Daily British Whig (1850), 7 Apr 1906, p. 13

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Clothes washed by Sunlight are cleaner and whiter than if washed in ay other way. : In soap may removy dirt but always injure the ie Sunlight Soap wil nog injure the most dainty lace or th hands that use it because jt : absolutely Pure and contains fr: mjurious chemicals. - Sunlight Soap sho Id be used as directed. oars or hard rubbin : g is necessary, Sunlight Sozp is better oe other soap, but is best when. * way, used in the Sunlight Buy it and follow 5c. Y p35 Eelow 5c. $5,000 Rrwaro WM be 3 paid Proves tht Sinfight Sou Ty: 8by Injurions chemicals or age U8 of adulteragfon, rartiw Lever Brothers Limited, Toronte » grace, style, t 'qualities for s are famous, ly corset made it the waist-- 10t break and id ill fitting iy woman ny day -- good to or rest in, ves it--common t demand it. the corset that ak at the waist a Crest Corset | «x See e® -®@® iC D(@ @ ive boxes containing about MATCHES ¢ Grocer For Them a ou only §c. to try them 10:13 Nes IN, AGENT, KINGSTO You are Quite Right' 1f you see the LITTLE 1 ' CHURCH on the label of the package of Alabastint buy, then you are You : safe--it 1s, gen sell the real a Church's Alabastine nines that We : fson v to fon! our cuétomers with kalsor wl inoving you s of your rooms, It is «© annoying 3 1 i 1 in time; and and scale off, as in t en you ave time t v beantifiil Paint - bx leis eve Hardware and ff you wrie-- PANY, LIMITED - RRS PARIS, ONT. 4 from woman's ailments. IED WITH ECZEMA i {BRITISH LABOR PARTY DIVIDED INTO FOUR SECTIONS IN THE NEW PARLIAMENT. Brushed Scales from Face Like Pow= der--Under Physica $i Months But Grew Worse --Some Said Face Would Be Marked for Life-- Now Without aiBlemish, CUTICURA REMEDIES WORK WONDERS a sufferer with eczema i classed as Labor Independents, he London Express, tation Committee Section, Which Numbers 29 Members--Form zn Ex- clusive Party In the House and Will Trades Union Program. The Labor party in the new British Parliament is divided ind four sec- tions: (1) The Labor | House of Commaps; (2) the miners' | members; (3) the Liberal-Labor mem- | bers; sand (4) a section which must be ! "As I was ¢ Ts to tell you what a great friend 1 found in Cuticura Remedies. In says gix months I had tried three doctors, but did notsget any better. mittee section, which will be known of- ficially as the*Labor party." It num- bers 29 members, which is practically | a majority of the whole Labor party. s Most Important Is the Labor Represen- . Decide Upon Its Own Policy -- A © representation | committee members, who meet at the : By far the most important of these- our is the.Labor representation com- @ i and the first three being strong mom. | bers of the congress itself their claims , for recognition eaniot be ignored, { + Yet they cannot stand aside, and It is more Zhan 'likely some compromise t will be made, and though they will not subscribe to the hard and fast rujes of the chief group, yet the benefit their wisdom will not be lost wheh| the counsels of the Labor representa- tive committee are bégun.' Thus, 'briefly, the position of the | : Labor parties in Parliament may be | sumiharized. Jt is as new and untried | body--only fifteen Labor members were in the last Parliament--and the ! eyes of all political England will be upon it, { FROM NEWSBOY TO M.p. * W. C. Steadman Tells of His Early Struggle With Poverty. W. C. Steadman, Labor M., P. for Central Finsbury, relates the story ot his life in a special article in the cur- rent number of Pearson's Weekly. "At the age of eight I got my first Job as an errand boy," he says. *"No- thing in life since has given me such pleasure as I felt when I took home my first week's earnings to my mother. oh 'dia. They are not ordinary fakirs or V " : | aredibte number are circulating tn tao | dia, showing how the great teacher, for | he hundrédth time, resolved to quit the blessed repose of Nirvana, out of divine compassion, to be bnge more in- i carnated in ap earthly form and under- go the suffering and sorrow which all | terrestrial existence involves, . i The Tree Disappears. { Visitor From the Occident Who Actual- { It was easy to perceive that the ls- ty Climbed Up Into One of the | teners were profoundly impressed with | the 8 ; . "Wiaard Trove--at at th Foot o | 1% S34 pronching, and we or my: | i Coomra Sami, the Philosopher of | I seemed to forget time and space. I i Srinagur = The Wonderful Rope SeRalaly da not sigties what servant i <: Trick, viz, the disappearance of 'the tree, The writer hs spent six months tn | hen the Sadhu hag Auished is gh Kashmir at the feet of Coomera Sami, Souies the tree was gone. } Inns