds met both
of his for she knew instinctively what
it all meaner and she was kindly
above all other traits.
"Same here, George," she assured
'him, very bluntly but none the less
tenderly and earnestly,
He suddenly wondered how he
could ever have doubted her in the
least. rat
4 * *
TRY MURINE 'F,YE REMEDY
In the same nioment that she gazed
the man became aware of what he
held in -his hand. It was a fountain
!pen, seemingly the symbol oi hie
work, for he was just one of the vast
army of the business world's every-
day bookkeepers. He had taken it
out to write the order for their little
supper. Almost angrily he ,janamed
it back into his pocket and then his
mind returned to the theatre and to
the play that they had just seen to-
gether, and to the hero therein,' and
rhe beauty romaxace and splendor of
It all, and that was the cause of his
present mood. She had like it so
lunch, grown almost over -enthusiastic,
he thought. It Would give her false
ideas of what to expect. That was it!
She would expect the romance of the
play to be her own romance. That
was imposeible,
Carried away by the irritation of
his mind, he noticed the tab that was
etill lying on the table, held it care-
lessly for a moment, then instinctive-
ly reached for his fountain pen. Back
at business college they had awarded
him several prizes for penmanship,
and he could write if he couldn't talk.
And title was the evening during
which 'he had decided to ask her the
big question that was troubling the
very soul of min!
he fountain pen was now moving
!hesitatingly across the blank paper,
oiltirnately framing beautiful doves
;and birds and drawing linesposeess-
ling true curves. Then the hand be -
gen to move faster and faster. He
etateeetseeesseegargelli0000•00r•.t-'!.....,t.i.0010Pettatttetiegal~t000WretmICSOSirt4r'‚'""'"00.
00000000000000000000000
The Feud of Tears
0000000000000QQ00Q00QQ0
(By Stuart IL Stone.)
When the patient, long-suffering
teat:her announced rettesi„ the mountain
rhildren seampered ottt upon the play-
ground and fell to at their nelsy genies.
There were tops and marbles, but the
greateat interest huug about the twirl-
ing tops. Llsie Latham, the sliin, dark,
solemn, eleehild, had the brightest top
and lost it. Sammy theta, who was
fair, blue -Pio mut enrly.headed, found
the gaudy fay and restored it to Elsie,
whitte the girl watt still weeping for the
bauble. brother, Tom, think -
lug Sammy had caused the teal's, struck
the la Then a, still larger Grant struck
or -Red, Weak, Weary, Watery Eyes.
Granulation, Pink Eye end Eye Straln.
Murine doesn't smart; soothes eye pain.
Is compounded by experienced physi-
cians; contains no injurious or prohibit-
ed drugs. Try Murine for your eye
troubles. You will lIke Murine. Try it
In baby's eyes for Beaty eyelids. Drug-
gists sell Murtha at 60e. Murine Eye
Remedy CceesChicago, will send you 111-
,4 b.
Knew HOW to Keep His Clothes Dry.
Among a. large shooting party on a.
northern grouse moor was a certaie
elderly professor ..whose skill with Ills
gun was hardly equal to the profundity
of his intellect. Suddenly a heavy
storm of rain came on, and as there was
no shelter on the moor the shooters got
thcironghle drenched through. At least,,
all but one suffered—the professor. He
had mysteriously -disappeared whea the
rain came on, and he did not join the
party until the sun was shining once
more. To the amazement of the others,
the erudite 'one was as dry as a bone.
The others, drenched and disgusted, in-
quired of him how it was he had escaped
a Wetting. "Directly the rain came on,"
replied the professor, "I went: off by
myself, stripped off my cgothe.s, and sat
on them until the storm was over.
London Telegraph.
SAMMY GRANT FOUND THE GAUDY
TOY AND RESTORED IT TO
backe-and the Letham -Grant feud was
on, it thing grim and. fearful. And. that
uight Elsie Latham, who teas: given over-
muchto tear's, cried her little heart out,
for she feared that harm would come to
-young Swam's'.
In a month the feud had aceounted
for two.Elsie's long, lanky brother, Si-
mon, and Saramy's sullen father, Jonas
Grant. And Mr. 'Sammy wrote this note
to Elsie Letham, so that there might
be no more intsunderstanding on his ac-
count:
"Deer Elsie: Me and you aint in enny
fade are we Elsie, I love, you like sixty
your true hart. S.AMAIY."
