Daily British Whig (1850), 14 Mar 1908, p. 12

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THE DAILY BRITISH WHIC, SATURDAY, MAR ee. IS A REMARKABLE WAN, Sebool Childre Tr The Success M. i Yuan Shi K u ino °o 3] i ; i . : : . J d M : cokes il re dc Ts 7 i ¥ i y ; 4 » Ye dati n & 5 % ; ae l JOD) o a 3 Jas Chinese ei er firmer "Ei nce 1 N A, f i rasp on this biggest and 'mobt bewil pops, Lomter th ds | ER ug od of the world's governmental How much for the bank this 7. , / 3 ; ; ) peohicina. netically a pelt made week 7' 0 : } : man (his [Ww C ) "Why, Emma ! That makes vour a \ : ! / worked up from rank to rank, 'himself bank account $8. You will pet inter : 3 ' a part and a product of ihe antiqua- el on your savings from today on.' 4 : = Loy - H : ted absolutism of his Seuntry, until In more than a thousand hool 5 A ' ; : va 4b he emerged at the top, a red-button houses, in more than a hundred cities, 7 1 Ln Fo mandaria, a viceroy, with a personal in more than a Wore of states, dia: \ | 1 ] Fe § ity towering above the wrstitious, logue of this kind go on every Mon- X : J fi ba x tradition-ridden court, yet suffi day morning between the teachers and 3 4 / Wl : J ciently able and skilful to' work with nearly 200,000 scholars who are the : hy id and through that court. ¥ thrifty owners of accounts in the . Ee {5 a of ] | We. have seen in an ea School Savings Banks, amounting to | ' g | bow Yuan, then = nearly a million dollars. | i f Within a generation, children by the hundreds of thousands have been launched from the public schools into | | the world of hard reality with the AR x m " . ters, r Priceless habit of Fugular saving in / | a yo eT yy dueing Spe study of Bde science sti into their minds. And an old | « pai ¢ 772 Rides arts 2a me cation | of entleman--a very kindly old gentle- ¢ A A 4 Z ; " v classes. He is committed to the abo nn is still ye and laboring a y Roser § . Zs RS 777 Ai erica 4 J lition of the palace ennuch system. He for the advancement of this simple > : : bas, within the past few months, made and wonderfully efficient training eof i : SNL alg 4 ' great headway with hie bold plan to American youth in the principles of rs since the introdetion of the system of | tation can come only from the man | Femodel this land of fossilized ideas economy, is responsible for it all. a . $5,486,514.48, of which $4,675,597.96 | whose disinterested patriotism has | 100 @ constitutional monarchy, with : Lo -- 2 : ; has been withdeawn, leaving & balance | made them the imposing realities they | ® TePresentative parliament. But first, His name iy J, H, T hiry, and his i of $809,617.22 owned by 177,992 little | are. So here is Mr. Thiry's enlighten. and above all else; he places the ome is in Long Island City, Long| A good many pexsons thought him y vacation, the cashier of the funding X | ing comment 1 ' opium reforms. Unilss this curse can Island, where, twenty-two. years qin | & crauk then, just as many good per- [bank is empowered to receive or pay] These have mucoceded to the lesson | "The rapidity with which extreme | 7° checked, and at least partially re. on March 16th, 1585, he suceseded in | sons have discerned only cranks in | monéys in accordance with the rules, of economy taught the long Proces- | poverty multiplies its vietims is one | Moved, there is no hope of progress. establishing in the city schools the | other men devoted to one big idea, | requiring identification where the child | 8ions of children now developing into | of the startling facts in social sci- first School Savings Bank in the Uni- | because they felt its successful advo. | depositor is not personally known to prudent men and women. The high | ence. The public schools, acti Little Girl's Dress. ted States, A . cacy would use up all their energies. | him, precisely as he does with the Proportion of depositors is apparent | every child, must he the It is the most interesting develop- Very simple is the plan he evolved : | ** rown-ups." _| when their number, 177,979, is com- | agency for the arrest of the evil. ' If ment of the savings bank idea since, | Teachers in the public schools give tensive as has been the growth of pared with the. total number of chil- | every child could be trained to save . "gt in the first grapple with the incubus | only ten minutes of the Monday morn- | Mr. Thiry's idea, it has not been all]dren in attendance at the 1,098 schools | as well as give the knowledge and os (IHRE : of poverty that weighed down upon | ing session to collecting the savings plain sailing. Changing school offi- 000,727, . | habits which assure his earning pow- RE Why rent typewriters f doubiiul England and the continent, Mrs, Pris- | of the children. The deposits, record- | cials have exposed it to