THE DAILY BRITISH WIIG, F RIDAY, MARCH 15, PAGE THIRTEEN SNIDER SPENT $500 WITHOUT RESULTS Then Takes Tanlac and Health| Is Restored--GQains Twelve Pounds. | The Going of The Barrel Organ, 1 "a a "1 have gained back twelve pounda | "Pheére's a barrel organ carolll ng of my lost weight and 1 don't hesitate | way de a golden stre Sn to say I believe Tanlac has saved my| i In a city when the sun Sink J > 0 fe," sald Frank Snider of 106! Anybody who has read that truly Duchess street, Toronto, recently, in| wonderful masterpiece of Alfred one of the most remarkable states] N at the news ments yet published in connection | that the old bs _ the with the premier preparation in Can-| that the curly- son ada, Mr, Snider is a valued employee of the south wears < 5 quely of the Chisholm Milling Company, | slung across his shoulder is going, and has lived in Toronto for sixteen! going jist as surely as time will wear years. He is also well known in Lon-| out those few that are now in exist- don, his former home, | ence: For, old Joseph Molinari the "1 don't reckon anyone ever had! last of that tribe, which is even moré a worse case of stomach troable than) select than the Mohicans, has stop- 1 did," continued Mr. Snider. "'Dur-| ped his work of bringing 1 ineful life! ing the past five years 1 went down | into the cold sides of bright brass in health and lost weight until I hard- | exlinders. He has closed his little. ly looked like myself, During the past) shop and with a wave of his hand three years | have spent at least five| and a touch of his hat, he has fled. | hundred dollars for treatment and| Nobody knows where, nobody can, medicihes, but kept geiting worse in-| tell where, but he has left numbers! stead of better. Several specialists; of hearts desolate. ithin a few re kind haired, -eyed son ntof(OTNE grea composers always "put thelr | And make it squeak as softily as best foot forward" in composing A tiny Yittle mouse; work of that nature. The beauty| And then he'll jerk out som i and majesty of a Symphony lies in With ¢ movement of nef) the fact that it is not one idea or| And make you think you'réetfstening mood but several, because it is div-| To a military band, ided into movements each of which} He plays it with his fingers, and .is .a complete musical number in it~ He plays it with bis toes, self and may be played detached] And if he really wanted to from the others. He'd play it with his nose; A well known supervisor of music} He's sliding up and down the bench, asked a class during the course of ad He's working with his knees, history of music test "what part did| He's dancing round with bath his feet Martin L uther play in the history of | As lively as you please, chureh music? A resourceful boy! always like to take a seat called out "The flute, Sir." | Where 1 can see him go; Curiously enough when Puccini's] He's better than a sermon, and "Madame Butterfly' was first pro-| ' He does me good, 1 know; duced in Milan in 1904 thé Italian|I like the life ind movement and people did not at first take kindly 10} 1 like to hear him play; the Japanese setting. Eventually it| He is the most exciting thing became one of the most successful of| In town on Sabbath day. modern operas not only in Italy, but! Alertness of Musical Mind, told me they could do me no good and I was given to understand there was no hope for me. 1 could hardly digest anything properly and 1 suffered so after meals that 1 could hardly stand | it, I finally got so I couldn't va anything 1 would eat and for fiftee months I lived on a diet of such things as oatmeal and milk--the very lightest of foods failed to help me. There was always a hurting in the pit of my stomach | and pains in my sides and back | around my kidneys. Sometimes I} would get so dizzy while at my work that I would just pitch right over on the floor Many a morning | have tarted off to work and before getting block away would around, go back vas off from part of two years, home and stay. I Would work a few days and then be laid up for a week | or two and was s0 weak that I could hardly get around at all. Many a| night I have suffered so much from | pain from the gas and bloating that! I had to get up out of bed and walk the floor for hours, "Now this is just the way I strug- gled along for five years and words can't describe my suffering. 