Elsie splotched the pencil scrawl terri-
bly with her bitter-sweet tears. -
1St the end of the month two more green
mounds showed in the tangle -grown
New Harmony cemetery; at the end of
a year two more were dug amid the
briars and the eternal' creepers. Then
the blood -feud lagged for a while, aud
Elate and Stimmyewhen.the older guar-
dians were not looking, held. sweet com-
munion at recess exehangiag ginger-
bread and welled corn, while the heed-
less others babbled and capered ti'bout
the playground.
But one of the house of Grant, riding
home in the dusk and hilarious from
toe much of the white, moonshine
from 'Moccasin Bend, yelled defiance as
he .passed the cabin home of the Lath -
tuns, and reeled in his seddle when the
revenging bullet came, This staxted the
thing afresh, end in six years dozen
Men bed gone to their art:mint. Then
they sent Elsie away to the mission
boarding school at the edge of the hill
country, and Satnnei wrote her long,
impassioned letters, and, having become
• •••"ttgli•1.0,4^-4'
-r•
The Ceilings for Looks --And All Js
Just as a matter
for a Pedlar Cei
You Wouldn't
put anything
BUT a Ped-
lar Art Steel
ceiling in any
building of
yours if you
really knew
how far ahead
of every other
kindof ceiling
mine really
are.
of economy—
king costs no
more to start with than
the very best decorated
plaster; and yet it will
be a perfect ceiling long
after the best plaster
• has beeome a dangerous
lietenOrk of cracks.
Economy is the first
, thing to think of in ceil-
ing any room, of course;
Ceiling—comparison simply isn't
posgible. ll'Or my ceilings,
signed by notable artists—gome
Two Thousand Designs—are ab-
solutely c'orreet from an artistic
viewpoint. •
•
The patterns are doubly -stamp -
,O by huge and very powerful
special Pedlar machinery, . into •
sheet steel, in a way that em-
bosses the design in clear, sharp,
high relief, with every detail,
wrought out to perfection.
nearh.imatsmamorarseedarrars
1•••141•.16.1.11.111M10619.06.6%
ART
STEEL
CEIL1
as brilliant as, one might wish,
iron the most delicate pastel
shades, to color -schemes iairly
13yzantine in their strength and.
strikingness:
Aid, of 'course, my ceilings are
fireproof—whieh is one reason
why anybody who carries insur-
ance will save their .whole cost
in a few • years' time, simply
through reduced premiums.
I wish you could see some lit-
eratur,e I would like to send you
—free, of course—upon this ceil-
ing question. Between
the illustrations and. the
!text I guess 1 could
show you that Pedlar
Art Steel Ceilings are
the kind of ceilings you
really want to get the,
next time you build or
repair any strueture
worth "Ceiling at ali. Tell
me your address (writc., to our
nearest plaee) and I*ill see you
get the information yon ought
to have about the 'Ceiling you
ought to have.
GS
For Churches, Residences, Civic Edifices, Schools,
Libraries, Rotas, Club Houses, Office Buildinds,
Factorie,s, Shops, Stores.
for it can't be a low-priced ceil-
ing if you have to repair' it
every year or two. My Art
Steel Ceiling will last as long as.
the building.
'Wilts shouldn't it last 's
STntri, It can't crack, no mat-
ter how unevenly the building
settles. Its surfaee can't take-
off. Moisture can't posaibly get
through it. The heaviest jarring
, overhead cannot loosart it. It is
THE permanent cei1ing.4 Which
one of those facts is true of a
plaster eeiling
And, as for the looks of a
plaster ceiling compared with
the beauty of a Pedlar Art Steel
Some metal ceilings are bletist
and vague in design—stamped
badly. Mine are not:
Acre is a Pedlar Art Steel
Ceiling for every style of archi-
tecture or fashion of furnishing
—Gothic, French :Renaissance,
Louis XIV., Greek, Colonial, or
whatever; and in each arehitec-
turd period you can have a
choice of patterns that is wider
than the whole range of some
makers' output!
With paint and ;ilia -Mimi', my
Art Steel Ceilings lend AMMO -
yes to color effectf., 85 dainty or
Mr
shines instantly at the first
brush or cloth.
Will not ,rub off. is
•
waterproof. Softens
and preserve a the
leather. No sub-
stitute oven half
AS good.
of eutterer years, joined in the great
clasbign of ciente But Elsle at the mite
sioa school learned that these thinga
sboula not be, and •wroto home to that
effect. The Lathams laughed at• the let,.
tors and fought , 1111 the barder—the
Grant gang eould not lick them,
And Elsie learned. Latin,.Cireek, a lit-
tle French and a smatteringeOf.musie
and returned in time to the A
beautifel, budding wonian, with strange
ideas of peaCe and amity in her head.
