Daily British Whig (1850), 16 Sep 1905, p. 7

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WR rd Success he early fall showers are ble for the g ® w having 2 Ladies a This and the fact we Rave e variety of the very late s, all new this fall a pricy ill Surely interest - to ey 14. yo from her Warns Yop Warns You clothes must be asteneq 2 scent of frost unmistakebly to offer at saving prices to and Drawers, g diff. t from, 25¢. to $1.25. os ol, Light Weight, Vests ang ar for early autumn. Ripe sixes, both Undervests and nt qualities to choose from, Ee ------ for Men cured and will h nd Monday: Reel Jnshrinkable 1 rawers | inches to 46 Yiches, regu- ty is $1 a garment or $2a fot while it Sc. Boch, rellas » 50C., 75¢C., $1. $1.25, 1.50, 2 and up. S, 75¢., $1, I.25, 8, $1.50, 2 and up. eli RE-COVERED as good as new, Save S and good frames. TTT TS AWESON nt Colt Button 1 Top, heavy extension shoe, This is the only ® that will be worn this rice $3 to $4.50 [ SHOE STORE Sed - ofl : with : SECONDISECTION. 2 5 - YEAR 72. BBY ELS AAPL. HUMOUR Would Scab Over, Brea Over, Break Open, and Be Raw-- Intense Suffering for "Two Years -- Doctors and Medi- cines Failed to Help Her, = CURED BY CUTICURA WHEN ALL ELSE FAILED Writing under date of August 15, 1904, Mrs. L. C. Walker, of 5 Tremont Street, Woodfords, Me,, says: ** My sistér had a terrible humour on her shoulder when she was eighteen months old, causing intense suffering for two years. We had several doc- tors, and tried everything, but in spite of all we did it kept spreading. One day it would scab over and then crack open and a watery matter ooze from it and the scabs would all fall off. It would be raw for a time, then scab over again. Some one recommended Cuticura, and we immediately pro- cured a box of Caticura Ointment, and a cake of Caticura Soap. She was much better after the first bath with warth water and soap, and an applica- tion-of the Ointment. Before it was half gone we saw a marked chan, for the better, and she was entire cured, without a scar being left, by thie ohE Box of Ointment and one cake of Soap. Her skin is now entirely cleat, and she has not had a sign of trouble since" 100,000 MOTHERS Daily Tell Other Mothers That Cuticura Soap is the best baby in the world for cleansing and purifying the skin, and that Cuticura Ointment is of priceless value for soothing and healing torturing, dis- figuring eruptions, 'itchings, and chaf- ings. A single application of Cuti- cura Ointment, preceded by a warm bath with Cuticura Soap, gives instant relief, and refreshing sleep for skin- tortured babies, and rest for tired, fretted mothers. Cutieura Soap, Olutment, and Pills are sold pn R Potter Drug & Chem. Corp a Mailed free, * How to Care Baby Humou [AN EXCELLENT FOOD, admirably adapted to the " Wants of Infants." SiIR*Ciras, A. CAMERON, CR, M.D. Professor of Chemistry, A y Ex-President of the Royal ( Surgeons, Ireland For Infants, Invalids, And The Aged. ; GOLD MEDAL, WOMAN'S EXHIBITION,) London, 1800. ] a DR. BARNARDO Say 3 S~-- "We have alrerdy used Neave's Food in twa of our Homes (Balies' Castle Viliage Home), and | have po he saying it has proved very J July 27th, 1001. Russian Imperial ursery. VE & CO, | Manufac tarers JOSIAH R. N ordingbridge, Fg Wholesale Agents t~THE LYMAN BROS. & Co., Ltd., Toronto and Montreal. Children grow and thrive, Delicate women get strength, Brain workers develop power when their food is seasoned CEREBOS SALT Wholesale Agents Geo. Robertson & Sens |IKINGSTON. Drarscanseysrosrael ! Dr. Brock's Celebrated 11k ir for Famals hi | Bilis s Spear tot ThRoA Letter Fro BRI M 0 Greater New York. AFTERMATH PEACE PROPHET SAW FARTHER THAN ULTRA-PESSIMEST. And 'Teddy' Was the First Mikado Drove Tycoon to Tem- ples, Where he Belonged-- Little Nation the Peer of Any. Special Correspondence, Letter No. 1,479 ew York, Sept. 15.