1 tried #0 many things without getting any relief that I became so down-hearted and discouraged that I told my wife 1 guessed it was all up with me, Everything had failed to do me fny good and my hopes of getting any bet- ter had about all left me. One night while reading about Tanlac I told my wife to send and get me a bottle and it was the luckiest day of my life when I began taking it. ' The first few doses made me feel better, so I kept on taking it and improving until now I'm feeling better than I have in ten years. My stomach don't bother me any more now, except that it is hard for me to eat enough to satisfy my big appetite, I am {ree from pain now and, 1 haven't missed a day's work since a short time after 1 be- gan taking Tanlac and 1 certainly do feel very grateful for what it has done for me. My wife and her sister, who lives in Kitchener, and my brother in Tanlac on account of the good it has! done rae and 1 will gladly tell anyone that I believe Tanlac is the greatest, medicine in the world." Tanlac if sold in Kngston by A, P.| Chown. In Plevna by Gilbert Ostler, In Battersea by C. 8. Clark, In Fernleigh by Ervin Martin, In Ardoch by M. J. Scullion. ---ADVT. The Telgmann School . of Music. Piano, violin and other stringed instruments; Elocution and Dra- matic Art. Fall pupils may begin at any date. Terms on ap plication. 216 Frontenac Street. Phone 1610. gy al WHEN YOU WAKE UP DRINK GLASS (OF HOT WATER Wash the poisons and toxins from system before putting more food into stomach, Says inside-bathing makes any- one look and feel clean, weet and refreshed. Wash yourself on the inside be- fore hreakfast like you do on the outside. tant because. absorb impurities into This is vastly more impor- skin pores do no the Db causing Ningss, while the bowel pores do. For every ounce of food and drink taken into the stomach, nearly an ounce of waste material must be It this 1 is not eliminated day carried out of the body. waste mater] by day it kly ferments and gen- erates polsons, gases and avers to sustain the body. A splendid health measure is to before breakfast each day, un glass of real hot water with a tea- nful of limestone phosphate in to wash from aio 8) i vaio 1 u harmless way these | and the st: ch, bier. kidneys ana' hay els, thus cleansing, swebtening an hening the entire alimentary a freshening ©! into oye an enthusiast on inside-bath- ~but this also] have to turn| my work the greater) all! Léndon, are all taking {| then, we'll hear again the toxins, a re absorbed or sucked into ream through the lymph cts I rehould suck only nour: | years all the bafrel "organs with | ed Puccini's greatest work. their queer monkeys which we now The following is what might c be t| occasionally hear and at whieh weil termed a good cartoon in words * on sometimes stop and smile whimsi- "The Organist" from the pen of Geo. cally, will begin to wheeze and crack W. Stevens in the Toledo Times: and sigh, and the lilting tunes of the I wonder how the organist | turning crank will be no more. The | Can do so many things; sight of the monkey in a red cap , He's getting ready long before { capering about at the end of a chain} * The choir stands up and sings; will be obselete and the species will| He's pressing buttons, pushing stops; lose its glamor for us. For a mon- He's pulling here and there, | key without a grinder and an organ, And testing all the working parts and a barrel organ at that, has as] While Hsteming to the prayer. much right to be seen and enjoyed as; He runs a mighty big machine, | Punch without his affectionate Judy. It's full of funny things; It is true we shall still have with A mass of boxes, pipes, and tubes us the big piano organs which are} | pulled around on wheels but they are as much a part of the adventuresome | life of a strolling troubadour @s an| automobile is a part, of a caravan inl {the desert of Sahara. They say--those who try to find| a reason for the departure of old] | Molinari--that he left because he { couldn't make any money at his work. They say that) his coutrry-| men no longer came to buy his little organs because of better things in| the way of making money. There! were streets to be paved and sub- | ways to be laid and the genorosity of the man with the blue print was! great. But we know better. Molinari | is gone to the "land where the dead dreams go."" Maybe it is Italy, may- be it is some other place, but Molin- ari could not bear the life of the present. He wanted to sing tunes into the hearts of the little boxes but the songs wouldn't come. Tears came instead. There was a world suffering from a war, the like of which had never been seen and the little organs that sang refused to be born. What's more, Molinari could- n't find Italian boys that could pass the test that led to the membership of the Knights of the Singing Road. | Yes indeed, there was a test. He had to be gay of heart and blithe of spir- it with a song in his