When the train palled in et the sta.
tion in the Moecasin Valley, what was
left of the Latham faction was there to
greet Elsie; also the remnants of the
Grants were on hand bemuse the Lath -
ams werepreseat, and. it '.vas a. good
time for trouble. Sammy, 14 the back-
ground, saw the radiant glory of Elsie,
realized his own miserable lack of
charm. .
The Lathams came forward, guns m
hand, to greet Elsie; and the Grante,
taking shelter behind- barrels and boxes,
let loose a volley of aimless defiance.
Sammy Grant wished that he was deed.
But Elsie tripped straight up to Sam-
my and, before the astonished clansmen
couldintetfeee; they were treated to
the spectacle of a Latham girl hugging
and kissing a youth of the Grants, who
did his best at returning the favors.
"Sammy, oh, Sammy:" cried Elsie
Latham, "let's get married and settle
this terrible feud. 1 know you are dying
to, but would never dare to ask me
now; and I. can't wait oft a proposif
while the old cemetery fills up." -
'All right," nssented Sammy Grant,
with startled eagerness. "We started it
—let's end it?'
And the 'lift*creeping cautiously
forward, finally. mingled ut nervous,
awkward reunion, So that the Latham -
Grant feud went out as it began, with a
girl's. impassioned. weeping.
• 'SUPPLY OF ARMY 'HORSES.
Not Equal to Demand in England—
French and German Stables.
The adequate supply of horses for the
army, it would scarcely be denied, is as
essentiat to its efficiency as men and
guns. Yet in this vital particular the
Government, as in so many other ques-
tions relative to the - defence of the
country, luave utterly ?ailed to realize
their responsibilities.
Sir Gilbert,Parker is raising the point
in one of its important aspects next
week in the House of Commons. He
has given notice to call, the attention
of the Secretary of State for War to
the fact that German etgents are exten-
sively buying three-year-old horses suit-
able for .army purposes in England, Ire-
land and Wales.
"There is no use disguising the fact,"
said ami expert on Englith horse breed-
ing, "that the country is midly being
denuded of its best horses, and the posi-
tion is becoming acute.
"It is a regulation of the War Office
that horses shall: not be bought under
four years old. This is the foreigner's
eliatee. Not only the Germans, but prac-
tically every Continental country, has
agents bent on securing the very pick
of the aaailable thr‘e-year-olds. They
purchase especially young mares, which
of course_do not return to this country.
TIciiy are, therefore, reaming both in
quality and number the supply of four-
year-olcis obtaivable by the home auth-
orities.
"The German adn French Govern-
ments realize the value of a plentiful
supply. They have their own Govern-
ment breeding estAblisliments and en-
courage horse breeding by subsidy. /
believe France pays something like 300,-
000 filmes a year in this respect. Then
they take great care that: only good
stallions are employed.
"The principal causesof the alarming
geareity—for 1 am convinced if war
broke out to -morrow we have not a suf-
ficieut supply for the army—eve the
ituprecedented buying of goiters horses
by foreign agents., the fact that farm -
era are more and more. giving ep the
breeding of horses, the mere:sae in me-
,fer horses during the late South African
chanical heavy demand
war."—Yom the Pall Mall Gazette,
Twit Classes in One Car.
.A uovel type of trolley ear has been
built,. for the South Manchutian Reit
-
road. The ear is divided into first and
second-clase compartmeete by n vesti-
bule and. steps at the centre of the var.
As these steps must not project, outside
the car body, they tett into the side sills
awl necessitate a special cobetruction
of franiewark. The first.class eompatt.
ineut is fitted with upholstered seat*,
While slat seats are provided in the sec -
'end -class compartment.
Pedlar Pretexts Include every kind ot
sheet motet Xtilding metorialsvtoo many
items to even mention here. You can
bay.) a tatalogne-estintate--eriereettevico
tett for the asking. "aVe d inte spesiai.
It ta interest you 10 our Alt gtset (Ni-
mes and Side Wenn-they aro a revelation
ta many people. Mort than 2,00e desiesee
The Pedlar People of Oshawa EsT861
Addeess Our Neerest Warehouse:
MO/MAL OTTAWA TORONTO. LONDON' Cl1ATllAd W IN NI P EG VA VcotTVER 011411.:e
Oise OM* flt.W. ea Misses St. 11 Colborne St. SS Xing iitt"' eas west Ichtee St. s; tee herd St. 521 itZnkvii ptt. ; ict„. au 1,0„1
JOIIN: MEL 4241 Prince William 11113.11,'21/X. 1 11,1iiie St,
We want Agents n some sections Wet tsr details, Mention flab pAper.
