Daily British Whig (1850), 17 Sep 1910, p. 11

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p READY FOR USE IN ANY QUANTITY y For making soap, softening water, removing old paint, "disinfecting sinks, closets, drains and for many other piirposes. A can equals 20 Ibs, SAL SODA. 2 Useful for 500 purposes--Sold Everywhere. COMPANY LIMITED ONT. BY REN ACT TNC Talks About rio . NN for Goal or Wood AYE you seen the Perfect Spring Door on the warming closet? It is the newest Pan- dora feature. The ordinary door, when opened, is inside the warming closet and takes up valuable space. But the Perfect Spring Door, when gpened, is entirely outside of the warming closet. By being outside it adds two inches to the height of the space inside the closet. That extra space provides room for fourteen more dinner or dessért plates. The door cannot drop down and smash the dishes because the spring holds the door up out of the way until you desire to close it. The Perfect Spring Door is a con- venience worth having. There are more than a score of other conveni- ences on the Pandora. Our Pandora booklet tells about them. Send for a Mc<Clary's Stands for Guaranteed Quality n Londen, Mortreal, Winnipel ) : gan Vaccouar TBS KB, Hiden, Caliary war---- or Sale by J. B.BUNT & Co., Kington dainty, delicious delight or the summer days when the appetite + craves light and wholesome foods i BISCUIT _ with berries, other fruits. restore crispness, Jraches, sliced bananas and: cat the biscuit in the oven to ess, then cover with fruit an milk or crearh, adding sugar to 'suit the taste. a "Shredded Wheat is made in Canada of choicest selected Ontario wheat. Contains all the muscle- making, brain-building elements in the whole wheat, made digestible by steam -oeoking, shred- ding and A Canadian food for Canadians. Start the t with ed Wheat Biscui served wi ; th or cream. ke Your "eat? Shredded Wheat serve with iW "THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, SATURDAY. THINGS THEATRICAL NOTES ON PLAYS, PIAYENS AXD| PFLAYHOUSES, Play in Paris--Old Lily and Will Return, Ww. Savage will bring "Coun ik Co to Nazinosa's Thirty-ninth | strest Theatre; New York, op S tosiber 10th to replace "Miss Patsy," ie which Miss Gertrude Quinlan was intrexiuces ua g Star. Fuller Mellish bas been engaged by Messrs, Liehler & CUo,, to play the role of ®ir Oliver Holt in "The Dawn of Tomorrow," with Miss Gertrude El hott, the role which he originated with Miss Eleagor Robson. | From Rome comes the news Liahoel D'Annunzio, the poet and playwright, will visit America early in 1911 and deliver 5 series of lectures, Kew York managers have lomg been afixiaie to present D'Annunzio herve, st he has refused pll offers. Messrs, A. H. Woods, Hany H. Frnzee aml George W, lLoaderer ob tained © from Judge Holt, in. the { pited States Circuit Court, a tem: porary order restraining Miss Adele Ritchie from sin%ing the song "Every Little Movement," which, it is said, ix from "Madame Sherry." Lady de Bathe, known to the the atvagoinz --publieol ea as Lilv Lanztty, has emerged from private life and ammounces her inten- tion of returning to the stage. She will make het regppearance at a Lon- don theatre where she will play the leading role in a modern melodrama. Whether Lady ds Bathe will visit Am- erica has not been stated. The company to support Mme. Nazi- move in ber forthcoming production of Sehuitzler's "The Fairy Tale," is complete. 1h addition to the distin guished Russian star, the abt for this play will include Prandon Tvnan, Filsie Esmond, Mrs. Jacques Martin, Gertrude Berkeley, Margaret. Lindsav, Alice Wicks, Edward R. Mawson, Or- Jando Daly, Wiliam Hessan, 1. Race Dunrobin, Thomas Russell, Master George Tobin and Evelyn Tobin. Next season's programme at the Gaiety Lyrique, Paris, has just bien announced. In addition to Operas pre- sented last vear, four novelties will be sung. They are Massenet's "Don Qui s sote," Adalbert Meveier's "Elsen," Le Borne's "les Girondoow," and De Saucev's "Paysons ot Sokdats." "Don Quixote" was heard at Monte Carlo last winter, with: Chaliapine in the title role. At the Gaiste-lyrigue the chief parts will be sung by Mlle. Tuey Arbell and Messrs. Fugere and Mar- ecoux. The segson will open October Ist. The pavment of forty dollars a seat to witness the performance of a play would seem high even to the Ameri- ean Croesus, Sut it appears thet the piice did not deter Paris folk for at- tending "Pdlleas et Melisande" when a special presentation of the Maeter- finek drama was given August 29th in the ancient Convent of St. Mand: ville, now: the home of Maeterlinek, and bis wife, Mme. Georgette Leblanc, The" scenes wove Jeid in the various parts of the Convent, and the prin- cipal role was takep by Mme. Le blanc, The proceeds wera yiven to charity. Ih New York, "Medame Sherry'" got off 'to 'a good start at the New Am: stérdam Theatre, with Lina Abarba- nell in the title vale. "The Commut- rs' has settled down for an indefinite vin at the Criterion." Bessie McCoy in "The Feho" is being received enthus- instically