heart, and a love for the open road and eager and anxious to see life, There are quite a few who could boast of those qual- ities now. There are very few who are willing to take the chance of the Smpty cup and the singing box even them and stop more coming. though that chance meant the seeing | Boils are simply bad blood burst- | of a nbw page everyday in the vivid-|ing out, and the bad blood must be ly-colored book of adventures. ' So made pure before the bofls disap- Molinari, tired and weary, waved his pear, wrinkled old hand, commanded his| Burdock Blood Bitters Is the great- little genil to lay dowpm their 0o0ls| est blood purifier known. It cleanses and hled himself way with them, the system and removes every par- organs are ticle of foul material from the blood, 2, They had been' then never another boil comes and born out of the aio of his hand the cure is permanent, and they know that he is gone. They Mr. Geo. Ayers, 302 Gloucester St. know it and they mourn for him, { Ottawa, Ont., writes: "I wish to tell That's why when you hear them on you what I know about your won- the street, if you stop a while and derful Burdock Blood Bitters. In listen close, you will hear their the spring 1 suppose my system voices grow hoarse with sobs and! needing a cleaning out, for I had their breats choke up with tears. | nine boils come on my neck one after Some day their grief will grow too the other, I quickly got a bottle of great for them and they will stop to; B.B.B., and before it was half finish- sing entirely, and the street will hd ed I felt a great change, and it cer- empty and dull for loss of them, But tainly put an end to my boils, other- many people won't understand and| wise I might have had a lot more. I call them worn out and sell them for, recommend B.B.B, to all 1 can, for 1 old brass. know it to be a great remedy." But maybe--and this is. a wish as! much as a prophecy--maybe some day, after the war is over, Molinari may come back or maybe he will send somebody in his place. And There's little whistles for a cent, In rows and rows and rows; I'll bet there's twenty miles of tube As large as garden hose. There's scores as large as stovepipes, And there's lots so big and wide. "hat several little boys I know Could play around inside: From. little bits of piecolos That hardly make a toot, Big elevator chute, The organist knows every one, And how they ought to go; He makes them rumble like a storm, Or plays them sweet or low; At times you think them very near, At times they're soaring high, Like angel voices, singing far Off, somewhere in the sky. For he can take this structure that's As As big us as any house, NINE BOILS Kept Coming on Neck One After the Other Anyone who has ever suffered from boils, kngws how sick and miserable they make you feel, When you think you are about cur- ed 'of one, another seems ready to take its place and prolong your wret- chedness, . All the poulticing and {laneing you may do will not cure | Save Your Coal THE SOWARDS COAL CO. Phone 155. 'LESS MEAT IF BACK «+ +« +. barrel organ carolling way down a golden street, "In the city when the sun sinks low." Consider the Teacher. Be fair to your teacher, and be; frank with him; let him know your; state of mind, your doubts and mis- givings. When you feel you would like or need a change of teacher! have the courage to tell your present instructor; It will save him and avy| distress, and will do away with Many ill-natured reflections. Demand square deal and be sure to grant one. "The Gay Bassoon" In "The Ancient Mariner' Coler- idge speaks of the "gay bassoon." Owing to a peculiar squawk In some of its tones the bassoon sometimes is funny and can be used with hum- orous effect, but never, with any stretch of the imagination, could it be called gay or abandoned. There is Iso a contrabassoon, which is of even lower register than the bassoon itself, It is a large instrument, and if you see a very large pipe protrud- : ing above the orchestra, with such a S50s6 ll Joris Of Streams, Pastiewiar. lavish outfit of nickel joints and region; rheumatic tw other trimmings that it Peminds you! pot aches acid twinges. severe of a section of sanitary plumbing, | gination 'torpid Yiver,. sl v oon: you are gazing, npon the contrabass- ui der and 'urinary ry oh oon. The English horn, bass Sarl. moment your back hurts or net, contrabassoon, and piccolo 2' kidneys aren't acting right, or if blad- small shrill flute) are additions tA 'bothers H you, get the regular wood wind avarette. | With the original qiiaktetie of wood-" ounces a jad Salts from wind instruments they enable a com- go poser to use the wood-choir