Daily British Whig (1850), 28 May 1910, p. 13

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i : or "5 be Rs THE DAILY. BRITISH WHIG, SATURDAY, MAY 28 1010. grow tired "of each other if : - them 50 closely." THINGS AMISS front Ber sodden garments. Again the mop . 2. & : > . oclwas lad on their heads and Pat, who had vorrei Bties ha they shogld live shown signs of restlessness, turned' to the curate an at discord: exclaimed hel ot "how long is this ceremony goikg to ERE in en" last, Fither?" he asked. Of course it is if it's real harmony," an- - . » : i 1 \ sweséd Father Daly "but Wa "ut 1a¥E 1 don't know," replied the priest, resuming YoM rales AY, hut 1 You are 2 Wa¥s ly, walk and unconcernedly repeating his Aropping in on them you don't give them the f office." When for the sixth timé the mop was chance for natural development. Are they | applied Pat -iost lig temper, and, striking the ; have a y 3 2k3 hk > * 3 never to have a quarrel and a making-up hke! rails with his fists, he cried outs "Tell" nite other 800d people: aX { Father, how long is this ceremony to last? There's too much quarreling in the parish "How can 1 tell how Jong it will last? as it 1s," returned Father Byrne. returned the priest : "N ; a a - . 3 » f Do you suppose Nora and Pat will neves "You can't tell, Father!" ejaculated Pat, in jarre fo i os <p " | bewilderment, "Sure, the girl's a'most I suppose they will, but if I can I'll Pre drownded. an' I'm "wet to the skin. Sure vent it*as long as possible" f ! : it 0 st know, Rather!" "Well, give them a chance, Miles, my boy, | ¥ TB tk ye what you said when and let them. get used to oné another. In thus > ¥ : toss nt se haa awe | YOu knelt there six months ago?" Sqthate of outs x $ unnatural to have always! "My head's that bothered with the throuble, a cloudless sky. : - : weet 10 say pothing of the cowld watet runnin' z Fathe y D p his : Aow, had Father Byrne continued down my back, that 1 misremember every- you CUSTOM OF WELL-DRESSIN A Century-Old Custom at Tissington, Derby-] : shire, England. FOUND ! g {REV. MILES BYRNE AT WORK IN HIS PARISH. . | Given up by Doctor "I bad dropsy, and was. told by my family physician that there was no chance for me. My family also gave me up. My limbs and body were swollen one-third larger than natural, water collected around my heart and I had to be propp up in bed to keep from smothering. 1 took Dr. Miles' Heart Remedy {| Worked on the Problem of Keéjing the {* Young People at HomeThe Plan He Worked Out to Help-the Cause. ' {By H. A. Hinkson'dn The Treasury i When the Kevefend Mies Byrne came to Bailvduff curate to Father Theophilus he found many ihings, to Inv' way of Ptainking, muss in the parish. The young (people were leaymg Ballyduf for America; ang soon ouly the old and the infirm would ibe left. If this unhappy state of things were {not 'quickly checked it would be a bad day! {for phe parish eof Ballyduff. Father Byrne thought anxiously over the probiemy, and :t 'Jast' tame to the conclusion 'that he had {solved it, at least in part. He had noticed lth the vast majority of those who emi ardianship of the two proteges there might | have betn nothing in the story of Pat and | Nora Kinsella worth recording, but like mast | thing," said Pat. The priest Lifted the mop from the pail; but Pat put up his hand quickly, d cried out, jountil I was entirely cured. This was in 1902, and I am now able to do any kind of work on my farm. My cure was certainly marvelous." L. TURLEY CURD, Wilmore, Ky. Dr. Miled' Heart Remedy has been wonderfully successful in relieving heart trogble. Its tonic effect upon the hefrt =: »=vce and muscles is a great factor in assisting nature to overcome heart weakness. peaple the curate of Ballyduff was human, | his 'teeth thattering) "I'll getFmy death of and in his turn needed a holiday. About 8X! wid Father" \ : months after the marriage of Pat Kinsella | "Well d ron senetibor? and Nara O'Brien, Father Daly sat reading | "Yes a ¥ remember" in his study. It was a chilly October night, You promised io take Nora for Detter of with a haxsh east wind blowing through the for Worse" " : he casement. A few days before Father Byrne " misrethenibes had left Ballyduff for Buxton to spend his Pat annual vacation. The pri¢st paused in his Ne ik , ia reading to throw a fog On the fire. "Tis Again the Driest Jilted the oF 7s. coms little good Miles will get-out of his