-- lhe agony 1s over; the commissioners, appointed by their respective governments, have signed the treaty and over all the land a mighty wave of . congratula- tion swept everything before it as a cyclone sweeps feathers from its path. Emperors, kings, princes, potentates, the great rulers of the earth, on .the swift and silent lightning's wing, flash- ed joyful messages of copgratulation and thanks to the prophet of peace in the city of Washington, hailing him as the great Hebrew. leader and prophet of old, was hailed by lsrael's suffering sons and daughters--as God's' appoint: ed chiefs who was to lead them out of Egypt's darkness and bondage to the blessings of 'freedom and the abund ance of the promised land, « When the black clouds of hopeless failure darkened the sorrowing vision of the ultra pessimist, who saw no- thing but failure and disgrace, ridicule and contempt as the reward of our self-appointed and misguided leader, he, with a prophetic vision, that de fied the threatemed evil portent, saw through the rifts of the dark'ning clouds the silver light that gave pro mise of a happier and brighter day, in the vocabulary of which there was no such word as fail. It is true, there had been lions in the path, with pit- falls and quicksands, pregnant with danger and death, but a hold and determined front made the lion seek safely in his forest lair and the care ful 'guardage of the treacherous path showed the way to security, rest and peace, The treaty commissioners ap- pointed by Russia .and Japan were pretty evenly matched; the rudeness, and almost Russian coarseness of Mr, Witte, was met with a diplomatic and imperturbable politeness by Baron Komura that would have satisfied the dying Chesterfield. When Mr. Witte was asked by a correspondent, if Russia paid any indemnity, he is said to have replied "No, Sir; not a sou! Not ore sou I" It was not so much what he said as the contemptuous tone in which he said it; such an exhibition of temper at that time would have been exceedingly bad manners in a hod-carrier or a costermonger, but in a first class diplomat it was little | than a crime. It is an axiom, trite as it is true, and as old as the hills, "That it is the unexpected that usual ly happens." The truth of the pro verb finds a striking illustration ip the treaty of peace between Russia and Japan. While the great nations of the earth, and all civilized lands on the globe joined in the hallelujah and hosanna the capitols of the two em pires most concerned in the treaty of peace were all ablaze with revolution Anarchy and mob violence rule the hour; murder; red handed and brutal, strikes down an imperial minister al most in the presence of the mikado, and the lurid flames of buming pal aces, fired by incendiary hands, thom Wakhama to Necaska redden the mid night sky. Can it be possible that the recent eclipse has had any in fluence upon the Japanese ? Shake speare, in describing a similar out burst of crime says "lt is the very error of the moon, that comes more near the earth than she was wont that makes men mad." The ignorant and murderous mob knew nothing of the magnificent victory that their country had achieved in confirming the treaty of peace. Victorious on land and sea; destroying in a single fight one of the most tremendous war fleets that ever floated on the sea, she was in the position to be magnanimous to a beaten foe; with the terrible red slaughter of two hundred thousand Russian dead around the smoking ruins of Mukden, and such an unpar alelled succession of victories, un clouded by a single defeat, Japan could well afford to scatter six hun dred millions of dollars to the four winds of heaven, when mercy and hu manity appealed to her for the sacri fice. By that single act Japan achieved an attitude of honor and nmortal glory attained in so short a time by no other nation in the history of the world. Just think of the astonishing pro gress made by this marvelous and wonderful people. It is only just ab out sixty years sine the gates of Ja pan were closed as tight as a drum against the outside world; she had a civilization and identity all her own, sufficient for her wants, and equal to her desires. The children of toil cheer fully performed their allotted tasks as their fathers had done generations be fore them: the great mikado ruled with a mild and gentle sway; unruffled or der reigned throughout the land, } peace and plenty were supreme and un iversal, But as soon as the gates were unbarred Japan realized how far she was behind the outside world's ad- vanced civilization, the work of re form began; 2,000 students