Daily British Whig (1850), 30 Mar 1907, p. 15

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~4 TTT YT TTY VALUE OF FRESH FRUIT JUICES 3 est Wonders of the Age. ade Well by Taking Advantage Physician's Discovery. fruit {in a highly intensified degree. Then s na-| valuable tonics and internal antisep- regu- | tics were added and the whole pressed Uns | into tablets. le of These are * Fruit-a-tives" the won- ities. | derful Liver Tablets you hear so much it to! about. * Fruit-a-tives * cure the most con- | obstinate cases of non-action of the fibre | bowels, biliousness, headaches, sleep- .tom- | lessmess, nervousness, kidney trouble, rheumatism, sciatica and neuralgia. od a| They are the greatest blood purifying ities. | medicine In the world, while thelr act- +. or-| ion on the skin, In clearing and beauti- fore- | fying the complexion, is nothing short prin- | of marvelous. Ask your druggist for pebls, | " Fruit-a-tives and see that you get This | them. 50c a box, 6 for $250. By mall, g all| postpaid, from Fruit-a-tives Limited, --and | Ottawa. 11s WE CATER THE 'WANTS OF YOUR FEET ing after your shoe wants. No ill ever wear poor shoes if we . We Can. 2 Always Have. s of this store shall wear nothing cing, comfortable shoes. They Des. Je Can Prevent It. ways Have. ns of this store will never pay es they buy here. We think we ways have. ierland & Bro, OF GOOD SHOEMAKING to the grave, a slow, continuous growth , in the knowledge, of the love of Jesus of The | Christ--that going from strength to strength until they come to appear be- fore their God in Zion. Such was the h con- | conversion of Timothy. St. Paul said will to {of him, "from a child thou hast' known re two | the Holy Scriptures, which are able to strik- | make thee wise unto salvation." He was "a few | born of religious parents. St. Paul of St. | could recall the unfeigned faith which from | Was in him, dwelt first in his grand- feed to | mother Lois and in his mother Eunice. at until | It is to such conversions as these, others | surely, that the words of Scripture may sudden | 2pply, "The Kingdom of God cometh ¢ been | NOt with observation, for the King- hement | dom of God is within you," or, again, ins. Jt the mustard seed, the least of all seeds, en the which by degrees grows to the greatest r 'some | of all trees. narrow ps the down Almost Christian. emotra-| In an gut-of-the-way part of Hunan, remem- | Central China, is a village of 1,000 peo- er was | ple almost as truly Christian as any h community of similar size in this coun- now he | try. Thess is 2 Se ised congre- d place tion with a cha iit by the mem- Pe themselves. The two Buddhist me fire | temples are in disrepair, with idols "| falling to pieces; there are no worship- rs. Christian forces are displacing eathen superstition. It is an inspiring imper- | sight to see these happy people; to hear on | them sing and to witness their enthiisj- ad asm. That condition is the result of ten cradle | years of Christian work. eo ut the * Safe Lock * Shingle, deat shingles. Several imitations ave not solved the vital problem of es. E Lock ** Shingles are nailed above the lock. the Jock, thus leaving nail holes exposed to i moisture, . slvanized, * Safe Lock " Shingles will never or dirt can ledge on their smooth surface, and s clean rainwater in the cistern. Besides, our d "Safe Lock" Shingles fay be counted upon ast a generation, without one cent for repdirs, t take our word for this, alone. Ask our sipimers in your neighborhood, bow they 'We'll send you a list of users ia your county, if you write us. Rn Toe Meta Shighe & Sag Cs. L1G Presi, Oot. nothing of that with York: It mixes without change of flavor, imparts a delicious zest to spirits, de- wvelops their bouquet, enhances their taste while diluting their strength. York Sparks is the purest natural water known, carbon- ated with PURIFIED gas and Bottled at the Springs for surety of purity Does the stomach good and gives the palate pleasure. Fine for table use YORK SPARKS 1 Is better yet costs no more ,, [E3= For Sale by Rigney Hickey, James McParland What We Claim for Ferrol FERROL is an Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil, and if it were nothing more it would take front rank because * "of the quality and quantity of the oil used and the scientific method of preparation. But FERROL has special claims which take it out of the ordinary class of Emulsion altogether. For instance: FERROL combines Iron and Phosphorus with the oil, and no other emulsion contains these ingredients, although it is well 'known that they should always be administered together, as each is the complement ot the other. FERROL is so- scientifically prepared that the first processes of digestion are actually performed in the process