heliday | . i fe Tigh he n1gt; he Me i ¥3 on 3 he hias weather like "his" he. nigtiered. "8 back, Kinse la cried out in alarm ; "Tis better after all to began old nian and| ~¢OM Ie! 518 grea: cure lop 2 defective take one's holiday by his ph x fiteside. What Memory; remadked the priest. "And didit do you say, old fellow?" and he bent down' yoi premise to tkeep her until death parted and patted the head of the Irish terrier which di . ose: 1 did Rather P aiwered lay at his feet. As he turned again to his { dejected. e did, ther, at ans Ook rs heard 2 knosk at the door, and his "And you, Nora, didn't 'yOu promise to be "There's Pat Kinsella Father", ® good wife to Pat until death parted you? 'aid she, "and no matter what I say to him Y es, Father, Nora Miswered rremionsly; ne won't go away until he sees sol: rever- and with a side glance at the dripping gure ance" : : of her husband. Cold and wretched as she "Well, why shouldn't he, Mary?" asked the V4#% she could almost have laughed at the priest. ""Maybe its another wedding he's | higure he made, with his thick curly hair sod- s0me ta tell me "of. IH 'break. Father den with water which ran down his cheeks, Byrne's heart if it is and he away." ¢ for the priest had given him the largef share it Ise weddin's isin his mind, Father, by of the pail. He had, like herself, put on his the look of him," Mr¥. Kennedy answered, best glothes jor the eetamOnY, and his collar "it's more like funerals I'm thinkin" and jie: were limp and discolored. : ; S& you both prontised, in the sight of "Well, show him in," 'said the priest, re-' 7 3 ¥ : : ~ : ( n liv etl til de arted you, signedly laying down his book. The next So x live together un ash, p $3 moment 'a tall, good-looking youth, with a "Yes; Father," answered both culprits fair, flusl€d face, stood confronting the priest! eirthly iin ¢ with a look of mingled shyhess and rebellion, «Well thén, sure T must 'go on" with the " Tell Ya fd ai <a 5 - y "eu hn 5 ' or . . . Joe, Pat, said Father Daly, "what ein ceremony until one of you dies, and how can Tt 'or yous 4 1 Sl I tell when that will be?" Father Daly said th to a Ki Same to ax Fo i "Is that the only way to unmike the mar: ence, returnec nse a, nervously wisting | riage, Father?' asked Pat, looking anxiously his felt hat in his fingers. at Nota ' or \ Fog 47 nia Father Dal i at Nora, To undo,Pat!" «emlaimed' Father Daly i That's the only way." "Yes, your riverence," Kinsella went on] "Then, Father, I'm thinkin' maybe we'd quickly finding has tongue "You married bBer Hot 'whit to the end, It's a tefrible me: ned dn' r > 2 aig Nora didn § iri ¥ S¥Miee? 1 Leowld day. Maybe the girl would come home B L p a -, a { ~ "» €5,g Ol course did, and ere wv A no ith me, Father. impediment. You're married ight enough. | Phen you'd better ask her" said Father You need have no donbts about it)" Dal ? - . hie Pat moved uneasily. "At isa't about that 1 ta alanna, will ye come hgme'" whis was thinkin', Father," he said, "but J thought! nerd Pat ar ry ye : is maybe that as you had married us, yon could F Yes, Pir" whispe red' Nota with a sob. unnatry 1S qs well. "Well, make haste and change those wet ~Unmarry you. " clothes, for it's a--caold day," suggested the X £5, JOUT tiverence, 5 priest. "And whenever you want to unmake Father Daly's eye twinkled. In all his ex the marrage, bring the mop and pail here perience he had never been asked : again. = Be off with you now" And Father marry peaple before, He thought of his cur- | Daly. resumed his office. ate. and wished Jin home again, On the hillside of Ballyduff there is a want 1a be uumarried, da yous! he asked. | pretty whitewashed cottage standing in a Yes, Father, Nits dice ; pleasant, well-kept rose-garden. Within the And what about 1 ora, does she 'want to house is white and spotless, which makes the be unmarried, 100? : ¥ uld pail and a tattered mop should hang in Faith she does, your riverence, just as the place of honor beside the fireplace. Nor much as we," and Kinsella spoke with sup- do those who point to the example of Pat and pressed aotion, : ye, ow | Nora Kinsella as proving the beneficent re- 'How long have you been married, Pat? sults of early marriage know of their second "A matter of £1 months or More, Father." baptism, because Father Daly kept his own 'And you're tired of each other already? counsel, notwithstanding his curate's boast asked the priest. y