were sent to Europe and America to spy out the for tule great pole on ons eneipt of price, land, they saw everything, nothing 1, 124 Princess St., Kiogstou, Ont. Becscsscsrrescsssane ¢ Therg § a never. any need to lie To | Your wife if you can only get herd into a frame of mind where sh will not believe anything you say. j worth learning escaped their investi | gation, and they Brought back to their native land stores of knowledge and mines of educational wealth that Yapanese manipulation transmuted to | ingots of gold. For thousands of vears Japan had a dual government, a mi- 282 reer PARK Row BUILDING 309 reer This shows a picture of the pro posed monster hotel of forty-four stories which a syndicate, headed by 'Al Adams, the former 'Policy King" of New York intends to erect and operate in that Hy. The building will be 500 feet high and will cost %3,000,000. kado and a tycoon; the tycoon gov- } EDUCATION FOR LIFE. erned all the temples and holy places; | the mikado administered. the civil, ju dicial and military powers; under the Article of Interest to Parents and new reign it was cumbersome and im- |! hi Teachers. possible, The mikado drove the tycoon Dr. William H. Maxwell, siperintend to the temples, where he belonged, and = ""} of New York public schools, con thereafter ruled the empire alone. { tributes to the October Delineator, an i Arts and manufactures were intro- | article that is filled with interest for duced, and to-day Japan has cotton parents and teachers or anyone who mills that pay forty and fifty per bears any relation to educational af: cent, annual dividends, and which in | fairs. The paper is the first of two fine machinery and the high character | and js entitled "Education for Life of goods produced rival the best cot Through Living." Writing of the new ton mills of Lowell or Fell River, ¢ducational methods, Dr. Maxwell Her foundries are--turning out wiecl S8YS © ""The dchtols are endeavoring rails which, owifig to the low priceot © Bt once to be substitutes for the de- labor and the abundance of her iron | fo of home, for the absence of child mines, sho can put on the market at ish possibiliti and for the insuffici a lower rate than they can be manu- § (ney of play wes, where muscles may factured by any other country in the | he excecised and lungs expanded. This world, and with which, no doubt, she | 18 Why the city school of to-day sees intends to gridiron Korea, down to | to it that the child is made happy, is the horders of Manchuria taught to play and sing, to exercise She is also making magnificent mon- i his body, and to have a chance to ster cannon, equal to the best turned | use his hand He is encouraged in out by Krupp, at Essen. She is build-{ the school to do and make real things ing mighty warships of steel, and is | for himseli and his fellows. He is given creating the engines that are to move | also thorough instruction in the so them, and is piling up thousands of | called 'three R's," but this knowledge tons of the best fixed ammunition | is, by actual application, made of pat which is to make them effective in a | ent service in his life to-day. The ficht. In electrical applinnees Japan | school also affords training hy does not fear © domparison with the | actual performance, in drawing, na most advanced nations of the earth] ture study, desig gning and color work, and the perfect system and the broad | as well as in sewing, cooking and humanity of her hospitals and her | housework and shop work. The design other charitable institutions loses ne- | is that if the pupil has special artistic thing when comparad with the best in | or mechanical ability, he may early England, France or Germany discover the talent and develop it for Don't be alarmed. good peoy if | practical utility in life; or, if he have thieve is a little row now in Yok pa no marked technical aptitude, that he ma and Tokio. We know sometWing | may, nevertheless, learn to use, to about riots in New York. Tn the draft | some extent, his otherwise untrained riots in 1863, the mob held, the city | hands, This aim is, in itself, sufficient by the throat for a week: negroes were | instification for some attention to the hunted down and killed like dogs: Col. | mapual