hve the philosopher of Srinagur, one of the | 'oNIShed suddenly, and yet the prec greatest of the thousands of adepts who are to be found all over the wilds of In- HINDU ADEFT MARVELS MANGO TREE GROWS FIFTY FEET WHILE YOU WAIT, . moment of its disappearance' nobody could tell. The adept quietly arose, folded up his mat, then went to the spot where the tree had stood and kneeled down, taking from a small bun- | dle which he held under his arm a short stick. With this he stirred up the earth, and in a few moments brought out again the fruit which he had planted. I was very close to him at the time, | and he allowed me to take it in my hand. It was an ordinary mango, an the jogis, but the higher brotherhood of Sadhu and Sanaysis, who seldom ex- | hibit 'their powers and never for re- ward, Dr. Heasoldt says in The Occult | Review. marvellous illusions have been 'wonder of centuries. If I could | uce anything like them and go up ~~ How found six small Candy Tablets. a pin/n me with- | out Aouching cc- | x F ":zema. My face was | covered, my eyebrows came out, and i it got in my i , I themwent to | another doctor. e asked me what 1 was taking for it, and I told him Cuticura. He said that was a very good thing, but that he thought that : my face would be marked for life. But Cuticura did its work and my face is now just as clear as it ever was, "My brother-in-law told me about 'the woriderful Cuticura' remedies. 1 took lis advice and got the Ointment, Soap, and Resolvent. 1 washed with the Cuticura Soap and then applied the Ointment, and took Caticura Resolvent as directed. In a short time my face began to get better, and when I had taken one bottle of Resolvent I could brush the scales off my face like a powder. When I had taken four bottles my face was as clear as ever. . "1 told all my friends about my remarkable cure. I feel so thankful I want everybody far and wide to know what Cuticura can do. It is a sure cure for eczema. (signed) Mrs. Emma White, 641 Cherrier Place, Camden, N. J., April 25, 1905." wiplete External and Internal treltment/ tor every from Pimples to Scrotula, from Infancy tn | g of Cufiturs Owen. ard ay f RAE A sige sri nd i. Corl, Bole Props. Boston, How to Cure Eczema." Free to You, My Sister' Free to You and Every Sister Woman Suffering from Womsn's Ailments L will mail, free of any charge, my home ~jreatment with full instructions to any sufferer I want to tell all | about this cure--you, my reader, for yourself, your daughter, your mother, or your sist I want to tell you how to cure your- selves at home without the help of a & Men cannot understand woman's suffer What we women know from experience we know better than any doctor, I know that my home treatment is a safe and sure cure for Leucorrheea or Whitish Discharges, Ulceration, Displacement or Falling of the Womb, Pro fuse, Scanty or Painful Periods, Uterine or Ovarian Tumors or Growths, also pains in the head, back and bowels, bearing down feelings, fervousness, creeping feeling up the spine, Melancholy, hot flashes, weariness, kidney ®nd bladder troubles where caused by weak messes peculiar to our sex. I want to send you a complete ten days treatment entirely free to prove to you that you can cure yourself at home, easily, quickly and surely. Remember that it will cost you nothing to give the treatment a complete trial, and if you 'should wish to continue, it will Cost yort only about 12 ceuts a week, or less than Wo cents a day, It will not interfere with your work or occupation. Just send me your name and address, tell me how you suffer if you wish, and I will: send you fhe treatment, for , entirely free, in 1. Iwill also send you free of . k WOMAN'S OWN NEDICAL AD wor lain wrapper, by my VISER,"" with explanatory illustrations show- ing why women suffér, and how they can } easily cure themselves at home, Every woman should have it. and learn to think for herself. Then when the doctor say: fo o% must, have an operation," you can dec Menor iecy whe isands of olen have cured Kk ary hm ome remedy. sll, old or young. y To mothers of daughters, T will | explain a a. ple home treatment which speedily anu slectually cures Leurorrhcea, Green Sickness | 0d painftl or irregular menstruati-n iryouns | pdles Plumpness and health always result ise It cures sin rever you live, I cam refer you to ladies * own locality, who know and will gladly y sufferer that this Home Treate ment really cures all women's discascs, makes women well, strong, plump and » ads t is s 5 . Write to-day, as sce this offer again. Address Su MRS. M, SUMMERS ! Box 11 -- EPPS'S ie admirable food, with Windsor, Ont. i The Celebrated English Cocoa. | 0S the system in robust health, ani enables it to