,
-
. I "i ,tN / rr
410PIONG 40 04
*.s THE JEWS
Theory of Colors in Plants.
The summer leaves and their brilliant
color have new theories to explain them.
One Stahl argues that the green hue is
a complementary adaptation to the col-
or of sunlight, in whieh when filtered
through the atmosphere, red and yellow
rays preponderate. Similar complemen-
tary adaptation is exhibited, -according
to Scherler, by the flagellates and die-
-toms of the black ponds of the Ere
Mountains, between Saxony and 13olie.
mil. In clear water these plants are
golden yellow and brown, but both as.
sume a green hue in the coffee colored
water of the ponds. This chtufge of cols
or in the same direction in two organ.
isms so unlike can onlybeattributed to
the action of external influences of
whicli the brown moor water is unques-
tionably the elief.
" Gaidukov and Esigelmann luive found
that certain blue and red plants have
the faulty of changing their color ,with
the light by which they are bathed.
They produce pigment cells of a hue
complementary to that of the illumina-
tion. Thus they become green in red
light, blue-green in orange light,red in
green light, and yellowi
sbrown n blue
light. The moor water, which appears
coffe-colored in -thick and yellow in thin
layers, absorbs some of the rays and,
transmits the red and yellow rays which
develop complementary shades of green
--in the organisms,thus increasing their
power of absorption and assinidation
and making life possible under adverse
conditions.__*,
ECZEMA CURE A MIRACLE?
—N0, --JUST SOUND SCIENCE
Vatter the new educational act, the
Jewish sellools in Bulgaria, wilt reveive
Ilover»ment aid en the same footing art
the rest of the people.
A deerease of 453 'member* daring the
twit year in the Iudepende»t Order of
;Free Sons of Judah, was reported by
Grand l‘laster 'nee Crossman, et the
mantel convention at the order. The
total nietubtenbip of the order oa Jan. 1,
1909, was 9,663.
The announeement is made of two
gifts to the Jewish Foster Home and
Orphan Asylum. of Philadelphia by Isto
Loeb, President of the inetitutioe, and
Benjamin W. Loeb, his son, The for-
mer has given $6,000 and the latter $1,-
000 for the establishing of a _fund for
elle education of Foster Hoine boys.
A ruling has been had la New York
to the effect that a rabbinical divorce
obtained in 'tussle, when both parties to
it were in that country'will be cOutad-
ered valid in the Vinted States, and that
it ems be proved by witnesses, and not
necessarily by the production of the bill
of divorce,
-
The Bev, Dr, II, P. Mendell has betted
An appeal to the Jews of New York for
the sone, of thirty thousand..401litre, to
pay off the indebtedness on the Institu-
tion for the Improved Instruction of
Deaf Mutes, so that the Administration
of it may be Jewish.
Sigsnor Ludovieo 'Mortara, advocate -
general at the Court of Cessation in
Rome, has been promoted to procureur.
general at the Court of Cassatiou in Pal,
erns°,
A (AMON Of tiCAUM
At the 'recent animal meeting of Touro
Infirmary of New Orleans, a defieit of
$20,000 for the year was reported. The
hospital is .the finest in New. Orleans,
and, in addition to the indoor work, for-
ty thousand cases were treated lix the
Ohne, of which ninety-five per amine
were those of non -Jews. The total ex-
pense of the hospital and home for aged
vs about $11000.
dovernor Noel, of Mississippi, appolut-
ed, Rabbi Max Raisin, of Temple Beth
Israel, Meridian, Miss., to represent the
State at the second•National Peace Con-
gress, which met lest Monday in Chicago.
Herr Julius Rotholz, of Berlin to emu-
niemmorate his ninetieth. birthday anni-
versary, has given a donation of ,a hail-
-tired thousand marks to the hospital of
the Jewish community of that city.
Physicians, note admit the superior
value of simple inedieines for all dis-
eases.
For eezenut • and other skin diseases
certainly nothing in the world could be
simpler than oil ofninterareen, care-
fully combined with such ° well-known
healing and antiseptic- substances as
thyme', glycerine, ete,, as in the D. D,
D. Prescription. The use of this simple
remedy, though, accomplishes results
that look like miracles. Cases of eceolun
of ten, twenty and even thirty yeers'
standing have been completely cured in
it >few weeks.
Read the experience of Mrs.,Toltu San -
dere, of Griswold, Manitoba:
"When I gentler six bottles of D. D. D.