arts: but it is found alse that A. Brien was hung to a lamp post, | these very activities' which develop and when he was still alive his body | dormant faculties help the child direct was cut down and dragged throughly acquire a better knowledge of the streets Ly a pack of savages who | reading, writing and arithmetic than have no equals in Japan was possible when attention was con Tokio and Yokohama are not denee | fined exclusively to books. The child is high when compared with Chicago and | also a part of the community that Cincinnati. In Chicago riot, red-| surrounds his school, and the school handed, stalks abroad at noonday.| endeavors to introdnee him to an in readdv to murder, timate onderstanding of his out-of Japan has covered herself with im-} school life It utilizes, therefor: mortal glory and to-dav stands the | through the co-operation of museums, peer of any nation on the face of the | parks and n unicipal works, all the globe. wealth of the city's property that can BROADBRIM. be brought to bear, with service, on the child's life. It takes him to nature in the parks, where that is possible, or else brings real things from nature to him in the school. The result must be Have It In The House. There is nothing cise you can have in your house worth so much that costs so little as a bottle of Smith's | that the child will come to manhood White Liniment. It will enable you to | or womanhood, more valuable to the cscape the discomfort of sprains, ] State as an economic producer, more bruises, swelling, neuralgia, rheuma intelligent as a citizen, and better fit tism and the. various aches and pains ted for all the duties of life. The pro apt, to come to anyone. Costs but | cess may be summed up in three words 25¢. for a big bottle at Wade's Education for life," The house in which . the late Charles Spurgeon, the famous preacher, was born. It is located in Kelvedon, Essex, England and English Baptists have started a. movénent to purchase the house and trantform it into a chapel o r mission-room, bearing Spur- geon's name. = 10 THE ¢ POOR| CASES OF LUCK HELD WIN- NING LOTTERY, A Maid Servant Heard of Her Good Fortune While She Was Cleaning Doorsteps--Another Winner Almost Went Out of His Mind, London Tit-Bits. When Dame Fortune is turning a lot- tery wheel, it must be ucknowledged, to her oredit, that she usually dis- tributes her favors in quarters where they are most needed and apprecinted. She was in this benevolent mood when a very short time ageo;-she awardad a £40,000 frie to Mme Hofer, the can teen maid, to the 28th Fretich ra: goons; and a second prize of £5,000 to M. Cousin, a clerk who had never Suwa more than £60 "a year in his ife. And the history of lotteries is crowded with similar dramatic and delightful surprises which Fortune has prepared for the poor. Only a few months ago, we recall, Marie Biret, a maidservant in Pans, asked her em- ployer to buy her a ticket in the lot Ye ry organized by the Northern League against Tuberculosis; and one fine morning when she was cleaning the doorstep she learnt that the first prize had fallen to her, and that she was a quarter of a million francs richer for her lucky purchase. In the drawing of the great state lottery at Madrid last Christmas the prize of £200,000 was won by a strug- gling tradesman of Corunna, to whom a hundredth part of the sum would have represented a huge fortune; and £8,000 went in smaller prizes to a few peasants in Sacedon, a poverty strick- en village in the prevines of Guadal- ajara. The winner of the chief prize of £10, 000 in the last lottery authorized by the French goveramént on behalf of the hospital for comsumptive children, was a Parisian workman called Duth- cil. When the list of winners wae tak- en into Dutheil's worshop and he dis- covered that the first prize was his, he was, says Le Francais, "literally de mented with joy, and it was feared that his brain had given way." Duth- eil had bought his ticket at a cigar shop six months earlier for 1fr., and had almost forgotten the circumstance es when the intoxicating news of his good fortune came to him. It wes only last vear that M. Cam- ug, clerk to an Rheims commercial firm, won a small prize of £40 in a lottery, and with the momoy bought a Paris city bond and a Credit Fon vier debenture, In the perfodionl draw. ing his Paris bond brought him £4. 