ing "Well, it was a foolish marriage. Sure we were too youlig to know our own minds; not that I'm blamin' Father Miles for it. Sure what did he know about such things, small blame to him, an' what he done he done for the best, but he 'didn't know Nor "And he TIM know you eithef, Pat. so you both wish to be unmagried?" "We'll be main thankful 0° your riverence --~Nora is more on for it than me, and we've both made wp our minds." "Hadn't you better Wait until Father comes back?" asked Father Daly, "No, your riverence, we can't wait," ejacu- dated Pat, "the house is too small to hold us as it is, and what's more it was ydu, Father, "hut they're both very young to take fo much that marsied us, and by rights 'tis only you responsibility." 'a : can 'ynmarry us." 'Maybe they'd never take it if they grew |. "Very well, Pat," rejoined the priest. "Fil older, but be leggin' it off to Ambrica, like], 1 you whgt to do. Both of you come to the rest," responded Father Byrne < the church to-morrow at four o'clock and "I hope, Miles, that it isn't you that's been bring a pail of water and a mop." putting marriage into their heads?" Fatherp oy mop, Father ["™Fhere isn't 4 mop in the Daly asked anxiously. i parish of Ballyduff," evplained Pat. "Oh, it wad there, right enough," the curate] well, you'll have to find ome, and--don't answered lightly; "all I did was to bring it forget 'the pail of water. Good night, Pat." out. Pat and Nora are breaking the el Father Daly laughed softly as the door We'll have weddings galore after this. : closed on Kinsella, "A lovers' quarrel; they'll "Maybe, maybe; but 1 hope there won't bef, our aif about it in the. morning" he said anything else broken--their hearts, for ns to himself, However, on the next afternoon, stance." ; i when the priegf went down to the church, Father Byrne felt that his superior was| with his breviary under his arm, he saw Pat now unduly unreasonable. He was secretly | Kinsella standing at the door. Beside him glad that he had fixed the matter up between was a pail§iall of water and a mop. Pat and Nora before they had had an oppor-| "Soeyou got the mop, Pat," remarked Father tunity. of consulting the parish priest, and he | Daly, ' was grateful to the dentist who had kept] "I med Tt mesel," returned Kinsella, with Father Daly out of Whe garish for a week]a kind of mournful pride. longer than had been ex d. "Very good. Whke's Nora?" On the following Sunday there was a thrill} = "She's inside the chapel; yer riverence." cures lof excitement amongst the congregation] "Well, carry them in" said the priest, points when. the names of Pat Kinsella and Noraliny to the mop and the pail. O'Brien were called out and theit | Bafins Nora was kneeling in a dark corner of the puthished. Three weeks later as some] church. She had .a shawl over her head apd and happy a couple as ever was seen was) her face was Hushed as though she had ined together in the bonds of matrimony. | weeping, but Pat's face was still sullen and rad Byrne's face beamedtwith joy, and if | determined. "Kneel down there, both = of Father Daly had any misgivings he did not you," said Father Daly, "and take the shawl reveal them. Tet them believe, as Father|off your head, Nora" So the young husband Byriie told them, that marriages wete madeland the young wife knelt down before the in hed¥en to give a foretaste of heaven upon fehance! rails as they had knelt of their wed- earth, So he gave them his\blessing and Jding day, about six maths before! Father bade them to be good children Med love and] Daly dipped the mop in the pail and thew Ibe patient with ome mother. The curatefput it on Pat's head, until the water ran. ont {was triveiphant. The luck of priestymade]of it down his neck. Pat shivered but said marciages had changed at last, and if any one 3 nothing. But when the mop was placed on doubted it. he could point to the case of Pat} Nora's head, she murmured to herself, "Glory and Nora Kinsella and their trim little ent be ty God, my best dressll he destroyed" | tage on the hillside. Father Byrne watched] aver t tgrated were unmarried boys and girls. The i mafried were much more likely to remain at | home, partly because two tickets to America cost more than one and partly because the {domestic interests of married people, and {even their quarrels, left them less leisure for listening to the fairy tales told of the wealth land prosperity to