of manufacture, and the emulsion is ready for instant absorption into the blood. "This is of the utmost importance to persons with delicate stomachs. ERRO unlike other emulsions, is positively palatable, and not one in a thousand find any difficulty in taking it. FERROL contains the three essentials of life, viz.: Fat, Iron, and Phosphorus--they have never been combined before. FERROL holds the record for increasing the weight. FERROL has received more endorsations from medical men than any other preparation on the market. : : FERROL will cure any case of Consumption that is capable of cure. FERROL is an absolute specific for Colds, Croup, Bronchitis and all kindred troubles. FERROL is an unfailing remedy for nervous pros- tration, Chronic Rheumatism and Neuralgia. Finally, the formula is freely published, and in taking FERROL you * Know what you take." G. W. MAHOOD, AGENT. TE >Pure Soap Has no equal for washing SILKS LACES TABLE LINENS ETC. because it thoroughly ) cleanses without boiling or rubbing, so that thé finest thread is not worn in the least. Don't use common soaps, but insist on getting "RICHARDS Pure." Write for cur handsome illus- trated Catalogue of Premiums iven free for Richards Pure wrappers. Mail us FIVE Richards Pure ot, WS WE APure Soap Ce country, but their voices, THE DAILY WHIG, SATURDAY, MARCH 30. BROADBRIN' Letter From Greater New York. YOUNG CRIMINALS PROVE TO BE BOYS ' WELL EDUCATED: The Good Work of Anthony Com- stock--Broadbrim Deals With Grand Opera and Tells of Happy Days of His Youth. Special Correspondence; Lotter No. 1,557 New York, March 25. ~The arrest of eleven burglars whose ages varied be tween eight and fifteen years, has suddenly awakened our community to the startling fact that more than ones hali of the robberies and assaults that occupy the attention of our criminal courts are the work of comparative boys, between the ages of twelve and cighteen years. Many suppose that this is the result of their criminal en- vironment but it is nothing of the sort... The eleven young robbers that the police picked up last week, red handed, with the plunder on their per- sons, were every onc of them members of ungucstionably respectable families, and the leader was a hardened ruffiian aged fifteen, who had on his person, ready for instant use if detected in bis thievery, a black-jack of home manu- facture, that with a single blow would have' cracked the skull of a rhinoceros. This desperate villain was a model EMPRESS MARIE OF RUSSIA, Who is now visiting her sister Queen Alexandra, of England, for the urst time in years. It is satd that her trip Ww London was taken also to give relief from the constant fear of anarchists in St. Petersburg DOWAGER scholar, always at the head of hws class, who had won dozens of diplo mas for proficient scholarship and J cellent deportment, and would hav graduated next week. When he was arraigned before the magistrate his sisters brought his diplomas and me dals as an evidence of his good char acter, but the black-jack and a pocket full of plunder outweighed them all, so he will be sent to Ward's Island te remain there till he is twenty-one. You may ask : "What has brought ubout this fearful condition among our ho, Lhe answer is simple. 'Lhis city and the entire country is Hooaed with thar class of "yellow literatures" which «x alts the thief and the wnardiaer sad makes him appear as a hero and a martyr, and paints the honest man who suffers through aim {5s a coward and a poltroon. We have & man 1m our city who has been in the gov ernment's service neac'y forty years His life has been devot:d to hunting down the criminals who have been de bauchiig our youth. Hundreds. of tons of this vile stuff he has seized and destroyed, but the trade is so profit able that the loss is soon replaced and the corruption of our boys still goes on. During the forty years that An thony Comstock has been engaged in his perilous service, he has carried his life in his hand but he has never fal: ered. Time and again he has been at- tacked by the murderous tradesmen, whose filthy 'property he was destroy ing; he bears on his face a disfiguring scar which he will carry to his grave and which iz an ensign of his honora- ble service. In' the performance of his allotted life-work he has frequently se cared nothing but insults from 'the court and the police. His life has been one long deadly peril, but he performs his duty bravely and nobly, and so he will continue to do to the end. When the day shall come, as come it surely will, when he passes away peacefully in his own home surrounded by loving friends, or goes down to death in the van of the battle, when they lay his honored ashes to rest in Greenwood cemetery, that magnificent necropolis, where rests the sacred