resist _ Winter's extreme cold. 0COA The Most Nutritious : and Heonomieal Te ---- Th offices catost proportionate loss of oe = to men in'any battle was at ore Ure of Redan, when' three, offi " wor EL to every (winty-two eg : man, R, Clynes, C. Duncan, A. H. Gill, + Jenkins, ' O'Grady, J. Parker, T. F. Richards, G. J. Wardle, A. Wilkle and W. T. Wil- , on occasions open its doors to thoge , compensation act amendmerit are all ! ty Labor representation committee, + union congress declarations will all be . J Johnson, T. Richards, J. Wilson, W. Out of §9 candidates the following have been returned: Messrs. J. Keir Hardiz, W. Crooks, D. J. Shackleton, and A. Héhdersop (members of the last Par- liament), G. N. Barnes, C, W. Bower- "I remember I was such a thin, miser- able-looking child that when I applied for the job they at first scoffed at the idea of my Meing strong enough' to run errands, and All through my. boyhood 1 suffered from. ill-health. * -"Between eight and 15 I aig all manner of odd jobs. I sold newspapers in the streets, had a spell in the oil and color trade, and at the age of fifteen 1 was a barman in a public house. I do not think this last experience did me any harm. On the contrary, it widened my mental horizon and gave me an interest in the social and political mat. ters which I heard the customers dis cuss, "My barman job, however, did not last very long, for my mother, at God knows what cost to herself, had me ap- prenticed to a large builder--a wonder- ful piece of self-sacrifice, for It meant that my earnings ceased. "Barge bullding changed me from a weak, puny lad into a strong man, and now I do not think I can tell you any- thing else about my boyhood. "The general election of 1868, when 1 was 17 years old, first gave me an .in- terest in politics. I heard the late W. Newton, the founder of what is now the Amalgamated Saclety of Engineers, speak at a meeting at Tower Hamlets, for which he was the Radical candidate, and thenceforward I threw myself heart and soul into his cause, and worked for thie pretties IS gAvosa ted Te "The editor asks me to say to what 1 ascribe such success as I have made in life. Well, I do not find it a very easy question to answer; but I will try. "In the first place, I can honestly say that I have got on entirely by my own exertions, I have always helped myself, and owe nothing to the favor or influ- ence of others. Then, of course, I have worked hard. All the time I was" an apprentice I attended night schools, and did everything I could to improve my general knowledge." T. Glover, J. Hodge, W. Hudson, J. F. W. Jowett, G. D, Kelly, J. R, MacDonald, J. T. Macpherson, J. H. Roberts, J. Seddon, P. Snowdon, T. Summerbell, W. Thorne, 8.. Walsh, G. son. These members are pledged by the constitution of the Labor representa- tion. committee to form an exclusive party, ia the House; it will now elect its own ~halfman and whips, and de- cide its own, policy, Probably it may membefs fyhose policy most nearly co- inoides with its own, and thus strength- en its action by increasing the unity in the party. What its exact program will be Is still Joubttul; thé meetings short- ly to be held will decide that. But those members who are trade unionists and whose candidature has been en- dorsed by the Parliamentary committee of the trades union congress, have cer- tainly a well-defined basis to work up- on. { Trade Union Program. To a great extent this trade union program will form the policy of the PRFLPTES IU Indludes all tHe VITH neue ures for which Labor has been clamor- ing, though probably some exiensions of it will have to be made to meet the needs of the strong Socialist element and the leaders of the group. To the trade unionist section of the Labor representation committee the trades disputes bill and the workmen's in all, andymean much more than the questiphg which are made the chief planks ix other party programs. No:doubt the coming conference will see an amalgamation of programs; the the trade Algernon Charles Swinburne. Algernon Charles Swinburne, the poet, was born in London on April 5, 1837, being the eldest child of Admiral Charles H. Swinburne, and a grandson of the third Earl of Ashbynham, His family has belonged for génerations to Northumberland. His early years were spent partly at Capheaton in that coun- ty and partly at"Bonchurch in the Isle Independent Labor party, and thrown into the melting pot, and thence- forth will. come something which will suit all parties. Both the Labor representation com- mittge and trade union congress are in agreement--as naturally befits a child and its parent -- and the list of meas- ures as given by the Parliamentary " 3 3 ht. o fu committee of the latter include the two of Wig The poet was educated at mentioned above, amendments to the Pn 20d Batol Soeke whither i truck act, the factory acts, unemploye uhdversity without taking a degree. His aet, educaton act, abolition of Chinese stay at Oxford was, however, made labor, extension of the housing of the memorable from the fact that he there working classes act, adult suffrage, an became acquainted with Dante Gabriel eight-hour working day, and reform of pi ccatti William Morris, and Edward some municipal laws. 