be found in America. The more he throught about the matter the {more convinced Father Byrne become that early marriage was the antidote to the evil of enrigration, 'and since he had come to Bally- duff, six months ago, there had been only. one marriage solemnized in the parish, and both the contracting parties had been over sixty. "H we can induce the wef and girls to get At Tissington, in Derbyshire, England, is annually¥celebrated he century-old ¢ustom of Well-dressing, or Well-flowering. This de- corating of the five local wells from which the villagé obtains. its water supply, is pre- pared for during the winter, when holly, yew, and mountain-ash berries are collected and stored away against the great event. In the early part of Holy Week the wells are temporarily takgn over by an appointed authority, and, ously guarded from the would-be curious. A frame-work of wood is erected over each well, and then a layer of soft clay built up, so as to make the whole resemble 4 wayside chapel or oratory. The actual dressing follows, the , busy worker striving to outdo others. Flowers are gath- ered from far and near, and the scheme of decoration is completed by an appropriate text such as is shown inour drawing. On Holy Thursday, after divine service in the parish church, a procession is formed--- clergy, choristers, parishioners--and a move made to one of the wells, generally the Cup and Saucer Well, where a hymn is sung and a portion of the Psalm for the «day read Then a move is made to the Coffin Well, thence to the Hands Well, the Town Well, and the Yew Tree Well, with a 'similar ser- vice at each, and-a final thafi®sgiving. + The religious aspect of the festival then gives place to the secular, and jollity and merri- ment reign, greatest aid to personal beauty. You cag have white teeth by the daily use of Sanitol. Its invisible antiseptic action will also prevent the decay of your teeth, and keep your gums healthy and your mouth sweet | and wholesome. Sanitol is a perfect dentifrice-- you can get itiin either powder or paste form. 2076 AT YOUR DRUGGIST'S, 28¢ " s & the word 'worse, " said ' ' Price $1.00 at your drugght. Me should supply you. If he does ngt, send price to us, we forward prepaid. DR. MILES MEDICAL CO., Terente, married we shall soon stenf the tide of enti- | gration," he said enthusiastically to his ec- t clesiastical superior. But Father Daly shook {his head with a smile at his curate's optim- ism. "Go easy, Miles, my boy," he answered. "You know what they say of priests' mar- yriages. Let them alone and mate as they please. Theres no good comes of interfering {in such things. The only thanks you'll get {will be the blame if it doesn't turn out well. | Lét them make their own marriages. I burn- ted my fingers once--g' long time ago. They {were a likely cogple, and willing enough he I put the thought of marriage ito their ,{ heads, instead of letting it come there of ifs {own accord. It turned out badly' The boy IS USED he Sill c iverware ran away fo America before two years, and {the only thanks I got was a letter from him * ' 1s SO bright {asking me to look after his wife ard child, og ' as he had married her to gfease me. That's il is a delight { all the thanks you'll get for meddling in®their A "I matrimonial affairs." TO THE EYE | The curate's ardour was somewhat damped Othe {by this prosaic ending to the idyll of a r women notice and { priest's match-making, but that after all 'was Catch the Idea. an extreme case, and notflikely to recar. Besides he was young and his superior old, ask your Dealer and old methods had been tried an! found wanting in Ballyduff. Half a dozen wed- Household Convenience Co. Lid, TORONTO dings, and half a dozen newly married cou- { ples settled down in the parish world soon $3.50 Reei : ipe Cures 7 . Weak Men --- Free gh whi} § $ A { convinee Father Daly that, after all, he had {been right. 'He would argue nd mcre until the could produce conclusive evidence. Father A ------ : To % 1 You Can Have It Free and Be { Daly smiled, deceived by his curate's silence Strong and Vigorous. ---- land thinking that he had found anotier 'plan I have in ] {or the amelioration of the parish, antil one day he noticed a suppressed air of triumph nervous debifit man ling e) - WHERE | WONDER- .