dust of our country's most honored dead--in that splendid convocation of granite, mar- ble and bronze, there will be no shrine more worthy of reverence and honor than that of Anthony Comatock Our opera season is ended and now is a good time to figure on the profit and loss. The cost of Grand Opera at the Metropolitan in the past year hag been. in round numbers, $2,000, 000, and now that Dall the bills are paid the trial-balanee on the ledger shows a deficit of £70,000. Mr. Con- reid has conducted the grand opera at the house for the last two seasons, and as far as quality is concerned no- thing could be more satisfactory, but the cost has been fearful. The wealthy subscribers gaye him to understand that they wanted > the best that the market afforded, and he gave it to them. Notwithstanding the deficit of £70.000, the ledger shows a cash re eceipt of $55,000 over the previous year. Mr. Conreid "gcems to have giv- en his singers whatever they demand- ed. They received no such compensa- tion for their 'services in any other country, as they did in the United States; they "bring nothing inte fh . \ depart, loavi nothing but a mem- ory behind, They are the most exact ing class with which the public has to deal. They absorb everything while here, and they leave nothing behind when they go. Every dollar goes to Europe and to just that extent the wealth of our country is depleted. Do not understand from what | have said that 1 am averse to grand opera, for I love good music and believe the nation 1s better that cultivates and encourages it. My dislike is the enor mous prices paid to foreign singers, who grasp everything and -ield noth- ing. The man . who builds an opera house like that of Oscar Hammer: stein, gives something that we can sew and enjoy ourselves in during years to come. The money that he hus he spends here. Let our rich people who now support in reckless extravagance present grand opera, encourage home talent, and we will soon see the best teachers in Europe flocking to the United States and it would not be long before Europe would be sending to us for prima donnas, contraltos, tenors, baritones, and bassos to sup-! ply the places of those who are now sailing away from us. We could then | have grand opera for the milion as well as the millionaires | several fine vocal teachers in the city | now, and moat American prima don- | nas that Paris has seen and heard re- | ceived the best part of their vocal! training - in New York. let me! here mention for the benefit of our | British, German and Italian cousins, | that the love of music is not a new | feature in our American life Fifty | and a hupdred years dgo there was! not a village or hamlet that boasted oa dozen houses, a blacksmith shop, a post office and a hotel, but it had its singing school around which cling | some of the brightest and dearest] memories of the past. It was there| that the smart young fellows met their the plans of their future lives, happily consummated later on. Who can ever forget those delightiul sleigh rides, thro the sharp, crispy, frosty win- ter 'mights, as' we dashed over the snowy road, smooth as a sheet of glass, while the happy company was packed in the straw like sardines inn box, and the sleigh was never so full, but there was room for one more Happy nights those ! Yes, and bright now among the golden memories of the past. We gathered our inspiration to sing from "The Boston Academy," and "The Carman Sacra." It is true, that we knew nothing of Verdi, Wag ner, of vaudeville or of grand opera with its $3,000 a night and 215 for a parquette seat in baldhead row, but if | in hours of inspiration, we desired to stir the hearts of the sinners present | with something less classic but more effectunl, we gave them, "Ninety and | Nine," and made the welkin ring with the soul-stirring strains of "Hold the | ort."" These memories are an oasis on | the desert sands of life. They are gold. | en dreams, fateless and beautiful, and | are all that remain to me of life, un- | seen and intangible to others, but to me solid facts that uphold the pillars of Eternity. So that with humble spirit I can bide my time, can watch | and wait-- "If it te not now it will come, the readiness is ali "As no man taketh out of the world] more than be bringeth into it, so jet | it be | "There is a special Providence, eveo in | wn sparrow's fall { BROADBRIM. | ---- | | Heals Like A Magic Wade's Ointment is more than a soothing, healing application. It is antiseptic and germicide. It heals: it prevents the infection of wounds by gorms and it destroys the germs or annoying and Cures eczemg, | parasites that cau stubborn skin dise salt rheum, scald head, cold sores, erysipelas, piles, ete. 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