by larze audienees every ovening. "Love Among the Lions" will remain at the Garrick for some time, and the same applies to "The Brass Bottle" at the Lyceum. "The Arcad- inns," recently removed from the Knickerbocker to the sNew York The: atte, will be on view at the latier house for some weeks. "The Fortune Hunter" continues the even tenor of its prosperous way at the Gaiefy, Waklnee * Eddinger has struck 4 lively it at the Republic with "Bobby { Henry that Grossmith, the famoms English actor and his en- tire London y in E, OC, Car. to's comedy, "Mr. Preedy and the Catintess," wt Montreal, Sept. 20th, marks a trical event of great im- portance to Canadikh theatregoors. Mz. Grossmitlf comes direct from - a remarkable vim of twp vears at the Criterion Theatre, London, where his acting and playing created suck un stinted praise that We was engaged by Messrs. Shuhect amd Daniel V. Arthur to 'appear in New York for a long win- ter season At one of the principal Bropdway theatres, immediately fol lowing his brief Canadian tour. Miss Charlotte Granville, ' the celebrated London beatty, i= Mr, Grosamith's nei feminine support. The Crit: erion theatre production as a whole is being imported with the English cast. blimps Science Camp In Spring. It has been customary for the science students of Queen's to go in- to canip back in the country for sur- veying imstfuction every September. The camp this session has been post- poned until next spring. a. Boost is a good by-word for = any community. Forty Dollars a Seat Charged for a Langtry | development, and there is the added A | strsin caused Longs for the Footlights Again tea Forope and Ameri: ST. VITUS DANCE, Striking Example of Ms Cure by Tonle Treatment: St. Vitus" dence is the commonest {form of nervous trouble which afflicts | children, because of the great demands ! made om the body by growing and when thai the by study, Jt is Become 80 great ithe impoverished blood, | nerves fail to receive their full sup ply of nourishment, that the ner vous debility leads to 8t. Vitus dance. The remarkable success of Dr. Wil liame' Pink Pills in curing St. dance should lead parents to their children this t blood-build- ing medicine st the frst signs of the approach of the disease. Palor, list lossneéss, inattention, restlessness and irritability are all symptoms which ently 'show that the blood and nerves are failing to meet the, demands made upon them. Mrs. A. Winters, Vieden, Man, says: "When my little girl Was six years old she was at tacked with searlatina, which was followed by St. Vitus' dance. Her limbs would jerk and twitch. Her speech became affected, and at last sie became so bad that she could wearecly walk, and we hardly dared trust her alone. She was under the care of a doctor, bat in spite of this was steadily growing worse, and we foared that we would lose her. As 1 r. Williams' Pink Pills bod owed her older sister of snsemin I decided to-try-them again. After the use of = few boxes, to our great joy, we found they were helping her and in the course of a few weeks more her powet of speech fully returned, and she eonld walk and go about as well as ray child, and she has been well and halthy since. When illness comes to one of our family now we never Dr. never Vitus any eifl in a doctor, but simply use Williams' Pink Pills, and they disappoint us." Sold by all medicitie dealers or by mail at S0c. a box, or six hoxes for $2.50, from The Dr. Williams' Medicine (0., Brockville, Ont. Near Nutmegs. New York Herald ¢ The Connecticut delegation republican convention at Chisago took along a lot of badges, each ornumen- tad with a wooden nutmeg. #The badges weve very popular. The ¢deghtes from other states thought it 1 great joke to wear a genuine Con- f.scticut wooden nutmeg Presently the man who had charge of the badges came to Senator Bran- degee and said : "Senator, we're «in a fix. All our vooden nutmeg badges are gone and there ia still a great demand for them. What ean we do." "(let some more." "But there are no wooden nuimegs in Chicago. We had to have these especially made for us back home." "All right," directed the Napoleonic Prandegee; '"'go down to a grocers store and buy four or five hundred veal nutmegs and stick them on the badges. They'll never know the dif- ference." And 'they didn't. -------------- The Greatest Robber. Bolton Hall, Ly Sime boys weref disputing ab vho was the greaest robber. One said ick Turpin wis, because he was best known. Another declared it was Roh- in Hood, whe robbed the rick. An other contended for Napoletin, because bo rolibed by wholesale. Stilt' 'another jor the James boys, who got off with the swag. At last one turned to the litthe hoy who was too timid to butt "me « "Who do you think?" "Well," he snid, "dor- all around vork, our landlord is no slouch." to f! There is more Catarrh in this section of the eountry than all other diseases and until the last be incur- ." For a great many years doctors pronounce! it a local disease and pre scribed local remedies, and by constant- iy failing to cure with local treatment, renounced it. incu le, en as feoven catarfh to ve a constitutional disease, and, therefore, jeg eon - stitutional . _HalFs Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio, 1s the only con- Eon Trea rmalty. io dgses "trom 10 rope en internally § to a teaspoonful. TE nets direct the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. They offer one hundred dollars for any case it fails to cure. Send for circulars and testimonials. Address, F, J, CHENEY & CO, Toledo, 0. Sold by Druggists, 780. o Take Hall's ily Pills for constipa« on. SEPTEMBIR 17. 