setbacka in| All parts of the north shared in the er, much would be done toward sav- Vor y . merit when you can rent " cilla Wakefield, of Tottenham High | ed in the ordinary roll hooks, are | various 'localities. The introduction of | benefit, and the idea soems to have|ing the very poor from temptation j -- 8 Cross, in Middlesex, inaugurated, in | turned over to the principal, "who | manual training, gvmvasium work and | spread nearly straizhtly westward, with | and suffering, LA . ; 1801, her epochal 'Friendly Soe tety | places them with a hank or trust {other features that draw upon the | Some moderate expansion on the dea seh Savings Banks have already \ onarc For The Benefit Of Women And Chil- company. time and energy of teachers has caused | of the movement, { ¥ { excellent results and, at the R/2 ; dren. an : . The child's weekly deposit may be suspension of the School Savings| In Long Island City, where it was | same tim¥) have helped to check and \ Mr. Thiry, who is YEIgIng now up- | one cent; it may be ten--whatever sum | Bank, until it was realized that the|begun, there were 3.900 depositors | prevent pauperism, erime, prodigality ] : S eS on fourscore years and ten, is the | has been saved during the week. When | drain of the system was too trivial to when Mr. Thiry compiled his figures, | and various vices, and lead children NY x father of a brand new baby whom he | the pupil's savings amount to $1, g|be regarded when its great merits | With $37,812.50 to their credit. to the road of thrift and frugality. | o The machine famous for Mght hopes to live to see a depositor in | bank hook is given { morally were duly weighed. At' Le Roy, in Minnesota, thirty out | "The united effect of the practical | / action and beautiful work at the one of the banks he founded in Long | Except in cases of sickness or of re- First enthusiasms have waned at|of the 150 pupils in a school that | lessons of thrift and economy is a / / following rates : Island City's schools long after he | moval from the city, deposits cannot | times, and, frequently where success | opened its bank in 1907 started with | cldaring out of the intellectual avenues ; ' was old enough to have been a grand- | be withdrawn until the amount reach. | was most signal, the rivalries of local | # fund of $62. The 265 stations of | which open upon the moral faculties. | IB ; ONE' MONTH ..vve... 4 4.00 father. If any an ever deserved sugh J es $3, and then only. on the second | banks have brought about the discon- | the New York fund, founded in 1888 | "By the ennobling power of truth re- } FOLLOWING MONTHS -<- 3.00 a réward it is Mr. Thiry. Monday of every month. Deposits of | tinuance of the system in a whole | with 61,114 children out of 150,000 en- | vealed to children and by good sur ) f OR SIX MONTHS He was some sixty five years old | #6 or more bear regular interest. city. gaged in saving, had $110,950.05 Rounding, some uplift is given to their 8 \ . eevane-$15.00 When his unselfish efforts to accom- | Withdrawal of money from an ac-| But the report compiled by Mr. Thi- | their books, © with a history of 83. thoughts and purposes toward that ? Fert RS In event of purchase the rented plish something for his country in a count can be effected when it is indors- (ry when the system was twenty-two | 003,262.26 of total deposits, and $2, [life of honest industry and rational / machine is replaced by a new one Mithuer that should have permanent | ed by the presence of the child's father | years old--in 1907--showed that pupils | 892,282.21 withdrawn. enjoyment which makes him who lives 7 and the first month's rental ap- n " a tor he should pass away came | or mother, and the signature of the | of 1.098 schools, in 13 cities, in twen- : These 'are crude, although not mean-| it a satisfaction to himself and a ZZ $ plied on purchase. a thelr first, modest fruition. { school principal, During the summer! ty-two states, have saved a total ingless, figures, Their best interpre- ! blessing to society." / We. Rave a large stock of wilt n - a re i -------- rims rm ------ a -- EE machines of : other makes Which pony with the comfort and easp of a She has failed in the hunt for a WHEN THE XING EATS may, at all dinners held at Bucking ' ' we will sell at bargain prices. trainer aud the grace of a' queen. | man--this is the explanation offered-- -- ham palace a clean knife is placed| The attractive little dregs shown Write for list, He reviews the sportswoman and the | and with her departing hopes depart-| Some Formalities When Edward [beside each guest with every course, | above was developed in navy blue "a---- - woman who thinks nothing of a long | ed also her self-respect and womanli- 1 : and this rule must be rigidly ohserved | French