-. -SHINE outside, i { Soap That Dyes ! te re soapt at home a or te. The colors are fast and brilliant. It dyes 10 shade. No streaks. No re Haypote rouble. Give Zones \ t real clea HAVE BEEN LOCATED. Sacred Spots Where the Saviour Spent Last Months. Bickerings of doubters have, in a large measure, been silenced and it is a generally accepted belief among Oriental archaeolo- gists that most of the sacred spots where the Saviour spent 'His last fmonths have been finally located, The very points along the Via that marked Christ's labored Jougney to the cross have at last been settled upon and designated by appropriate tablets. Ihre rough cell in which He was imprisoned while awaiting the decision of Pilate has been unearth®d, the stocks that encased His feet have been found, and the silent tomb, the real holy sepulchre from which He arose, has been oeated. The only point at issue between the Biblical research societies is which of the two Golgothas, the traditional one or the one recently discovered by Major- General Wilson) of the British Army, is the actual scene of the Saviour's crucifixion Each new discovery has added to the in- terest of the Holy City. Indeed, if the sac- red sites were taken away, it would be about the meanest spot on earth. Dirty, crooked streets crumbling buildings, and dirly/ natives is all thygewould besteft Possessing the sites of the Saviour's life, however, Jerusalem is the heart of the Christian world, and each newly-discuvered relic has added to the power it exerts over the faithiul in every land. What has been decided on as the true em] Could Not Sleep. DOCTOR SAID HEART AND NERVES WERE RESPON- SIBLE. There Is many a man and woman Jouting night after night upon sleepless Their do not close in the sweet and ref repose that comes te those whose heart and nerves are right. Some constitutional disturbance, ox or disease bas so debilitated and irritated the system, that is a Dolorosa and .a vivid excitement in Father Byrne's magoner. "What's the grater now, Miles, m boy?" he asked, "Have you found the fairies crack of gold or the philosopher's' stone, or what is it?' "Neither the one nor the other," znswered Father Byrne, "though maybe it's better than either. It's three years, isn't it, since there was a wedding in the parish, except old Joe Malone, and he doesn't count." "He was properly married, anyway, for 1 married him myself," rejoined Father Daly. "Ta be sure you did, and you'll have an- other to marry this month, What do you think of that?"--and the curate's \cice was triumphant. _- "Who is it?" asked the parish priest, some- what excited, it must be admitted, by the prospect of a ceremony so unusual "Pat Kinsella and Nora OBrien" "Why, Pit's only a lad, and as for Nora, its only the other day when [I christened her," exclaimed Father Daly, "That was before my time," retorted the curate, laughing; "and, anyway, wora is a fine slip of a girl and was eighteen last Michael- mas, and Pat will be twenty before Christ- mas." 5 "He may py responded the par shy priest, he ption for edkoned The Bible in Practical Life, In the May Century unusual importance attaches to the paper on "College Men and the Bible," setting forth the stimflating facts Anil 1 of a widespread revival of interest among in- ! tellectual young men in the text and teach- ings of the scriptures. The movement is be- ing guided by an international committee of the Y.M.CA. from all denominations, and more than sixty thousand studeflts are ai ready earolled. The article is by Clayton Cooper, secretary, charged with organizing the wark 'in the colleges, who has just.re- turned from a special mission to India, China, Corea and Japan, where Bible study is spreading with surprising enthusiasm. The influence of this North American student up- rising has already extended to bther nations, Last year 80,000 college men in eighteen dif- ferent countries were engaged inf studying this great book of the nations in an intelligent and voluntary fashion, National secretaries giving their entire time to the far-reaching enterprise are leading the work in five coun- tries, while national councils Jf scholars are devoting thought to the preparation of literature appropriate to the needs of the re- spective lands, One of"the most practical features of the uprising of students is that the Bible is being transferred from the region of dogmatic and theological conceptions to the, realm of real life. The book is being rediscovered, not simply as a store-house of "mysterious and sacred information, but as a means leading to. successful and normal human life. The Bible is taking its place among the service able books ci the world. If is proving, itself to be the first book for conduct, which' Mat- thew Arnold asserts composes three-fourths of human life; the simplest thing to know apd the hardest thing as regards doing. A student coming out of one of these Bible groups was recently overheard to" say: "I feel as though I had mach to do in the world." 