1910. " A ------ girs -- . * -- 'PROBLEMS NOT EASY THE REST CURE AS PREACHED IN JAPAN. Victim of Nervous Prostration Given Metaphysical Problems to Solve-- Quite a Strain Indeed. The Japanese sre catchink up = with us. They now enjoy the i ol Fr vous proétration and are prietie- ing their own form of rest cure. 1he Japan Magazine tells of this latest step a progress. A A lady by the name of Kanal, Just sulump was tened with, a nervous collapse whith necessitated a visit 10 the seaside, and being at Kamahura she was persunded to eater wpon the form of rest care practised wnder the direction of a priest of the famous Kenkoji temple. "It was on Uctober 3rd last," says she, "that 1 made the acquaintance of the Kwanchosama, the director of the retreat. He acceded very Kindly to my request to join in the exercises, and after asking me many questions about my life and about the seliefls 1 had hitherto entertained ss te gods and Buddhas gave me a subject for medi- tation. t "The subject was 'Hoorai no Mem- moku," snd 1 was told to think about it until 1 had discoversd its meaning ar thought 1 had done so. When 1 had solved the problem | was to come agein wo the director, who would either give @e a second proolem or send me back to think over st again. "The problems thus given are not of a pature to be easily solved. | cannot tell you the meaning of the particular one propounded to me, because 1 am dot allowed to divulge the secret; it wilh suffice to say that some people will think over one oly these formulas for a year or more without coming to a satisfactory answer, "It was very difficult for me, with my family cares and household duties, sath gervants," and children and visi- tors coming to interrupt mu, to devote my whole attention io the proslem assigned me, Hut fortunately 1 have heen able to avail fayseli of stated periods of quiet. "Once a month wom the beginning of October to the eid of Marck thete is a retreat [seishin} held at the Kenhoii to which alk stedents of the contemplative life are a'i>wed to go. The retreat lists tor a week, and dur- ing that time) the sale members live entirely at the 'emple, the women in private houses or their own homes. "Hours of silent contemplation are observed, bevinnin: at 7 o'clock in the Pmorning and spread over the day till about 6 in the evening--five hours of silence in all, with the director sitting in the next room to receive commiini- cations and to furnish us with fresh problems when necessary. "I had to leave the house early in the mornin with 5 chochin (lantern) to light me: it was 10 o'clock in the evening before I returned. Our meals duriny the day were supplied from the temple; for breakfast, tem, rice gruel and relishes; at midday, rice, kenchin soup and vegetables bosled in soy in the evening, tea and rice Pruel. "The most important of these meet- ings was the one in January, During i ihe cotrse of it I had the good fortune Kolve my first problem. The second prose given me was 'Kane no one wo tone,' how to stop a bell from sounding, : » veut eure is now over. 1 have come 'out of 1t fortified in hoody and i mind. 1 am no kmgeér nervous and Srritable; 1 am able to look at thinye more dispassionately and feel myself wore fit than 1 was hefore to come with the difficulties and worries of hfe." 8 Red Tape. Youih's Companion. Some people fear red tape than any other kind of trouble. One such was a postman, whose duty it was to bring mail to the few scatter- ing houses on an idand off the At lantic coast. One morning during a terrific storm, a man saw him pulling his boat over. Several fimes it was nearly swamped and the rower in danger of his life, "Why in-the world did you make that trip," he asked' im, when the boat finally grounded on the beach. "Well, you see," replied the other, "6 1 miss a trip I have to write a fearfully long letter fo Washington ex- plaining why, and so I thought 1 had rather pull the boat." more A av An Object of Pity That part of our nature which we eall the emotional is much mang hi velop 4 1 womca than I en. They are more sSelsilive, more TeRUee, te syin- patheuc. mare pronounced in thelr hikes d Clsiikes, more susceptinle 0 the ex. themes of pless. re and pain, and these refined mental qualities, nd less than beauty of form and fealure, muke up the aumoiptire of atirsctivensss and charm which always surrounds rue wemaniiness The continued istence of these winning, engaging womanly characteristics ds 10 B very large exte on the reg. iy of