in vari- g 3 ous combinations with itself and 10 then act produce a variety of exquisite ' tone made | colors. The voice of the wood-choir | jemon as a whole is exceedingly rich and' and hax been tender, breathing romance and gentle, futh melancholy. Take a Glace of Salts to Flush Kid neys If Bladder Bothers You. Eating meat regularly eventually Brodhses kidney trouble in some form r other, says a well-known author- { ity, because the uricgacid in meat ex- cites the kidneys, tfey become over- worked, get siuggish; clog up and From Rags To Symphonies A humorist's fi Ager gog of a fugue Sop is: "A fugue is a musical composi- tign where the voices come In one by make o dps A RE injure anyone; ervescent one, and the people g0 oul" bne hy! water ? i ST eature Sa dior it uAnally *osults in two ATR millions of one.' ww and His reason for taking a special in terest in Symphonies is explained by ¢ a music lover in the i that "the ig and omen, taie cop fi a in Europe and America and consider- | And sticks and slats and strings;! There's every size, up to the great | AND KIDNEYS HURT about four wells. 6 The world is not altogether blame- | worthy for its general low estimate | of the mental status of musicians, | for, in a vague sort of ag way, there is a universal idea that the musician is of a distinct class of human being, | knowing nothing but music. So much | time and concentration are required | for the accomplishment of the art, | as to lead to the idea that there is no | time or room in our lives for any- | thing else. But this is after all a | talse conclusion; we have time for | other things besides musie, and as a { class we have both desire and cap- | acity for much of mental develop- ment alongside of our music, Perhaps the world will not believe that the "miisical'"' mind is the most | alert of all minds and the musician | the most consecrated of all students, | but these are near facts, which lead { us to the conclusion that we have need for great mental force, not only | for the accomplishment of our most | complicated and difficult of all arts, | along its theoretical lines, to which must be added its enormous task of | practical attainment, but, and more | to our present point, we have a spec- | dal and arduous task in the complex | duties of our arts ministrations, How can we make evident the importance | of our art as a psychic, ethical and | aesthétical sociological force, how | can we bring the average man to a | realization of musics' seriousness, spiritual factor in human life? Art of Piano Teaching Plano teaching as an art has made , great strides in the last few decades, | especially in the brdaneh of psycho- | physical analysis. 'Merely trying to establish habits by the look of the movement was the 'old way. The new way is to study their sensations. Trenchant and destructive criticism by teachers who were not content to | work along these old lines, who could logically and scientifically prove their contentions, contributed in no small measure to the great ad- vancement in the art of teaching. Many great artists hav hopelessly floundered in their atte to con- vey a clear idea of touch their pupils. These pupils, if th. "ned at all, deshits their chaotic « .ocepts, did so by parrot-like imitation. The gigantic end monumental technique demanded of a modern pianist makes it impérative that he be intimately acquainted with the underlying principles that govern his art. When these are mastered and crystallized into habit, the pian- ist is enabled to command infinite varieties of muscular sensations and adjustments, with corresponding tone qualities and speeds at will, The modern teacher must be able to point out with unerring accuracy the direct means of producing any desired effect and also analyze with equal precision the cause of failure. He can hardly do this if he is not a good pianist. Not every great pian- ist is a great teacher but it takes a great pianist to be a great teacher. These constantly varying mental musoular discriminations and states are invisible, and yet the competent teacher is instantly able to detect a restrained motion or harmful mus- cular association caused thereby, the faulty thythm and indefinite tone qualities usually being the first indication. Many players study for Years with faulty muscular condi- tions, and realize it only when their hands and arms give out through the unnecessary strain put upon them. vis its final purpose as a i { i The Other Side of War. You wouldn't thick that men would £0 to war to learn how to be kind, but they do. There's no kinder crea- ture in the whole wide world than the average Tommy. He makes