'Burne-Jones. men who wera destined Miners and Members. to leave so emphatic a mark upon the Such is the policy of the largest art and literature of thelr generation. section. The miners are in a different = As one of the wonderful rele that category; for, while they are strongly formed around the Pre-Raphaelite Bro- trade unionist, there are among them therhood the poet lived in London, and many who could safely sit on the Lib- even shared for awhile with the Ros- eral benches and not lose political caste. sett brothers a' house in Cheyne-walk, Inasmuch as they have at the trade Chelsea. Later he had chambers in union congress supported many of the Great James street and Guilford street, resolutions brought forward, it is pret- Bloomsbury, but a quarter of a -oen- ty evident that their unionism will come tury ago, with his friend Mr. Theo- first and their Liberalism last dore Watts (now Watts-Dunton), he The miners' members are N srs. W. removed to The Pines, on the edge of Abraham, T. Burt, C. Fenwick, F. Hall, Wimbledon common, and there the poet's slight figure has long been fam- Brace, E.' Edwards, J. Haslam, W. lliar to those who dwell in the neigh- Johnson, J. Williams and J. Wadsworth, borhood, while zealous admirers of his thirteen in.all, forming a very strong poetry = healthy hero-worshippers--- representation of one plrticular in. have wandered about the common near dustry. the house in the hope of getting a dn the manifesto issued by the execu- | glimpse of the writer who by general tive committee before the election the consent is the chief living representa- Wotes of 'electors were asked for in tive of English poetry, order .that the Eight Hours Bill and an amended mines bill might be car- | Our Yankee Cousin Abroad. ried through the House, so that this | Grace George, recently returned from portion of the Labor party must have pound tells of a great blow to her support for 'their. particular measures patriotic pride. - Ske was invited to a before they can work harmonjously go no. by Lady ----.at a magnificent with the mewly-christened Labor Party. mansion in Kensington, and was treat- | There 157little doubt but that things 4 after dinner to some rare singing will be arranged smoothly; indeed, the py a celebrated vocalist. On the ver- federation has announced that their anda afterwards the hostess brought candidates: were In full "accord with young debutantes up to the well- the aspirations and needs of the labor- 1, wn actress and introduced them. ing classes generally," and would "co- | «pm sure you will like each other, operate heartily with other Labor rep-, gr they are Americans, too, Miss resentatives." | George," said the titled lady; as if that The Lib.-Labs. | settled the question of the mutual es- Thirdly, then, the Liberal-Labor teem of the actress and the debutantes, mémbers, guch as Messrs, Broadhurst, Miss George, wishing to be cordial, W. Cremer, A. Richardson, H. Vivian, greeted them pleasantly and remarked, who at some time or other have been with the intention that the hostess, as very actively engaged in trade union = well ds the girls, should hear her: wqQrk, or now represent the work of "Did you not enjoy the beautiful Labor in association, such as co-opera- = singing in the dining hall? And 'the tion, as does Mr. Vivian. , acoustics were perfect, were they not?" Outside this circle is still another "Yes," sald one of the fellow Ameri- which circumscribes men who are of cans, with enthusiasm, "those acoustics Liberal tendencies who have no trade- , were the best I ever ate." . union backing, except at thé polls, | ------ but whose sympathies lie with Labor and. its proposals. In this division fall Messrs, Percy Alden, F, Maddison, G. Nicholls, J. Rowlands, and W \ Byles. 