the womanly fimctions and Uie condition of the womanly or ww, and when these functions aud organs becoin ordered or diseased the same mental qualities which are the glory of a well wonw become the source of suffering amd torture mimost mdescribabie. Hér cheery hi fulness is changed to a fecling of despondency, almost of despair, and she ls hay with forebodings of worse evils to come. Instead of being entértuining and panionable, she becomes woudy and irritable being unable to keep ber mind dwell on her troubles. She becomes morbidly sensitive, Imagining that being slighted or foresaken LY hgr relatives and friends and she has a most Wad ating sense of her miserable condition and of her loss of her womanly atiribotes she is religiously inclined she ls very lable (0 be oppressed with doubis and fears in' regard to her spiritual condition, or to think that she Is eternally lost ia dition to this, she has also to endure tie ost distressing aches and pains What makes the case still miore pithable, especiully with married women, is the fact that few men understand or appréciite the extent of their sulfering, or the seriousness of the froables causing it. M doctors evin speak of theso Girorders as subjects for ridicule, and the poo suff 8 & reputition for being & crank Or a scold when she pore Nearly hes being & marty As these disorders are cue to « d condition of the wa svident that to #ffect a cure thede o 8 muct be restored 'tc fn other words, the circukition, which has become ton parts, must be improved so that the waste matter wil ment so badly needed be brought to those suffering ory oF broken down tissue which is held in the stagnant 1lo that causes most of 1a® suflering by opprefiag toe nerves ads LIV organs normal eohditio: sted and stagrupt in th fr it Is oated 13 these § The romedy known ss ORANGE BILLY wil positively relleve this sonpestion and Pestore normal eire in the dhordersd organs. an applied or local frealment, gets wigolly on theses parts. It absorbed Into the bland vessels these organs, amd as it has erful antiseptic properties, it Immediately acts on ths waste mat. tor held ab discharged y abd causes It to be As this dead mmiter is dischnrged thie berves are felleved, the pains and mental troubles bes cone less, and the asrves sod hod vessels become stronger. ORANGE LILY thus proves its mérit By ace tus vigibie results, ots on all female troubles « Soni . « anti-toxin does on diphtheria Winnipeg, April 26th, 1908 Pear Mre. Currah.--I am very gratefv] 10 ORANGE LILY for the change it haw made in my life. When I cemmenced. is ute eitht months ago 1 fal 1 would be surely insane before the yéur was ended, "he pan 1 suffered offen wade me wish for death, and besides 1 would have such iis of depression and pervous tsvitching that 1 would have (6 serbam, 1 had doetered with threg AEere) Lord for over two years and had also weed both tha Plerve and Plokham » eines. but none of them seetged to reach my case. 1 felt sone improvement after the first month's use of ORANGE LILY snd have kept gaining even since, 1 do tot feel that 1 am entirely cured vet, bit 1 am #0 with Better tnan I wes that | am sure I will soon be entirely well 1 sloep well! and feel chinerful and happy. except that | am oc casionally somewhat depressed. but these rele are wéttiae fewer pnd milder. 1 hava also noticeably improved in nrmearance. Fioclosed find $3 for Which pledse send me two boxes of ORANGE LILY dod ene of Cermte Mussag®. 1 might rdd that the matter which sed to be froeiy discharged. asd whi fooked like a chichen's glu. gard. 18 becoming Very pent, nnd I Imgagine that the elrculation ia pretty well re- stored. - Am I net right in this? Your sitcera friend, RE. LE A. Free to all Sufferers In ofder to enable every woman sufferivig from any form of female dizorders to test the merits of ORANGE LILY, 1 will send to everyone who will send me her address, or the address of any suffering friend enough of the remedy for ten days' treatment, absolutely free. As this is worth 36¢. it In only because | know that It anaest give relief that I make this fred trial offer. Further if any woman wishes expert redical advice, and will write me a full description of her case, 1 will submit same to the staff of thé Coonley Medical Institute, Detroit. Mich and they will write her direct without expense to her, INGLOSE THREE 2-CENT STAMPS and address MRS, FRANCES E. CURRAH, WINDSOR, ONT, 2 certainly and ns positively "The Flour that is Different" We must stand ready to prove it and also prove that the differ- ence is so marked, so worth while, that you will feel this is the flour you ugh to use. That is exactly where we do stand. We ask you to take no risk. Buy a bag of ROBIN HOOD and give it two fair wials. If it does not prove perfectly satisfac~ : Ea tory, so satisfactory that you, too, say, "It Is really the flour that is different," you may take it 10 your grocer and he will give you back your money. THE SASKATCHEWAN FLOUR MILLS CO. | MOOSE JAW, SASK. LIMITED

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