Daily British Whig (1850), 8 Jun 1907, p. 10

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MOONEY'S ! erfection Cream Sodas air-tight, moisture-proof, dust-proof times as much in any + Yet they cost little more they're good § Our Classified Steel Ceilings ana Walls | mmm pp hon o r orking plans make it to erect a ceiling with po invisib}, ints "which you th be TEVIOTDALE, Oxt., Nov. 2, 1908, 1 leased with the Ceili sorry did not put it a1 through the Tous wuly 'ours truly, v (Signed), Ww. 6. NICHOLSON. tite us, and we will gladly give you complete "and you on I i. catalogue and * Book of References." hay tively free to hi re mPlete trials and if you shoutd wish to continue, it a or less a day. It will not interfere with oe your name and tell me-how you suffer, if you wish, a wi return really 1 woman', "0-day, us you may mot see this RSwox 1., 11. . . - Dr, KOHR'S RESTORINE 3 and Stops to ten day ater A a retlpeny, The shin clean, Ta s the evesbright. Conf returns, step elastic, bowels regular. Hn dicho disa; he mind heomes Lright and active. A Find p> , the min es and active, - for brain 3nd Blood: A 00 matter ts n sealed pack: e will treat you . . Do tate a moment, x With sacrtasing with hopest MEDICINE Co. P.0. DrawEn L 2341 MONTREAL. SERA: The Metal Shingle & Siding Co. Listed, Preston, ont, ENR makes women send me your address, and the free ten days' tmant is * SWINDSG, Ont. ae 2 TFB mse Servia - ns, No Great Horror Over Going Sp ial Correspondence; Letter No. Belgrade, Servin; May BT break on Easter morning, when od, and the rated, remained silent since music the choruses in Servian richness tone .and harmony. voices, particularly the basso, choirmaster, who conducted +t special singing. The sepulchre had, Course, been removed, ments of the metropolitan and t fourteen priests of the Greek church, gorgeous. Easter Monday 'was, Course, observed as holidays, Sundays included, are of served in In," place on the exhibition for their hair elaborately decked with artificial frui vertise at once to dark skins and once for women of these regions. Of course there are notable struck me that the them of many graces. To return to the Kola. monotontus jig-likd dance performed music. The strolling musicians, with and a bass a long chain of jigging dancers is crowd, but chiefly in a circle, the mu- sicinns following, sometimes with dif- ficulty, over bass viol, topped sometimes with the player's hat, removed from his per- spiring brow, bringing up the rear, the player scraping away cheerfully, as he stumbles after 'the others. There is little variety of either music or movement, yet it is astonishing with what zest the young people of both sexes join the chain of dancers, and continue the exercise with ever increasing liveliness until a sudden stoppage of the music breaks up the dance, when another note or two calls forth fresh dancers. Soméwhat allied to this dance is the dance of the Hup- garians, known as the "'charadas." The monotony of movement and mu- sic is somewhat similar but the char ades is danced by separate couples, with evér increasing rapidity to the most weird music. resembling a wind: storm sweeping through the forest, with shrieking of witches, and howling tempest. This dance seems more artis- tic than the kola, but my comparison nay not he fair, inasmuch as I have eoen: the latter simply as danced by the peasants and gypsies on the bare ground or turf, to rude accompani- ment, while the Hungarian dance was performed at a private party by two Indies of the Hungarian nobility, with their partners, accompanied by a skill- ed Hungarian orchestra and the con- ished floors and electric lights. One of the dancers informed me that the 2vp- sie of Hungary dance the charadas with much greater freedom and 'aban- don than iz permitted to ladies of their rank--which I ean well helieve. ~The dancing was 'but' one feature of the Fair I have referred to. Brass bands, refreshments booths, ice cream carts and many side shows catered to the multitude. We witnessed the im- mortal tragedy of Punch and Judy, performed in a conjuror's tent, . the squeaky tomes of Mr. Punch'®s voice being in accordance with time-honored precedent, but he talked for the time being in the Servian tongue, while a decidedly continental beard adorned his usually prominent chin. The occasion of this annual Fair ] A Canadians impression OF] [A READING PEOPLE|: to of Jail--Sunday a Day of Wed- oly o dings-<The Serbs Cleaner Than the Italians. 5. de- vout Servian attends church near Say. climax of the Christian year is reach- resurrection is comnfemo- The church bells, which have Friday, From and festivities, which has pre- iment--there beine no organs i churches--with wonderful ot She low jaw were excellent and had been well drilled by and the vest- who assisted him, the incense, and the elaborate ritual were rich and a holiday--1307 pocges. I e Servian year--and at Topchider much dancing of the "Ko- the Servian national dance, took green. On the succeeding days of Easter week. however, a bet- ter exhibition of this invigoratj 2 ex- ercise of the peasantry was al orded us at a fair held in the churchyard of St. Mark's chapel--and an interesting festern eyes it is The J Peasant asses Ye in their best finery, dressed and t.and flowers and hung with scores of gold or silver coins, which jingle as they dance and adv the admiring and are often eclipsed by those whose raven locks may be decked only with a kerchief, yet are made attractive by their white teeth and liquid black eyes. I may as well, all, venture to express an opinion formed after some six weeks travel in Italy and the Balkans. name- ly, that the average of good looks is much higher ' among the men than | ces, exceptions to the rule, but both here and in Ttaly it has burden of labor Which is and had been borne by wo- men from time immemorial has robbed It is a to the accompaniment of monotonous two, three and four stringed fiddles viol, strike up, two or three bystanders join hands and begin a shuffling measure, others join, until formed, who move in and about the the uneven ground--the hip. comitants of fashionable dresses, pol Peause RAE This is where the Servian ingenui | | saves the situation and the liherty the press is secured, while the dignj a man to go %o jail in the name of t sponsible editor." He is a person fe no, particular character or consay Ol whenever called for in the interest his employer. tor is not disturbed or distracted hié editorial work. ox ri tale, to for me by man am to prevails in some parts of France, To "go to jail" seems not to he of respectable b- lands. A change of government is, am told, us of his colleagues. of the present government, the mier recommending swaing their worth in money, their fice, good naturedly assuring him proficiency in dancing and their per- | that he would find it more comfort- sonal charms. "These latter, if the | able than the other dungeons, as h truth be told, are . not transcendent, | had during his term had it rendered more halutable for a political prison me out a bad politidlan," he said , | ries a pedometer in daily walks, himself twenty thousand steps a day, as necessary to his health, when in prison. Sunday is a day of weddings here-- the "Slava" of Cupid, so to speak. The priests of 'other parishes have the of their parishioners in the cathedral, and each Punday a succession of these interesting events is 'witnessed by a concourse of both sexes. who have, not only one, but many brides to ad- mire or criticize. The bri s however, is a much less conspicuous figure than his best man. The latter wears a broad white sash across the right shoulder and breast, tied at the Otherwise, the wedding party, including the bride, are dressed much ,a8 in Canada or other civilized lands. I am writing, of course, of the city well-to-do folk of Belgrade, who are a well and fashionably dressed people To Get More Strength from Your Food. ' -- . HEN the Bowels are filled with undigested food 'we may be a great deal worse off than if we were half starved, Because food that stays too long in the Bowels decays there, just as if it stayed too long in the open air. Well, when food decays in the Bowels, through delayed and overdue action, what happens? The millions of little Suction Pumps that line the Bowels and Intestines then draw Poison from the decayed Food, instead of the Nourishment they were intended to draw, This Poison gets into the blood and, in time, spreads all over the body, unless the Cause of Constipation is promptly removed, » That cause of Constipation is Weak, or Lazy Bowel Muscles. I When your Bowel-Muscles grow flabby they need Exercise to strengthen them, not "Physic" to pamper them. There's only one kind of Artificial Ex- ercise for the Bowel-Muscles, Its name is "CASCARETS," and its price is Ten Cents a box. So, if you want the same natural action that a six mile walk in the country wauld give you, (without the weariness) take one Cascaret at a' time, with intervals between, till you reach the exact condition you desire. One Cascaret at a time will properly Seems to be the festival or slava of | cleanse a foul Breath, or Coated Tongue. St. Mark's day--which we had seen commemorated under a different calen- dar and different circumstances at Venice. The Slava is an ancient in- | stitution of Servia. Each family ce- lebrates its Slava once a year--on the date when their ancestors becasie con. | verted to Christianity, or rather the - » - Don't fail to carry the Vest Pocket Cascaret Box with you constantly. All Druggists sell them--over ten million boxes a year. Be very careful to get the genuine, .day of the saint who supposedly con- only by the Sterling Remedy Com- verted them. A cake is hlessed ] 3 cut by the priest jn the morning, tad stamped "CCC. pany and never sold in bulk. Every tablet characters-- pn letters Hows as the 4 t--resembling in part ussion and in part the Greek al- which one sees on the signs and windows of every shop and office. selves open to prosecution, which means that someone must go to Jail. pheld. Each paper hires journal when so required. Mis name is printed in the - paper as the '*ye- ence and he is willing to "serve time" Meantime the real edi- This is no comic but solema inst, attssted wit. | has a similar practice | National Theatre, regarded with the horror which the same experience arouses in some other y followed by the im- prisonment of the ex-premier or some The present popu- lar prime minister, who is just now in London, has been two or three times in-prison.--1he-prime minister hdr" King Milan, by whose order he was imprisoned, was in turn sent to pris- by the order or under pr. i winds - Wo Scution Turkish invasion and 500 years of oc- the cell he himself had occupied to his predecessor in of- "I shall write a book of my experien- sd added laughingly. He car- is waistooat poc- ket, with which he still regulates his | and having prescribed for privilege of celebrating the marriages ! dent. Lg procession intervals. 