cloth. The band on the skirt, p ALL: BERLIN RAVES OVER| moms sho. | VII Dines Publicly, The Monarch Typewriter tramp iu the forenoon, |ness, and now she has become a club- {1 ngon Tit-Bites ot all public as well as private din- | the over-blouse edges and belt dre of BEA | and who may be seen in Bond street | dwelling, shrieking fanatic. When his majesty is to preside at a | ners attended by his majesty. And his | Scotch plaid, The over-blouse taps in UTIES. Y, : | in the afternoon, one of the fashion- | She has become a danger to society public dinner a variety of formalities [9ervants take special pains to see that | front in surplice style and short tucks -- | able throng, or 'indulging in a Iktle| seeking revenge on the men who, were | have to be rigidly observed. In the| it is so. are taken up in the shoulder above X w vw On Adaptability and Many-Sidedness | flirtation with an immaculately 'dress- | they Germans, would soon teach her | first place the 'invitation--ineludi a| Dinner must 'be served as soon 8s | the kimona sleeve. A guimpe of Ching 98 King St. W. oronto, Ont, of * English Wonien Excite ed admirer in one of the fashionable something different and put her out | list of - 'the committee, the toast list | his Lajesty a Joated, Nome save | silk was used instead of a lining, and ---------------- | r . tea shops, of harm's way. and the kers--must iw members of the royal family is ex- | the over-blonse is attached to the ¢ Batons Admization, , This adaptability and many sided. -- emo ---- at. B pea Sm. hoy ifeesived peoted to converse with the king until | skirt, The skirt fs wai fire Phim BANTESY . rin BRANCH. Herrigs Mow inl, has gow, One ness of her life is another thing which | BRIGHT EYES, ROSY CHEEKS. [month or six. weeks ahead of the date addressed by him, and a stranger | and has short tucks at the top, thus (Near Princess St.) rid 381, the in "th Ge host hua ousted all excites the German's wonder and ad- proposed for the function, It is then Tuust on no account attempt conyersa- disposing of the fullness around the . - og 3 in ea 'eran - capital--every- | miration, He cannot understand how | Every Girl Can Make Thenmi By submitted to- the king by his' private {tion without a formal introduction. | waist, : be Kati ing about the beauty of | gle can be equally a lady in the sad- Using Pink Pills, secretary, and if the date does pot{The royal Visitor is exceedingly par- A -------- OLD AGE Yu ung a woman, Soe dle or in the drawing room. In the early days of her womanhood | clash with arrangements made pre ticular on this point, and is most pre- The Choice. --T---- . id exhibition of old English por-| He might even wish to marry her if every girl--no matter what her sta- | viously, all other detal being in or| cise in indicating those to whom bey. Bohemian. Comes to sveryome, But Its Visits ry raters How. being held here set {she would fove him, hut he is afraid | gion in life--should be bright, active, | der, the invitation is graciously gc. | Wishes to be introduced, : he A young man stood before the mir May. Te Postponed, h rolling, and the newspapers | she would prove somewhat expensive. | cheerful and happy. Her steps should cepted, ' < . No one is permitted to leave t ror completing the finishing touches Old age is not a question of years. Hid the rest, Yet his experience of young wives} be light, her eye bright and her cheeks] A statement must also be sent ay. | table at a public dioner until all the to a toilet of which he felt justly Some men are old at forty, others ¢ Amid a chorus or praises and com- | who have lived. in the colonies makes | rosy with the glow of health. But the|nouncing the hour at which the func. [members of the royal amily hate proud. . are young at sixty, : ots One hears the question, [him modify this view somewhat, | reverse is the condition of thousands|tion is to begin and when it is ex. | first risen and retired. The king rarely He way going to eqll upon the girl's Its a mighty hard proposition to "How does she come to be so beauti-| They have learned, he remembers, to | of young girls throughout Canada. |pected to end. Thess two points are! smokes at public functions, but a she: widowed mother 16 ask for her daugh- | ook young no matter how young dul?" and the geperally accepted solu- endure hardskips side by side with They drag along, always tired, suffer| most essential, as royalty and pune. | ial room is usually set aside for his | ter's hand in marriage. vou feel it yodr hair' is falling oat Rion to the problem is that the cli- | their hushands, and®they have come from headaches, breathless and with | tuality are Synonymous terms, ore- | Majesty's accommodation should he | xg last vers thing was complete ex- | yng your head becoming - bald. pate and the wholesome food are re- [home as tender and as womanly as palpitating heart after slight exercise, | over, the king does not care to spend | Wish to do so, cept his cravat. Before him, on the Perhaps you are tived trying ioeflec- sponsible for her charm of complexion | though they had never known a dan- | so that merely to go upstairs is ex-|more than a certain number of hours dressing table, spread the two cravats tual: remedied Agr this evil, We don't blame you if you nie; . while an outdoor life and liking for | ger nor borne the heat of a tropical | hausting. This is the condition doc-fat any publie . dinner, - thorefore Have Iron Strength. between which bis choive rested. One, Sport give sweep to her. figyie 'and | day. ¢ | tors eal anaemia, which means weak, | speeches and other matters have to| Strong people have rich, red blood. [a neat black with a narrow white Why not try .an effective one for : a grace 10 her movements, Nay, their experience' has made | watery blood. In this condition Dr. |be are accordingly, The color of the blood is due to the | stripe, which he had bought himpelf. change, § One writer indulges in reminiscences them, he says, more womanly, for it | Williams' Pink Pills is the only safe} After t necessary preliminaries | iron in it. When iron is lacking vital- | The other, a cravat which the girl Newbro's Herpicide "kills the Dand- ©f the little rofl house on the fringe | has melted the icy mist and the cool { and reliable medicine. These pills 'ac- | have been satisfactorily arranged, the ity and strength is reduced. Then it is | bad given him for a presenta tie sueh rull germ--which iw the cause of the Bf the wopd and the green lawn in distance which English ladies always | tually make the new, rich, blood day om which "the baiquet isto take| time to take Wade's Tron Tonic Pills | 8% only women purchase. i whole troubde, ~front of ft, on which the women are {observe in the society of men. which can ~dloné give health and Flaw is awaited. An hour or so be. (Laxative). This 'orm of iron slipsin- | "MH I wear the black-and-white one "Destroy the cause you, remove the Playing tennis, One shadow crmps into the béauti- strength, and thus make weak, list- fore "the commencement of the dinner | to the blood without tax on digestion | I'll look my beet," he mused. "On the effect." ' . i Their movements are so fre and ful picture. The frivenrechtlerin, or less, pale-faced girls bright, active and | an oficial arrives at the banqueting | and increases energy and vitality. other hand, if 1" wear the one she gave Sold by leading druggists. Send 1e, paxy, their limbs and joints so flexi- suffragette, is a type of English lady strong. Miss A. Bt. Andre, Joliette,| hall. It is his duty to exathine the They are a great nerve strengthemer | me I'll please her immensely, but will i" stamps for sample to The Heérpi- lo, thefr nerves so calm and theif entirely beyond the German's com- | Que., says. Ll am more grateful than 1| plan of -the-tables 'and to see that the(and blood maker. In boxes, 28c., at | look like a fright cide Co., Dgtroit, Mich. Pwo sizes, - #0 strong that the oplooker | prehension, can say for the bemefit I have+found | chai¢ of the king is suitably placed | Wade's Drug Store. Money back if not |. Then he whistled, walked around the 5c. and $1.. G "W. Mahood s special Mes but the poetry of motion, She is something quite outside the in the use of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. | 50 as to be free from draughts, noise satisfactory, teom--and carefully tied his aravat. Agent oi 6 , Ff This "'tennis girl" he tells his read- pale of womanhood, and contempla- || was weak, run down and very mis- | and other disturbing influences. This The mother said "Yes," though there . hk £rs, may be a poor typewriter girl or | tion of her gives him pause in his re- | erable. - I sufiered from severe pains | official is exceedingly fastidious and It Was A Booby Prize. were tears in her eyes, aud t girl * the daughter of a duchess. flections and dreamings, since she sug- | in my back and chest; bad a bad | his word is law. On not a dew occa. | Philadelphia Public Ledger. thought he was the handsomest and i Then he recalls the sunny May in, a | gests go him possibilities in the Eng- | cough; no appetite and would lay { sions he has thrown every one inth sf A woman fell from a ferryboat, | best-dressed man in the 'world. Jountry lane and his meeting there 8 [lish lady quite contrary to his tradi- | awake most of the night, and" what |state of consternation by demanding | crossing over to Camden the other Which cravat did he" wear ? dy in a dogeart, driving a smart tional notiors of the obedient life. sleep I did get did not refresh me. Ia change