'These may be called the "free lances® of the Labor party, bound by no allegiance to group or federation, ready to support or abstain as their conscience dictates. And in the same category must be inciuded the Right Hon. John Burns. Lastly are four Labor Independents; Messrs. R. Bell (re-elected), W. C. Steadman, J. Ward, and J. H. Wilson Thése have not chosen to sign the con- stitution of the Labor representative committee, and are thus nominally ouf- side its pale. But they agree with t poilcy promulgated by the trades union, Not To Be Scared. In an old-fashioned - churchyard in Scotland a pile of skulle and bones had been turned up in the process of grave- digging. The plowmen in a bothy near by of- fered the "loon" five shillings' to go at night and remove one. The lad agreed and started in the dark. An ambush had been laid to fright- | en him. As he lifted one skull a. hol- | low voice called: ' "That's mine!" "A' rich," said the lad, laying the | ghastly thing down "to lift another. | Again came from the darkness a volce: "That's mine!" "Gae awa', ye Imaverin idiot! na hae two skulls. Te can- Pearson's Weekly. id tain has eight times as many rail- ways as the United States. = Cures aCold inOneDay, 3DeyS| A man in trouble always appreciates a favor---until he gets out. 5 saevery He is a mean man who refuses to , PI APY IV ea® DOR 350 ive praise where it is duc, i 1 i | | In proportion to its size Great Bri- | ' , cidental humanity never experienced. I shall never forget the day and the" state of my feelings when I saw the mango feat for the first time. This was in a large public square at Agra and in the presence of about 400 people, forms= diameter. In the centre stood the "Sad. hu" Some of the onlookers were, of course, much nearer to him than others, and he seemed to have no objectioh if people came within ten or fifteen yards | of him, but the average distance kept by the spectators was, I dare say, thirty yards, Most of my readers will know what a mango is For the benefit of the few who may not I will say that it is an edible tropical fruit, about the size of a large pear, growing on a 'tree which | reaches a height of from forty to a hun- dred Teet. > Not a Cheap Western Trick. The "Sadhu" dug a hole in the ground --by means of a short white stick-- about six inches deep, placed the mango in it and covered it. with earth. I now expected to see a modification of a well known trick practiced by some of your western conjurers, The performer plants a bean or pea in a flower pot, contain- ing quickilme at the bottom covered with earth. The bean has been pre- viously soaked in warm water for sev- eral days and is on the point of germin- ating? Then by pouring. in_encugh. Water io reach the quicklime the earth 18 warmed 'to such an extent that the germ is driven out in a few minutes, forcing fts way upward through the soll and reaching a height of several inches in less than half an hour, This will astonish all those who are unanguainted with the wonder of plant life. Instead of this I was startled to see in the air above the spot 'where the mango had been buried the form of a large tree, &t first rather indistinctiy presenting as it were mere hazy out- lines, but becoming visibly more dis- tinct until at length there stood as nat- | | ural a tree as ever I had seen in fy life mango tree about fifty feet high and full foliage with mangoes on it. A Shadowless Tree. All this happened within five minutes of the burying of the fruit. It may have been three minutes till I saw the tree, but as I had been at first looking intently at the spot where the mango was planted, the apparition may have been there even sooner. I was so in- tensely surprised at what I beheld that | the fact that I! I could hardly realize was not dreaming. There stood a tree, to-all intents and purposes as natural as any tree could have appeared to human eyes--a huge tree, with a stem at least two feet in thickness at iis 5 base. And yet there was something strange about this tree, something unearthly, something gruesome, There was a welrd rigidness about it, not one leaf moving in the breeze; it stood there as if carv- ed out of some hard' solid, like the obelisk on the Thames Embankment. Another curious feature I noticed--the leaves seemed to obscure the sun's rays and yet I could not detect a particle of shade; it was a tree without a shadow. But the most amazing thing of all was this: after havihg gazed at it for about two or three minutes, 1 slowly approached it, wishing to make a clos- er examination of the stem and, if possible, to secure some of the leaves Now in proportion as I drew near 'the | tree seemed to lose its distinctness; its outlines became blurred and faded so that I had to strain my eyes to retain the impression of its form until wheh about ten yards from the supposed stein the apparition had completely vanished, Only the smiled as he caught my eye, but his | louk was one I shall not gait forget. Not Too Near Nor Too Ear. And my surprise did not end here, for no sooner had I commenced retracing my steps than the outlines of the, tree appeared once more, growing