Daily British Whig (1850), 4 Jun 1910, p. 11

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i . $3.50 Re Weak Men ---Frée "You Can Have Mags ouay= to | be satisfied, man | cian Ladies'Shoes + Spring Footwear should be dainty #8 befits the season, but heavy en- ough to shield your feet from the damp ground. . 'We have the style that meets both requirements at a modefate price, $3.00 and $8.50. H. Jennings, KING STREET. ® fet us do your Repairing and # this house cleaning BIL. Newman Bectic Co, $ 3 79 Princess Street. Phone 441. 08 Cues the benefit All things that are, J Are with more spirit chased than en-! : a vant of Venice, Act IT. Sc. 6.! Enjoyed, as used in this passage, | has reference 10 the pleasures of pos-| tession. Fach man thinks if he had! this position or that object hus would | The only creaturcs that! are ever satisfied ave the animals in the summer fields, the hog in its pen! or human beings, whose chief $f is) "but to sleep and feed." Shakespeare in classifying the latter termed them beasts. They need not be considered. | All properly constituted men are workige towards a goal. The politi-' is thinking of representing his state or province in congress or 1 commons, of wioning the governor- ship; ve may even have the prize of the presidency or the prime minister's | position before him.. The young lsw- yer has in bis mind's eye a judgeship. | The manufacturer has his gaze fixed | on a milion. The midshipman or the lieutenant ins his naval or military carcer with the hope of some day be- ng a commander in chief. apy strive, fow attain! The win pers have a brief moment of 'exulta- tion. The enjoyment of the strivers nas been incessant. Unless those who have: réached the goal seek other goals their prize will turn out to be but oad sea fruit, dust and ashes. Shakespeare has frequent allusions to the hunt. This is an excellent ex- ample. As he wrote he no doubt had m mind the flesing fox and the pur- suing hunters. Brutal sport ! but the dash, the speed, the danger-of it, made it a real pleasure. The fox is run to ground, the winner of the brush has mm the prize bu fechie enjoyment com- pared with enjoyment of the chase, It is the chase, not the game, that takes men to Africas and Alaska, to South America and to India. The world is a big*hunting ground; some men are engeged in a pursuit of arms, some in mercantile pursuits, all are after 'a got; honors or wealth, Position and decorations are won; they pall and weary. Wealth is gain- ed; 1t does n ive the satisfaction that was ex Alexander wept when he had no more worlds to con- quer. The restless spirit of Napoleon sought to bring the old and new world under his sway; had he won the whole round earth' he would still have been dissatisfied. Wellington con» quered the "world conqueror." Did it satisfy ? No! He squght 'other pur suits. In statésmanship he found an outlet for his energy. Cecil Khodes pursued wealth, monds and gold ashes, ¢ sought happiness in greater yood of the British empire MAKE BOY FARMERS dia- 1t. was all dust and 3 : } as CLERGYMAN OFFERS LAND TO : A CHURCH. * -------- Rev. Dr. Oscar Haywood of New York Has New Plan to Educate City Youngsters and Others in Agricultural Trades on a Farm in North Carolina. A gift of several hundred acres in North Carolina for the establishment and equipment of a settlement and a school of farming and hed fades for was offered. Pp the 'what mht by hd Rov. Dr. Oscar Haywood, pastor of the Bap- tist Church of the Covenant, in West rd street, New York city. "to take city born lads and boys of the landless classes of the south to the farm and to make practical farmers of them. Dr. Hay- wood announced his plan to his con- gregation at a musical service for the work for boys which conducted 'hy the ghurch. In announcing his Eift he "1 offer to the le of New York city and my lifelong neighbors in North Carolina several hundred acres of land now cultivated as a cotton farm as the ground and a foundation on which to establish and equip a settlement and a school of farming and allied trades for boys, city born and from families of the less class In the south. The farm on the lower border of the middle Piedmont section of North Carolina. About one-fourth of it is open to cultivation, the rest being. carefully protected forest of all va- rieties of native trees. "The plan which 1 am carefully working out and details of which will be printed when ready, is to imcorpor- of the so 