000. and shortly after his Credit Fon cier coupon vielded £8 000--thd £12,000 being the return for an original in vestment of a single france, In 4 recent Spanish national lottery drawing, an £8,000 prize fell to a syndicate of ten men, among whom were a cobbler, a costermonger, 5 waiter, a pork salter, and an armv-sergeant; while the prin cipal prize of £35,000 went to orew of the Malian warship Lepanto. Quite recently, too, a whip's fireman on the Wilson liner Murillo recvived the gratifving news that he had drawn the winning number in a great Aus trian lottery, and that the snug lit tle fortune of £8,000 was gqwaiting his claim. The lucky fireman was a Ger man mamed Joseph Torsig, and he had purchased the ticket when his ship ealled at Flume. Fighteen months ear lier a poor railway signalman in Prague won a lottery prize of exactly the same value £8000; and about the same time Tomba Pietermann, a very poor woman, who held ticket No. 17 in the Bank of the Nobilitd Lottery in ft. Petershurp, almost lost her reas on when she learnt that she had won the first prize of £20,000, Luck. however, came too late to a Moravian called Hertz; for when news reached him that he had won a £2,000 prize in the state lottery he was com mencing a life sentence of penal servi tude for murder; and Charles Rotter, a retail tobacconist of Chisago, when he hoard that a ticket which he had just given away to a friend had won a prize of £3.000, died of a broken heart. Year after vear a Vienna shop man purchased a number which be had dreamed on three consecutive nights, and for ten years his ticket "drow a blank," On December Ist, 1902, the man died, and a few later the ticket he had purchased won a vrize of £4,800, To give but one more illustration of thie: aspect of lottery fortune, A short time ago a Vienna paper had an ad vertisement offering "£500 and no auestion asked for the restoration of a Turkish lottery bond to ite right ful owner. The number of the bond in question was drawn for the chief prize of £25,000 some vears ago. The owner of it, however a poor man numed Maver-- did not learn of his wood fortane until, hy a hard stroke of Inck, he recently lost the bond. Be ing out of work and in great want, abont a month ago he decided to sell the bond, and started off to the bank for that purpose" On. his avpival at the bank the Lond twas missing, Such are some of the tragedies and ironies of lottery luck, days Are You Pale And Sallow ? Tt's blood vou want, more blood and hetter., Wade's Tron Tonic Pilla make pmrify and enrich the blood, changing that sallow face into one of beadty. In hoxes 28%. at Wade's drug store, Money back il not satisfactory. The apricot orchards in Santa Clara county, UB A"Cre the largest in the world, averaging from 80 to 100 acres in extent. The total acreage of apricot orchards in Santa Clara eomnty is over 5.000 acres Three avplications of ' Peck's Com J \ YAVAYA ¥ --- KEEP THE CAPSULES, THEY ARE VALUABLE. A Pure and Wholesome | Matured Spirit. Mixed with Soda it makesa very : refreshing and invigorating beverage Fit-Reform has no interest in -- or connection with -- any other business. There is only ONE Fit-Reform Wardrobe in each city throughout wif Canada. Be sure you are in the right place --and look for the Fo Rent label on every garment you buy, Val pe hs Suits and Overcoats.....<.... $12. to $30. TrOUSErS.....ocenreesareves +. $8.00 to $7.60 Toe only Fil-Reform Wardrobe bore bsnl x J. 8. HI Salve will eure hard or soft corns, 2o., at Wade's Drug Store, Sida ic Baia Sho If the water used in ale is impure, the best of equipment, skill and other ingredients can- not produce a pure, health-giving beverage. The water used in Carling's brews is taken from Carling's private springs at a depth:ot one thousand feet, and never tested less than 99.08 degrees pure by Government Analysts. ; Carling's plant' is equipped with every modern Tasiliny for producing pure, wholesome ale. Sold éverywhere by all enterprising dealers. , Carling S Ale Letters, &e C. W. Mack, 9-11-18 King SEW Toronto.

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