more dis- tinct with every step till, at last, when | reaching the spot where I had origin- ! ally stood, it resumed the same marvel- lous reality. Precisely the same thing happened when, instead of approaching the tree, I went further away from it It faded, and finally disappeared com- pletely when I had about double 'the distance; then came back again and appeared as distinct as'ever when [I got to my original position. And it was evi- dent 'that all the rest of the onlodkers underwent the same experience, viz, each individual saw the tree only froin the place where "he stood. The mango tree had now been in view | fully twenty minutes, during which a large concourse of people had gathered, The adept who, until then, had not opened his lips, now placed a small mat | of cocoanut fibre on the ground, and squatted down on it, eastern fashion, with his legs crossed, which was at | ! once interpreted by 'the people as a sign that he wanted to addfess them. The Hindus squatted likewise, and most of them came around to the side where « they could facé him. A Buddha Birth Tale. "Once." he began, "when Brahmadat« ta was King of Benares, the Bodhisatta was born as a white crane, far in the Nellgherry mounting, near a lake where the lotus never fadés." And then he went on, giving the details of one of those strange and beautiful Jatakas, or Risili-tales of Buddha, of which an la- GAR DINER"S Insurance and Real Fstats. Eight Companies at Lowest "Rates Money to Loan ofi Real Estaté 151 Wellington Street ould cause a scusation such as Oc- | ui ing a circle of perhaps sixty yards in | adhu" stood there, and he | one, apparently, for it felt rather I expressed my surprise at his wofiderful powers and complimented him on his eloquence, but he merely smiled. I then offered him two rupees and tried to engage him in conversation, but he refused the present on th ground that a Sadhu who practised Voga Vidya was not in need of money, and he begged to be excused as he had a great way to go. A Very Real Mango. This was my first experience of the famous mango feat, which I witnessed five times in various parts of India. On one occasion I saw it performed in a | Httle village in the valley of Kashmir | near Srinagar, in the Himalayas, by a | certain Ram Surash, an adept famous throughout the Punjab, apd I am al- most afraid to record this experience, as it may be deemed utterly incredible. Yet I am telling here no ideal fairy tales. The mango tree which this adept produced did not vanish in proportion as I approached it, but retained Ms fuii realism, and I not only touched it, but actually climbed several feet up its stem, % On the west coast of India, about 230 miles north of Bombay, lies the city of Baroda. It is the eapital of one of the semi-independent native states, Gusze- rat, and is ruled by a Maharatta prince | who bears fhe title of Geakwar, which in plain English means "cowherd™ It Wak th TEont of The Geakwars palace, In the open air and in broad daylight, that I first witnessed the illusion, which, in the opinion of the Hindus themselves, is the climax of Sadhu achievement, viz, the celebrated rope trick. I say illusion, not because the performance | gives one any such impression, or as it that word afforded some kind of ex- planation, but for want of a better term at the present moment. What I saw |.appeared to be just as real as the fact that I am now engaged in penning these lines. A "Sadhu" after having addressed a large assemblage of people, and preach- | ed one of the mdst impressive sermons | T ever listened to, took a rope about fif- | teen feet long and perhaps an inch thick. One end of this rope he held in his left hand, while with the right he | threw the other end up in the alr. The rope, instead of coming down again, remained suspended, even after thé adept had removed his other hand, and it seemed to have become as rigid as a pillar. Then the adept seized it with both hands, and, to my utter amazement, climped up this rope, suspended all the time, In defiance of, gravity, with the lower end at least five feet from the ground And in proportion as he climbed up it seemed as if the rope was lengthening out indefinitely above him and disappearing beneath him, for he kept on climbing until he was fairly out | of sight, and the, last I could distin-! guish was his white turban and a plece of the never-ending rope. Then my eyes could endure the glare of the sky no longer, and when I lookél again he was gone, I have seen this marvellous feat on four different occasions, performed in precisely the same manner, and the mystery scemed only to deepen with each repetition. Tt has Been the stand- ing wonder of India from a time ante- | dating