8 in independent life of he gue me Plantation hoy. There be ttiement ys on "One of the reasons which led him to 2 they h wood hos Jaton. it. North nrolina and ob ¢ country in the world, in every tious ele- El a 'descriail by the land. ihe i 3 knowledge arel. : farming chief. NT WZ En NY ASAE IN 0s | SERMON FROM 5 YA El NN 7, he saw it. He strove to paint the whole of Africa red. He fortunately failed. kven in his death hour he was still seeking satisfaction. The Rhodes scholarship scheme bringisg oung men from sil parts of the An- jglo-Saxon world to a common centre in Great Britain no doubt gives His restless spirit more satish tion than his wealth ever did. Though dead he wostill pursuing a great object. Androw 'Uarnogie may have ined that in the enjoyment of Tus wealth he would find happiness. His millions proved a burden. Other and higher pursuits he tack up; the better ment of the condition of mankind by education bane his goal. In the es- tablishment of universities and li- braries he finds a pleasure he could néver have found in bis merk millions. As a money maker he could not but at times be conscious that his success meant the failure of some other pro- ducer; as a promoter of education he has the consciousness of doing good to many without causing any possible suffering. J. Prerpont Morgan is another strik- ing example, His millions, in them s:lves, brought io satisfaction. A mere gold-heaper he could not be, He became a hunter after the rare art treaswrds of the world. His anti guarian collection, his old-world paint ings kring him real pleasure. They ave « part of his pursuit for the uplift mg of the nation to which he belongs out of the material slough into which it has fallen to a higher plane of cul ture and refinement. In every instance the pursuit of sume object is the real source of ene joyment; the attainment of that ob ject leaves a void in the heart. It is clear that man was made for work, If a reoan, having attaingdd, decides to rest and sellishly enjoy what remains of fe, what is the result ? Querulons, compiaining old age, or, if he he still young, too often vice, Salvation comes only in work, the pursuit of high goals. Mueh of the unhappiness in the world is due to the weakness of ashicvement. beep up seek bigher ands, other the spirit will never tire, In work toward definite ends is ultimate cool, In the sowing there is greater plensere than in the reaping, in the planting than in the digging. The hunter's highest ¢njoyment is in the search and the pursuit. The loft- 1er, the more upattamable the objeet, the batter iv is for the spirit. The mar who reaches after the sun may win a star, It is still as true it was in Shakespeare's day that : imag- resting on the hunt, game, and as "Things won are done, joy's soul lies in the doing." are of them, he said, near cities, found of agriculture and put to work on illusionetl idealist," Dr. Haywood ad- ded. # shiting steel share he turns up cataract of pulverized soil without tion, . with just the proper constituency to make pumpkine potatoes for the state fair and a re- sort when the heavens are brass. "The congested population. of bandoned farms of the south, the cost of living will turn profit of tive to the city will hence ' begin with to not. leave if; the hoys, them grow up on the farm, never. get over it. "There is 5 growing demand where for trained, practical, skilled farm laborers and superintendents. Ne- ver did the farm call so loudly as in or *A student graduated from a college a farm where nature is ice and mud in winter and reeks in: summer is a dis- "On that suburban gatden plot called an experiment statign, equipped with nickle plated implements, he plays a gentleman's game of farming. With a a problem of clod, clay or sand for solu- chemical and servoir hard by to which ho may re this city would find happy relid on he a where the living. The mature life na- taking them from six vears 10 (welve, and let They will every- now. Thither science is turping with ¥ ia pd os tedgation, soil: making, Toresity and improved implements' and its hand- masden, art, with asechitecture and landscape -gardehing. The south will be the greater centre of egricultureal development for the next quarter of a century." The pastor said he had received as- surance that the enterprise woald re- ceive support both in New York city and in North Carolina. A POLISH WEDDING. Fun and Profit Steangely Mingled in Festivities, Detroit Free