I had one of the worst eases of'Eczema
in my legs. 1 only used two bottles
wben they were clear .of Eczeina. The
four bottles 1 have lett will keep for
hives and inflect bites. It is it useful
remedy to have in the house at all
times. 'Wishing you all success. •wlth
D. D. D."
• For free sample bottle, write to The
D. D. D. Labora.tory, Department D, 23
Jordan street, Toronto.
For sale by all druggists.
sat o
BRICKS FROM REFUSE.
English Procese Which Turns Garbage
Into Useful Building. Blocks.
At Woolwielt end at Nelson, England,
garbage is incinerated in furnaces. The.
combustion gases, after heating boilers
in which steam is produced for the gen-
eration of an electric lighting current,
flow through tubes surroundea by air,
whieh is thus heated to 300 degrees F.,
and is then blown 'through the furnaces.
The operation leaves a large quantity
of clinkers, composed of silica, altunina,
lime and iron, with a litttle magnesia,
potash and soda, which is utilized in
making sand-linue brick, The ground
clinkers are mixed with, quiek-linte and
about 10 per cent. of water, to form se
soft mortar, which is stored in brick
cisterns for a day or two to insure the
complete slaking of the lime, and then
goes to the brick -making machine. The
fresh bricks are pinerd in closed vessels
mid subjected for eight or ten hours to
the action of steam at eight atmes-
phew% pressure. When Wort out the
bricks aro suffielently hard for Immo.
diato use.
' The listrdenitig is caused, as in the
ease of ordinary sand -lime kid:, says
the Scientific Amerienn, by the confein-
alien of the lime with the siliea of the
elinkern at the high temperature 'of the
steemer. The quality of thO Nelson
garbage briek 14 equal to That of good
blue Staffordshire brick, except that it
is rather more hygroscopic,. Large
building Meeks and pavement tiles are
made by similar processes,
L
• EL
git f5(1)11040 you know, barbers' sui.1
Perey, with a wink at the num in the
other chair, "that the herr on a nem%
head grows at the rate of three -millionth;
of .1 gen!
No. 1 never heard that's before," thq
1-10101., betaing a tattoo 00 110.
:.1.1.1113 with hie razor; tl ut I know
o Spot • to, the beek of pine teett
eh -le tee Mew wouldn't sseow as tete e
it that in it ti.'',Iion y "
.. • • •
Mind Cues.
'Pretty C0119111,‘ Algy, dim% your knese
get {-old in that unifttrin
seselgy tin tltghlaui restninte
Jove. Ility did et firnd„ bit!. itMti 10
them: "1100t1 Mime forget that my
ant greittlfeet her wn a Svotsatnni" and,
Iota Jove, they waimed nj, ritt to the
--se
"Pass a Piece of Tree."
A tree found in ,Astliantee VA:sae'
exeelleut butter.
The ronetant and healthy growth of
the Hilseerein der deutselren Judea is
one of the most encouraging signs of the
time in Jewish life in Germany.
Dr. Herman Adler, chief rabbi of the
British Empire, wUl celebrate his seven-
tieth birthday and the fiftieth year of
his ministry by the publicatibn of a von
iuoirei al/ orhtinsborsid
olialsat. addresses as a me.
nil
At the office of the Federation of Am-
erican Zioelste there has recently, been
noticed an unexpected development of in-
terest ih the Anglo -Palestine Company,
sftiliTlv
iciiis.
sta blanch of the Jewish Colon-
iThe directors of the Rockaway Park
Sanitarium for Hebrew Children by the
Sea announce that edditions have been
completed which will enable their buil&
ings to accommodate sixty more beds.
This sanitarium for the New York tene-
ment district, children now has a total
of e75 bedse,
A Jewish hospital is tit be put up
on California avenue, Chicago, on ground,
that has just been purchaeed from Wil-
liam J. Callahan by the afahnonides
Elosher flospitat. The hospital wilt be
six storeys and will cost at least $75,000.
Ground. is to be broken in June for
the new building.
Since the anouncement by Ma Zang'
will on behalf of the Ito of the abate
.donment of Cyrenaica as a -Jewish terri-
tory there has been an evident disposi-
\Con on the part of many territorialista
to turn their attention to Palestine and
its immediate neighboriands to the ex-
eclusion of every other possible territory,
There are, evidences that the Ica is also
beginning to look , upon the neighbor -
lands of Palestine as a favorable region
sfoesr.Ieswish colonizatiee an 41. thrgo
ie.