perhaps the building of the first | pyramid Marco Polo was profoundly impressed with it, and Tavernier, who visited India about the middle of the seventeenth century, speaks of it in terms which plainly denote his bewild- erment, A tbs Gloves and Microbes. It was noticed in Paris when King | Edward was there that he always ap- | peared In -public with his right hand gloved, but not his left. As it is a com- mon practice to carry the right glove loose and not the left, much specuta- tion has been excited by the King's re- versal of this custom. One learned | writer suggests that it Is due to a sound perception of hygienic propriety. The object of a glove, he says, is not to adorn but to proiect the hand. Which hand has the more constant employ- ment and is therefore brought into clog- | er contact with microbes? Why, the right hand. It follows that in keeping | .that hand gloved the King shows his unfailing sense. a | -------------- Irish Fue! Supply, Experts claim that Irish bogs® are | capable of turning out 56,600,000 tons of fuel per year for a thousand years, and if this wére sold at the moderate | figure of bs. per ton it would bring in £12,500,000 a year. When this sum is multiplied by a thousand it wil be | | seen that Ireland is richer in undevel- | i oped resources than is sometimes Ime | agined. It ig claimed for the new fuel that it is practically smokeless, that | it has no ¢linker or einder, deteriorates but little by keeping, does not crum- ! ble by handling, and has high calorific power. Only Half the Brain Work. Prof. Symes Thompson lectured-the , other evening before the Gresham Col- lege, London, on "The Nervous Sys- tem." In every man's brain there ars many cells walting to be developed, he said, and as a matter of fact the nor- mal person uses only half of the brain, the other haif being kept in reserve, Have no equal as a prompt and posi- tive cure for sick headache, bilions ness, constipation, pain in the side, and all liver troubles, Carter's Little Liver Pills, Try them. The damning doubts are those that Where Is That Adept Now? deter us from good deeds, . turn-to k ECAY is not digestion, yoi fhe food, Just aa Salva mises know, even when it takes = caref fablets,. place in the stomach, that Food decayed in the body after 'being eaten is as dangerous #< health as food before being eaters Yan ; Food nourishes or poisons, just J Nutriment ing to how long it remains in the Bowels them in going throughs und 8 ; El Cascarets are the simplest and surest 7 ee Sold in a thin Enamel Box, half as a ahi Baw thick as your watch, which fits into the the little Gastrio and Vist pocket or lady's purse as if it grew flow, or too little flow of D Here, ¢ .. to change the food In In this round-edged Enamel box are Then, the. food' One of these toothsome tablets works wonders for digestion. : Soon as placed in the mouth it starts the Saliva flowing, which at orice gets to work dissolving it. The Saliva becomes blended with the Candy Cascaret tablet, and from the 1 oie of the Bowels and Iniestines moment they start going down your Bath open-al ols throat together they start working to- prob oi E : Baorclen, tion Ca Food, into the tion it should have Now, Cascarets contain the bination of drugs that Steen gether. - 3 Now, what do they work at? Bowel Te Thefblors ao he work, of course,--Digestion, wd result that a Six Mile walk in the country 0s would produce, without any injurious Some folks think Digestion takes place~ Chemical effect, Ya La in the Stomach only. i.e But that's a great mistake! The Vest Pocket Casoaret Box is sold Most of the Digestion occurs in the by all Druggists, at Ten Cents. g thirty feet of Intestines that connect with n the Stomach, Now, these Intestines, are 30 feet long, = never sold in for a purpose. "coc." They are lined with a set of little mouths, that squeeze Digestive Juices into the Food eaten, . The Digestive Juices thus mix with new season has in store for men in Suits and Top Coats, Daily, we show some a) 4 fd advanced conceit of fashions some tnusual pattern--' exclusive with us. Daily, men are coming here to find out what is proper £4 for spring wear--from the recognized authority on * | correct dress. Rely on Fit Reform for the new things in Suits and" Top Coats, E. P. Jenkins, - Are manufactured fromsan fish linen that i specially woven for them. Ji will not wear out prematurely or break 4 as does the linen in ordinary Collars. h Actual laundry tests, extending over a quarter century, have proven that this is the best linen ever put into a 20c Collar. ; Made in all popular shapes and tws grades, selling at 15¢ and 20c. TOOKE BROTHERS,

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