Press. eddi among the Poles may certainly be said to hold its own among the more. entertaining of mar, riage customs. There fun and profit are strangely mingled in the marriage festivities, for the bride the i and rarely fsjls to get enough to en- able her to begin honsckeeping with comfort, After the wedding feast a dance is in order, and at that dence every man who would distinguish. lmself must onee in the evening at least claim the bride for a partner. The honor of dancing with her, however, is .not to be obtained lightly, The aspirant must win the privilege and pay for it. . in ope corner of the room mother of the bride has taken up her position with a plate in her lap. The wise woman has chosen that plate | carelatly. It is made after the plan {of an eating house coffee cup and could not justly. be described as frail. The gallant 'who wishes to dance with the bride--and, as has been said, all are in honor hound .to do so-- must pull out a piece of silver and throw it into the plate. Not until he has succeeded in breaking or chipping that almost invingible piece of crock- ery has he won the ' honor he seeks. Few succeed in making an impression upon the plate' for less than a sum equal to fifty cents of our money. The money thus accumulated goes to the bride and not unusually amounts to seventy-five or ome hundred dol- lars, even where the crowd is appar: ently as poor as it can well be, This sum in a gural district of Poland is enough to start the young couple fair- ly in housekeeping. hy HOMES OF WILD CREATURES. Bear House---Cottontail's Simple Abode, When the long Arctic night ap proaches the polar bedr retires to some sheltered spot, such as the cleft of a rock or the foot of some pres eipitous bank. In & very short time he * is effectually concealed by the heavy snow-drifts, Sometimes the bear waits until af- ter a heavy fall of snow, says St. Nicholas, and" then digs a white cav- ern of the requisite form and size. Such is his home for six long months, The common little ttontail, or so-called rabbit, dogs not Jive in a burrow, as 'does the. English rabbit, but makes a slight depression in the ground in whith she lies so Hatly pressed to the earth as to be scarcely distinguishable from the soil and the dried he in which her abode is situatod. - The rabbit is stfongly at- tached to its home wherever it may be placed; and even if driven fo a great distance from 'it contwives to regain its little domicile at the earliest opportunity, Une of the most gruesome among animal homes is the woll's'den. This 18 simply a hele dug in the side of a bank or a small natural cave general: iy situated on the sunny side of a ridge and almost hidden by bushes and boulders. Here the wolf lies snug; in and about his doorway . lie the remains of past feasts, which, coupled with his own odor, make the woll's dem a not very inviting place. Polar New York restaurant managers in their salaries rank close to the rail- way executives. Several receive $25, 000 a year, and two or three receive £350,000, oc France supplies. many of 'the flower bulbs that formerly came from Hol land. A more recent. competitar is the Puget Sound region, in this country. A woman has less faith in her ideals after martying ene of them. 1 9g EEE AER a g.Sapends upon festival for her dowry { the. Haine "THIS TESTIMONIAL -A-TNVES" SB -------------------------------- FOR THE BENEFIT OF OTHER SUFFERERS" this famous fruit medicine is all that . » i: en like a man! Mr. Paul Jones of Sarnia is- proud to ako et iit he Fw 2! Jon wonderful fruit medic ine. He wants every sufferer in Canada to know what * Fruit-a-tives** did for him. His reward comes in the gratitude of those who take his advice, use ** Fruit-a-tives", and cure themselves. SARNIA, ONT., Feb. sth. 1910, 4 I have been a sufferer for the past 2 with Constimation, Indigestion and Cataurh of the Stomach. 