Vinarer, the well-known Constitu-
tional Democrat aud member of the first
Douma, has been elected editor of the
new periodical which will appear as the
organ of the St. Petersburg lawyers.
According to the St. Petersburg pa-
pers, a new "Soeiety for Jewish Na-
tional Music" has been founded there by
certain well-known Jewish artists, sing-
ers, fula musielens.
The Yiddish poet, Frug, 1rho has been
seroiusly ill for some time,
will !shortly
leave Russia for the Tyrol on the ade
vice of his physicians,
The Qtteen of Italyhas thanked the
Jews of :Minsk, Russia, for their con-
tribution to the Italian earthquake suf-
ferers.
The tete Leon Emanuel, of Ports.
witth, England, left by will over $60, -
Me for charitable purposes,
Baa. se thbolfs haisrteortitelaaki iNn.vgorkpsla 1,71 ntoiorpe rpegrue.
tar form than the Jewish Encyclopaedia.
They are preparing a "History of the
Jewish People" for the general public.
The history is to consist of twelve vole
umes; one and two will deal with Asta,
Egypt and North America; three will
deal with southern and south-eastern
Europe, four with France, Belgium and
Holland, five and six with Germany,
Switzerlaud and the Scandinavian coun-
tries; seven, Austria-Hungary; eighth,
England and Colonies,; ninth aud tenth,
Russia, and eleventh and twelfth, the
American continent.
Gaster's 'find" of the 80,mm:item
Book of Joshua has at last found it
strong advocate itt Mr. 'Bruno Schinaler,
who endeavors in a long communication
to the English Jewish press tO establish
Its genuineness.
Without Rick, Red Blood. You Can-
not be Healthy—How to
Obtain This Nosing.
If every yottng woman and girl would
reelize the danger of 'allowing blood
to -become thin and poor, woultienue
derstend that the majority of common
diseases aro rouged by an anaemic
(or bloodless) cenditieui, that pato*.
Olt pallor means that tlie blood is note
Welshing the organs with the required
amount of »ourishment, these would be
awakened, interest in the tonic trese-
molt with, Dr. „Williams' Pink Pills-
,blooti mean* starved nerves, weak-
ened. digestion, funetionel disorders,
headaches, frequently neuralgia, soiatiee,
and oven partial paralysis. Dr, Wile
limns' Pink Pills build up the blood, ree
pair waste and, prevent and &heck die -
ease. They fill the system with ride
red blood, whist, means good health and
life.
Miss Marie Dionne, St. Angele, Que.,
says: '0I ant deeply grateful for what
Dr. Willahns' Pink Pills have done
for me. My blood had Mutest turned
to water. 1 was pale, had no appetite,
suffered from. pains in the hack and
side, and had, a. feeling of constant de-.
Pree8J01.1n The einallest exertion would
leave -ine breathless, and I was re-
duced 14 flesh until I weighed only 98
pounds. I gob nothing to help me un-
bertans. n
the -erbseeofnDris"VVilioinlIgiamsms'
Pink atter the first oouple of weeks, and in
few more weeks.' was again perfect-
ly well. The color returned to my
eheelci, the pains left meesend I gained
in weight until now I weigh 130.
pounds, I feel so happy for what Dr.
Williams' Pink Pills have alone for
me that I hope some other ailing, mtser-
able girl will profit by ,my experience
and obtain new health,'
These Pills aro sold, by all medicine
deli/era yousean get them by man t
50 cents it box or six boxes for $2.50
from the Dr, Williams' Medicine CO„
Brockville, Out.
sse•
LISTENING TO THE BAND.
(Montreal Wittman)
To hear band music, out-of-doors, out
people have to take the cars and go to
one or two places in the east end, where
they have to pay. We ought to have
bands municipally provided. We are big
tough as it eity, and our people are
musically inclined. Music is inspiring.
ff 11 18 music of the right kind, it is
ameliorating and elevating. There is
scarcely a city of any size in England, or
on the continent of Europe that does
not have a band to play in the parks
or squares. If public music is eonsidered
necessary there can we afford. to do
without it? ihat music does elevate
taste is not generally disputed, and this
is specifically testified to by the Parks
Committee of the London 'County Coun-
cil, which has found that the standard
of musical knowledge of the everage
park , frequenter is higher than it Lae
ever been.' Even in the poorest distriete
in which the Council's open spaces are
sib:at-Led, there is .an ever-growing appre-
ciation of good band music. po much is
this the case, that before completing the
musical arrangements for the coming
sewn, members of the Parks Commit-
tee yieited the various parks and made
agreements with the baud conductors
whereby in the more popular public
places one-half the programtne must be
free from barn dances, cake walks,
waltses, hackneyed national fentaeias,
and. similar pieces; and only one such
piece is tii be allowed in the other places
where bands perform. Among the list
of pieces not to be played at any of the
performances given by the Council are
such great favorites of the , past ire
"Swanee River," "Way Down Tennes-
gee," "Live on the Ocean," "Coon Band
Contest," "In Old' Kentucky," "Dusky
Dinah," and a score of others. Among
other regulations are that composition
having a foreign title must have the
title translated into English—another
"education made easy idea"—and that
no,..two pieees by the same composer,
however, popular, must have a place in
the same programme. That London
considers music necessary may be judged
by the feet that the Council -'a Censer.