in the arrangements of ga)day, and a poor Irishman sprang tried several remedies, but they did] dinner at the eleventh hour. The re-|over and rescued her. When she was Too Sharp For "Em. not help me, and I, as well as my] quirements of his majesty in these and |safely landed on the deck her husband, | Rather humorous is the story of friends, feared I was going into a de-| other matters, however, are mow #0 | who had been a calm spectator of the John Downey, the great little hight. cline. At this stage a friend 'who| well known that mistakes are of gare accident, handed the brave fellow a | weight. This "Jack" was born in came to see me strongly urged me toloccurrence. quarter. : Brooklyn, but in his youth he did try Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, and pro-| As soon as the seating arrangements | Some of the bystanders expressing more of playing fruant than of at videntially I acted upon the advice. | have been "passed," the special wine | their indignation, Pat said : *'Arrah, tending ' school. He was. always out After using a few boxes my appetite} which the illustrious guest is to drink |don't blame the gentleman--he knows | in some back lot boxing with the oth- improved and I n. 10 sleep much| arrives in charge of a royal servang.(best. Perhaps if 1 badn't saved her | er boys, when he should have been betthr at night. is greatly cheered | Members of the royal family always, he'd have given me a dollar." studying. : me and 1 continued taking the pillsjsend their own wine to public dinners, "Jack" went owe night te wee for some time longer, when the change} and, in many cases, their own special | A Winter Comfort, fight at the Greenwood Athletic Club, in my condition was really\marvel-| brands. of cigars also. The wide is in For pain, cold feet or in seasickness | "Charley" Banks, the manager, ap lous. I was failing as well_as\I ever| the charge of & responsible serwant ina hot water bottle is invaluable, Es- proached Downey with the intention had done. + could sleep sou at the "smplby of the royal household, ially needed in winter. The right | of signing' him as a coming aitrac- night; the pains and cough had - dis- whose duty it is to stand belifnd the Kind here at 50c. up for the two-quart | tion. . ; ! appeared and I felt an altogether dif- [chair "of his master and wait upon | size. Fountain Syringes, Bulb Syginges | "Will you fight New York "Jack . ferent girl. 1 am so grateful for|him, and all Rubber Sick room supplies, at | O'Brien here ?" asked Banks, oar reel » what De. Williams' Pink Pills havel Special eare has t6 be paid to the| Wade's Drug Store, "Sure," replied Downey. ~ ' done for me that 1 cheerfully givel menu, care being taken thes the co, "All right. We'll give you a guar- GLOVER S, on permission to publish this in. the] contains an "assortment of dishes [or a £7 Cheap Barometer antee of twelve hundred dollars." y Rope What tay point the way to uhich he. mom important members {rrom Pack, . soa Lr pxclaimed _Mawney. "11 Gar, Bagot-and Bast. Bt, bealth (0 some cther weak and des-fof the royal family have a predilec-| Farmer Barnes--'I've bought a | guess mot I. No, sir! A. thousand . or ] i Ho oar Re Ph Bb son. The tent is ususlly short' and | barometer, Hannah, ter tell when it's | Pothing. I'm. no cheap lighter. A lias' Pink Pills are good rarely exceeds four or five courses. goin' ter rain, ye know." Mrs. Barnes | And Manager Basks let it go at (Buying From Friesd, B due to weak, watery Private Servants always attend ex.] Ty tell when it's going to rain ! that. Pa ia Press. : : blood. That is why this medicine cures Shusively to the requirements of the Why, I never heard o such extrava- " a dy bought a borig the other al guest, i 1g 1 t "pose th' good a y By andr' Bs ut ' Tike most of Bis subjects, - fa Fon vee ive 0 7 bow th" good Saupe bes ancty Doteitiul, A oeritly suck, want le 7 ¥ dining whims. He will : ! The. story is told of an idotor "Na 1 Sesh Ls Coon % ¥ + popu No; 1 ; Loin accomut, for instance, alow' the lar with the matinee gicls, who is be-| 4, buy Jot. bt ahd me. Be, oe, Soiee set Abe fear of being thought older | 3. business." " i oi $ P : Nn n---- The last time this player was inter Finds anys Harphe's Weekly. i The It " The Hurt. by a woman reporter for ome §¢ ¥alue of 4 liniment of the dailies. She wished to got his pon its ene views touching the Condition of the iy White 'Linimen ; the actor was not very bone. Ny oer seg ened le I flammation and cong "I'm ware," daid the young wo- | Moves it. Si , Inughingly, "whether Vm really | 87d by 0 doing relieve think. You] 900% The best Neuralgia 'gud oli es. We. at Wade ma. d hee apvepted he Sa Yeu, but TTF bet he at het 8 np #

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