a friend of any stray animal he can find. He shares bis last france with a chap who isn't his pal. He risks his life quite inconsequently to rescue {anyone who's wounded. When he's gone over the top with bomb and bayonet for the express purpose of "doing in" the Hun, he makes a com- rade of the Fritzie he captures. You'll see him coming down the battered trenches with some scared lad of a German at his side. He's gabbling away making throat noises and signs, smiling 'snd doing his inarticulate best to be intelligible, He pats the t Hun on the back, hands him choco- ites, exchanges souve- nirs and jg wiv with him his last luxury. If anyone interferes with his Fritzie he's willing to fight. When they quis to the cage where the pris- 0 be over, the fare- Pore companions whose ac- point are often as absurd us 1 suppose one only Shay ae of kicdness when he fuels 1pe the need of it himself. The me have sald "G bye t out there they loved, but they've got to love some one so they give their to ca Fritzies, stray 'dogs, fellows who've collected a piece of a shefl---lg fael, to anyone whos 2 little worse off iban themselves. -- Coni Dawson, lieutenant Cana- alan Field Artillery, in Good House- eening. Virtue becomes a vice as soon as you The an 0 pha of it wick suming. the bills ak 18. Because it is better made, better in every essential than any other piano, the Teintamuan & (To. Art Fiano has earned the title "World's Best Piano." So marked is this supegority, so perfect its tone, its action, and every detail of its construction, that even the novice needs only to examine it to be convinced that it has no equal. It has taken 65 years of continuous effort on the part of three generations of Heintzmans to attain for this pigno its proud position. C. W. Lindsay =] Limited, i Kingston, Ont. rT ---- AZ 04 TTR EE EC LOCAL BRANCH TIME TABLE IN EFFECT MARCH SRD Traine will leave and arrive at City Station, Foot of Johnson Street, Golog West, Je City JAG am, 10 a.m, 5 0 p.m, 3.00 pan. ? Golng East, Live, Clty Mail . 140 am, 6 Express . ., 30am, Mail .. ., .. 1220 pm, Intern't Lid. 1.20 p.m. vo. 28 Local . . S45 pm, 27 N 1, 18, 14, 16, 18 15 run daily, Other trains daily except -Sundav, Direct rogte to Toronto, Peterbors, Hamilton, Buffalo, London, Detradt, "hicago, Bay City, Saginaw, Mantresd, Ottawa, Quebec, Portland, St. John, "Halifax, Boston and New York. Fo» "Pullman accommodation, tickets and all other information, apply, to J. P Hanley, Agent. Agency for all ocean vteamshio Mnes. Open day and night. Arr. Citv § Mail 1 1 Express Passenger Service BETWEEN Halifax and Bristol Money remittances made by mall op cable. Apply to Local Agents or The Robert Reford Co. Limited, General Agents, 50 King St. East, Torente, Ont. at ERNE RARE EERE REE IRR REE # . 2,000,000 People Have witnessed Edison Tone-Tests, yet not one has been able to distinguish between the voice of the artist and that of the instrument. THAT'S CONVINCING EVIDENCE The New Edison, "The Phonograph with a Soul," has been used by thirty great artists in these tests and have challenged the audience to detect any difference. That is truly MUSIC'S RE-CREATION Hear the wonderful Edison, at The J. M. Greene Music Co. Limited Corner Princessand Sydenham Streets NEEEN EN EE AEENEENENEEENEENEN ANNAN RANE Comfort Lye is a very powerful cleanser, It is used for cleaning vp the oldest and hardest dirt, grease, ete. Comfort Lye is fine for making sinks, drains and closets sweet and clean. Comfort Lye Kills rats, mice, roaches and insect pests. Comfort Lye will do the spring cleaning you've got. Comfort Lye is good for making soap. It'spowdered, perfumed and 100% pure. hardest Al i111] P9090 000@ tance has been made at the' England's and Canada's Choicest Weaves-- as exemplified in the famous Semi-ready Spring and Summer 1918 apparel, now await your inspection, in our establishment; it should be worth your while to call early, while the line of patterns is complete. Styles range from the ultra-conservative to a correst expression of the * last word" in modish effects. Semi-ready Tailored Clathes FOR MEN are tailored just right, outside and in. Scientific apparel construction. involves painstaking attention to each detail of figure types, and variations. A Semi-ready gar- ment fils--in each and every dimension and measurement; and the " Price-in- the-Pocket " is profit in your pocket. We show Suits and Top-Coats, $18 to $50. superbly tailored--' | a FEE Glassco's Pure Jams A New Shipment Just Arrived. J.R.B. Gage, Phone 549. Montreal Street. DAVID J. WILL, 213 Princess Street. "The Home of Good Clothing and High Gade Men's Furnishings."