-waive one—is spending about $65,000 on
bandsathis summer, and that in many
recreation grouuds for which hitherto
no music has been provided, bands will.
now play for the first time.
do come ino sighs,
'hems, ilaNVB eveland
""HNoats thne -s--IPjoor°1 tnant words—theya°s eywdAewords,"iGg:ueErtgr?0erp.77L;ilaf
"That's n • never
THE U LOVE,
Loader.
in bun the PrJivieve a.if Alberta proe
1,:ii)7,1;97 DK Alf Witter. lit the
,distant future the westeirn Provinces
will he great femurs in the world's
tut ivy market.
Butter making, is the staple industry
of Siberia. in looft IVeilern Siberia ex-
perted 78,994,720 lbs, In 1903 this had
grown W.11%108,2-14 ibe. In 1907 Greet
Britain took .00,748 cwt,
The l'nited States moans department
estimatee the wealth ef the 'conntty at.
107 billion dollars. 11 wan eetintated
at 7 billion. in 1850; at lid billion in )890,
anti at 88 1-2 billion in 1900. If yen are
not suited, however, you may ad.1 or
subtract
it few billion as pleases you.
Insteed of the quarter of it million
OC so immigrants front Germany which
the United Statesused to get annually,
20 years ego, they got len than 20,-
000 last year. The 'United .Statetavegerds-
the falling off in this immigration as
distinct loss.
Perhaps no better evideece of Om fall
or Castro could be furnished than the fact
that a Venezuelan court has ,condemned
him to rental and heavy damages nor
arbitrarily taking possession of the
,witlow of a former president. Hard -
tittles for tyrants, First Castro, then ,
Mend Hamel. No wonder the Shah
stood. front under!
,TfltS IS IN TORONTO.
(Rev. 11. S.Nfage ienn.i1; Christian Guar-
il&
Itere is one inatencot A dirty hovel,
the floor of whieh is broken down to-
ward th; middle, so that it rests on the
ground, and on the Boor water stag
-
mates for many months of the year, in
h are three apartments bearing the sem.:
blinee of rooms, fled in these a family,
sonsieting of father, ntother, four chil-
dren end a boarder manageto exist.
'The father haft been out of work for
months; the mother; soon- to bear again
the responsibility of motherhood, goes
o nt, doily to earn a, partial support for
the family by doing janitor work," In
Another case. in surroundings Aimee
Similar, we find the father tete been ill
for months, awl the moiler .looka sons
the wonder is that It mulct be other.
%Cite. The eltieet son, a biPrO biltI, ia
• eria.lual, retnruing 1 -venially to the
.hoodi or the police. and this is what we
ntigh expeet. lit nettle.: 'lotto referred
to on* tbere any eenitary -convenience*.
These two typical plitecs to which we
tave referred tan be rolled neither,
home% nor houses.
WORTH--
MOUNTAINS
OF OOLD
During Change of Life,
says Mrs. Chas. Barclay
Orttniteville, Vt. — "I was passing
through the Change of Life andsuffered
from nervousness
andothet annoying
symptoms, anA.
can truly Slty that
Lydia2.Pinkharn's
Vegetable Com-
pound has proved
worth mountains
of gold to me, atilt
restored my health
and strength. I
never forget to tell
my friend* Whet
LyiliallePinkham's
Vegetable Compound has done for inc
during this trying period. Complete
restoration to health meant; so much
to Inc that for the Sake of other suffer-
ing woreen I am willing to Make my
trouhle public so you may publish
this letter." --Wins, CtrAtt. Renewer,
R.E.D., Granite -due, Vt.
No other medicine for woman's ills
has received such wide -spread and 811-
gitalified endorsement. No other Med-
ichke WO know of has such a record
of fltrOS of female ills as hes Lydia E.
Pinkbaro's Vegetable Compound.