1 iried ny remedies and many doctors, but derived po benefit whatever. Finally, I read an adyertiseruent of ** Fruit-a-tives on) which Hon. Joba Ase] that be been cured * Fruit-a-tives", : La at he had | * a trial and they did exactly what was claimed for them. 1 have now taken them fof some time and find they are the ouly remedy that does me good. 1 have recommended *'Fruit-a-tives" toe t many of my friends and 1 cannot praise these fruit tablets too highly, as they have done me n ; I claim * Pruit-a-tives' are juvaluable in 'every respect, and § willingly give this testimonial for the benefit of other sufferers." PAUL J. JONES. Mr. Jones is favorably known all over the district of Sarnia. He was in business there for years, amd is now enjoying the fruits of a Jong and stigeasiul merase Suiech Every mages of this ris at y to write Mr, Jones and find out for themselves that the above letter is genuine and was written to * Fruita-tived"' voluntarily and solely with the idea of helping the sick. RAY: MESA Sr A SURRY SRS of those who have written letters in favor of Fruit-a-tives" is the best guarantee that is claimed for it. * Fruit-a-tives " is the only true liver stimulant in the world because it is the only medicine made of fruit juices. By its use, the amount of bile is increased while the muscles are made stronger and more capable of kind, senna and cheap pusgutive pills have no action on the liver. secretion of bile by the liver, but their action is entirely due to irritating the delicate and *' Fruit-a-tives "* alone--can and' will positively naturally. Salts of eve: ones, the long standing Constipation had Jon regular, the digestion improved, Consti , was cured also. " Pruit-a-tives bas proved its value and has made its way solely on merit. ted medicine in Canada. The sales ormous reasing ize that at last they have one remedy that will positively do all that is claimed for it--and they known, and most highly a every day. The people show their *Fruit-a-tives" could be taken for twenty for all Stomach, Liver, Bowel, Kidney and Skin Troubles. because of the pleasant taste and mild, are suffering as Mr. Jones Some women say: I'm satisfied -- flour's good enough. But, you see, some people are so very easily satisfied. To the fastidious folks who demand more than commonplace results, who are eager for the satisfac- tion of good work well done, whose families appre- ciate good things to eat-- it's to those particularly particularhousewives that FIVE ROSES flour makes its strongest appeal. The woman who's merely satisfied with anything less preciation of this honest, reliable fruit medicine by using it themselves and "Fruit-a-tives" is one of the few medicines that may be taken day after da emptying the bowels They do mot increase the oo Shebawils. "av cure Constipation, Biliouspess a orpid Liver. In case of Mr. aff his a ig catarrh of the stomach. As his bowels became When the Constipation was cured the Indigestion, which was caused by the " Prait-a-tives" is probably he best © Pruita-tives " are en and are inc ing it to their friends. with only benefit to the health, If necessary, and tonics--nature's natural remedies especially suited to women and children soc. a box, 6 for $2.50. or trial box, , because it contains omly frat na 8 "PFruit-a-tives"" utle action of the fruit tablets, I id, take bis advice and try *' Fruit-a-tives", 25¢. For dealefs or sent, postpaid, on receipt of price by Fruit-a-tives Limited, Ottawa Madam, Too You Can't Be Particular Then, you know, a good wife and good breadmaker {is a rare combination to be treated with every conside- ration and appreciation. If FIVE ROSES can possibly bring YOU this apprecia- tion, this satisfaction, isn't it worth much more than the trouble of asking your grocer to "send up" a small bag ? good than FIVE ROSES can mever know what a wonderful breadmaker she might be, how she might shine in plain and cunning cookery. For the sake of the kiddies who dearly love the goodies mother's hands have fashi- oned --you should try FIVE ROSES. } We are satisfied to let FIVE ROSES make its own friends--If you will only try it once, Madam. FIVE ROSES FLOUR . Suppose you are baking in oven by cireul- ating heat (the usual method) and want to use direct heat. Simply do this: Open the glide in the oven bottom. This exposes the oven burn- ers and brings the flames directly under your ans." This is only one of the several new eatures you'll find on McClary Gzs Ranges this year. Go to our miearest agency and see the white enamelled broiler and drip pans, the "Spring balanced oven and broiler doors, Anti- Rust linings and other new features. You have your cholce of sight different styles of Gas Ranges. Bach style can be supplied with or without two burner extension, oven thers mometer., water hester, reservoir, high shelf, high closet and canopy tp. Can be changed from artificial to natural gas in a Tew minutes, , Vancouver, oronto, Wisnipeg, 8 Jom, N. B., ton, Calgary,

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