1 am that as on one all very handsomely dressed, the customary white with bridal veils. I granted by-the synod of the church, all accbunts, however, the jour- | Spe reported very numerous and read. Good rals run to license and are very point- ily inable for slight S inte "aot fotivignd the, ban UPOR (cd, "mot to say persanal. mm heir can | 2, Qieinable fot slight cxuses. Some i ten | vailed through Holy Week, is removed. mente, and in consequence often lay At the forenoon service at the cathed- ral a choir of men and women in the pts. i) ral a hole l out the service, without instrumental six hundred cases are said to await the judgment of the next session -- though agnin I cannot vouch for the figures. - ty | Anot of | May household movement. ty | ago yesterday (1st May, the movement still continues. of | were making of residences--the majority one-storied-- gives the impression in | pancy. Punch and "Judy. That of Hamlet has 'been holding the boards at the As it too is ren- the triumphs of an American wrestler, who has got the better of many anta- 1 | gonists, white and black, at the circus here. Short excursions by steamboat Sauve and Danube respectively have made pleasant pastimes. Passing be- neath the old fortress, with. jts base tions, moats and ancient Turkish "torture tower," invites reminiscences of old days of Servian rule, of the cupation,of the final throwing off of the Turkish yoke 'and the alternating rule of the rival Karageorgovitch and vitch dynastics, the latter end- e | ed by Alexander's death. the former now in occupation of the throne. That - | the tragedy just referred to could have er. The. former premier donned holi- happened less than four years ago, it day attire and went cheerfully to the [is difficult to realize, as one stands fortress, which does duty as prison. | amid groups of quiet, orderly citizens I met him the other day, when he on the main thoroughfare of the city, spoke jocularly of his exper: . "I | listening to the music of the fine regi- was a good doctor, am they made | mental band stationed in the palace garden on the site of the old palace-- now destroyed--as near as may be to the very spot where the gruesome was done. Trolley cars passing repassing, courteaus, sober men and modestly behaved women (I have seen none others in Belgrade streets), officers saluting one another with graceful dignity, well-ordered outdoor cakes and cabstands few vards off--all serve to obliterate the thought of that evening of horrors and give one the impression that it is but a phantasm of a disordered mind. Passing the fortress by steamboat, a fine view of the east side of the city is obtained, succeeded by a pan- orama of quiet homes along the shore and well tilled hillsides beyond, sug- gesting parts of French Canada; while as the eve wanders over the apparent- ly limitless expanse of the swollen Danube, dotted with verdant islets, the impression of a Canadian that he is looking at the stretches of the St. wrence among its Thousand Islands is strong. A few final impresdions of attractive Belgrade--attractive in spite of its rough pavements. Its common people are more cleanly in their habits than the same class of Italians. If not more industrious and thrifty, they are more self-respecting. Beggars are not numerous. They are respectful to each other and to strangers. Socialism of a mild and orderly kind seems preval- ent among the industrial classes. We witnessed a procession of socialists, which was said to number 5,000 men end women, a day or two after our arrival here. We have received such kindness and courtesy from Servians in their homes. To the British and foreign diplomatic corps of the Servi- an capital in general we are indebted for many courtesies: --C. 0. ERMATINGER, IN SCHOOL WITH HER SON. Iowa Woman Proves Herself a ¢ Clever Pupil. Not long ago 'fifty-year-old Iowa editor started his college course at the State University, and now an Iowa woman is going through high school with her son. Perhaps the only case of mother and son attending pub- lic school together, says the Clinton Herald, is that of Mrs, Elly Feldman and Worth Feldman, classmates in the Sioux City high school: Finding her son somewhat indiffer- ent to the@ys of student life, Mrs. Feldman has adopted the course of studying side by side with him. It us two years ago that Mrs. Feldman first tried the plan of attending night school. She and her son graduated to the sixth grade of. the Armstrong school, where both are now doing good work, 3 Mrs. Feldman is said by her instrue- tors to be an especially apt pupil, her interest in _class work being much greater than that of the average stu Mrs. Feldman is the owner of a quarter of a block at Fifth and Court streets, whercon she has eleven hous- es. While attending she employs' a housekeeper, while Mr. Feldman is the superintenden€ of her realty interests. She has been in the restfurant busi- ness in Sioux City, having kept three different eating places during hér busi- ness, career. ------ Talk is cheap if you get it from a 08sip, Fe Oné succecds another at brief told as sixty couples have been married ] Sunday at the cathedral -- though I cannot vouch for this. Three brides looking very attractive in the regret to say that divorces, which are spring custom here is the A week old style) Streets were alive with bullock he | carts laden with household. effects, and Mt seems as if half the households of Belgrade i a Mayday migration, u- | while fresh coats of cream color on the stucco clad walls of many of the of fresh oceu- I have mentioned the tragedy of | in Servian, I have not ventured be | to witness the performance, nor yet Salt-- "Its ingredients have been repeatedly analyzed by exper chemists, and have been pro- nounced fully up to the i of the test for purity as laid down in they latest edition of the British Phar. macopea. We consider Abbey's the best effervescing salt made in any country." Get well and keep well by taking a morning glass of Abbey's = 25c. and 6oc. a bottle. 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