Ivor more than years it has been
-curing female complaints such as
inflammation, ulcefhtion, local weak-
nesses, fibroid tumors, irregularities,
periodic pains, baakaehe, indigestion
and nervous prostration, and it is
unequalled for carrying W0111011 safely
through the period of change of life.
It eosts but little to try I.ydia, E.
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and,
as Mrs. Barclay unit is "worth rowan..
taine of gold" to suffering woman.
1'
Queen Alexandra, in a sympatheHe
letter to the Womeite Nurses' Congress,
makes clear that she has nn sympathy'
with the British suffragettes' movement.
Nobody coald have suspected her of ein
proving of the eondtiet of the unwoman-
ly eveatures who have been making ex-
hibitioes of themselves in Engltind of
late. Queen Alexandra is ft lady.
Since the beginning of April Georgia's
4-0
method of employing convicts has under-
gone a great change. They are no long-
er leased Out to contractors, mills, etc., '
but are eniployed in building the high-
ways of the State. About 2,000 are now
at roadwork, and their application
ought to show something in re-
sults in ti short time. A. system of per-
manent roadways has been planned
which should do much to increase the
value of Georgia farms.
, The British Admiralty having set out
to excel the Dreadnought type of war-
ship by building mammoth battkshipa
8,000 to -10,000 tons heavier, it will now
be in order for the alarmists to speak of
the Dreadnoughts ILS "obsolete" and
-"outchisteeil," and for the ICaiser to an-
nounee a "programme" of a still -greater -
than -has-been battleship for &time time
In the future. When it comes to building
ships costing $12,000,000 to $15,004,000
apiece war preparations become se costly
as to make the 'people think. Their tax
bills keep them in mind of the limiter.
France intends to take vigorous aetion
to assert the power of the Government to
deal with rebellioua state employees. It
la certainly an anomalous condition of
affairs that exists in France. Men move
Heaven and earth to get jobs under the
Government, and, having got them, conn
bine to defy the .0overnment and compel
it to give way ten -their every demand.
Sneh a state of affairs is not to be tol-
erated by any free people, and it would
not be astonishing if France mom' in
the direction of treating such conduct
as it. crime in the nature of mutiny.
Government jobs are usually fat enough
to produce plenty of applicants.
4..
Later information from the scenes of
massacre in Asia Minor go to bear out
the idea, conveyed by the reports of
missionaries at Adana, that the fighting
was not altogether of a one-sided kind.
It is now said tiatt at Adana, at least,
the Moslems suffered fully as much as
the Christian Armenians. Indeed, some
reports say the Armenians had been
oeganizieg and arming for some time,
and thrit they "sought trouble." Doubt-
less they found it. Perhaps long experi-
ence had taught them that the way to
deal with the Turk was to enect him
with his own weapons, and to .geA itt
the first whack if they would. .
- •
hi diseussing. the Daylight Saving
Bill, reeently, Sir Robert Ball pointed
out the advantages of the thane pro-
posed, especially to the people of Greet
Britain. Sir Robert does not think that
there would be any dreaded interference
with the merldiens, An English paper
says:- .
He drew an amusing picture of the
predicament of a certahr tribe in the
extreme east of Asia, who, if the mer-
idian were strictly adhered to, would
find ohe-half of their village in Tuesday
And the other half Sit Wednesday.
(Laughter,) "I van imagine," he con-
tinued, "a villager smoking it pipe for
the whole day, with one foot in Tttcsday
and the other'foot iu Wednesday. This
would happen if we adhered striel13r to
the meridian. We must have loathe-
Matfett1 accuracy tempered with cone
1110/1 SUM We most regard the peo-
ple's feelings and relieve them from the
intolerabledaily fight as to the proper
day, one so we took the date line and
pushed it overboard ioto the Behring
Straits, .and gave them • Wednesday all
over the emintry." Coutintting, Sir Role
ert mentioned an Maskau difficiiity es
to wbielt day was Suntloy. ThrgaeS11011
was raerrOd tit Ole 1/10101.141 who, after
deliberation, told the .people to keep
both daYa- (Laughter.) Juin meritt1on4
were given to used in conformity
with time when it suited human eonvete
knee, he declared. Mevidiaus were made
for man, not man for the meridian*.
(heughter.) It required no imaginatiou,
if we were 1yrithMaeil by meridians, to
foresee On thee when the hour at 'width
a man got up in the .morning Wottld
petid untupon the min, the elock,
the Daylight Saving llili, hut upon
whiell side of the bed he got out
.( Laugh( er.)