5 ir ---------- A New Anglican Church at Antwerp. « The fine Gothic Church of St. Bofiface, Antweip, consecrated by the Right Rev. Dr. Wilkinson, Anglican Bishop for North and Central Europe. This church, one of the finest English churches on the Continent, is in ark Engin Gothic style, and cost £10, 000. A large stone statne of St. Boniface {presented by Sir Cecil Hertslet, British con- sal-géneral), with a brass, giving details of Wig life and mariyrdom, is in the sanctuary. to the north-west of pr . The isiand of Aldabra, Madagascar, is becoming smaller and smaller gh the action of the mend t/ highly to all nerveus and down women. Price, 50 cents per box or 3 boxes $1.25, at all dealers or mailed direct weceipt of price by The T, Mil Limited, Tortonto, Ont. of the Saviour lies just outside Jerusalem The site has been purchased by a conimittee of archaeologists, headed by the Archbishop of Canterbury, for $10,000. The owners of the site have dug among the accretions of soil that for centuries covered the "spot and have laid bare what is asserted to be the veritable tomb in which Christ was laid fol- lowing His crucifixion... It is hewn out of solid rock, and when the place was excavated, it was found that the place planned for the reception of a body was empty. The devout consider this fact very significant. The tomb of Christ is beipg restored as rapidly as pos- sible, and a beautiful garden is to be set out around the spot. The cell in\ which Christ. was confined prior to the crucifikion is in the street called Ecce Hamo, which forms part of the long route called Via Dolorosa, through which the Sa- viour is supposed to have passed on His way to the cross. It is on property belonging th the Greek Charch, and its discovery a year Or s0 ago was made accidentally, Several workmen, excavating under the direction of archaeologists, came upon an underground passage hewn out of rock fifteen feet long, to a chamber or cell measuring seven feet on each side. The cell was mot intended to hold more than one person at a time. Iron rings, used as stocks, prove this. The person to be confined in such a cell must have been of importance, for Romans usually herded their common criminals in a quadrangular chamber below. Investigators are satisfied that the Saviour was confined in this room while awaiting Pilate's decision. Another fact that has won scoffers over to the belief in the discovery of cell is that it is about 3 hundred yards from the spot long identified by the Roman ahd Greek ChsircWes as Pontius' Pil- ate's judgment seat. Another controversy settled to the great comfort of the Christian world concerns the part of Mount of Olives from which Christ made His ascension. Two places have for a long time been thus designated. One site, occupied by the Moslems, was declared the true ome; ths othe? owned by the Greek Church, was pronounced with equal emphasis the authentic spot. That of the Greek Church, near the wretched village of Kafr El Tur, bas been declared the true spot. Byrne # docters writing te any wr mierel ike this -- bat 1 send 8 Never Fails to Restore Gray gait to fitsNatural Nomatter ho Seal - w lon, been gro or faded. Promotes » luxuriant . of healthy hair. Stops its fa vely removes Du y $ not fii vd por tive years For sale The BEST Praggseore. Don't Persecute out, v\*)\» RUUD Sflsefes . « Father Daly put the mop in the pail, and hem 'with more than a fatherly care [opening his. breviary to repeat time he visited them he peturpeg|ofice, yaiking ug and dows the church. [hfe § Now abd again, when he Sime to heya kneeling together, he t ie mop from t ' beads with it. They 3 il and: soused , their were by this time doy "I noticed, Mr. Lioyd, that you were the only who did not weep daripg Mr. | a -- Exansy Soattal prayer: : rawr Bed Border from Te . "You forget. Mis. Davies, that 1. bela ~ * a ®t and Cnies kinds : « " fu 2 2 ua 2 wil - *

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