Daily British Whig (1850), 28 Mar 1918, p. 10

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The Daily British Whig PAGES 9-14 KINGSTON, ONTARIO, THURSUAY, MARCH 28 191 Se = EE SECOND SECTION Making Music Interesting. The study of music from the very beginning should be made interesting and thorpugh, even the child can be made to play with egpression in her own atmosphere and by degrees the study will become a source of real pleasure and inspiration to him or her. The really good teacher must have a positive technique to teach, it will not do any good to fged the pupil on old worn out doctrines. What we need is teachers all over the country, who know foundational technique according to correct prin- ciples and can teach it. TheMsthere Is no need of "beginning over again," because the foundation was badly laid, if such a student should enter the classes of an artist teachér, If you want to choose an artist teacher for your girl or boy, be sure that he or she is thoroughly prepar- ed a 'hen choose one teacher who is an gducator. In order to conquer the technical side of piano playing one has to learn a positive technique, and this positive technique consists of a through drill in theills, scales and chords, arpeggios and octaves. A painte, would not begin to teach a pupil landscape painting without giving the pupil first a thorough drill in drawing, in the same man- ner a piano teacher should not begin to teach a pupil compositions with- out first: giving him a thorough drill in technique and touch, to stréngthen the fingers and make them trust- worthy and dependable, Practice at the piano should not be a mechan- foal rattling off of exercises by the hour or by the number of repetitions. The student should bear in mind, that a mental supervision is abso- lutely mecessary, in erder to see that the hand is held eorrectly and that the fingers move in the right way. Children Blame Parents, Some people pride themselves on the fact that when they once make up their minds ofi a subject they never alter their decision. To 'make that a general rule is no sign of big- ness, The really big mind does not operate on the same principle as the laws of the Medes and Persians. And 50 'when one finds a person of good judgment, who has altered his or her viewpoint, it is always instructive to pry into the reasons for the change. The writer recently met a Mother who at one time Yhelieved it bettér to force a musical education on a child if the child rebelled against it, She thought that without a delight in piano practice or at least a mild The Telgmann Schoo) -. Music. Plano, violin and other stringed lustruments; Elocution and Dra matic Art. Fall pupils may begin at any date. Terms on ap plication. 216 'Frontenac Street. - Phone 1610. pleasure in the work, progress was impossible. Now this mother "Why," said she who blames his parents for the fact that he cannot play for the boys to sing, forgetting that he fused to practice when he had opportunity. =A brother of mine who sings very nicely often expresses the regret that he cannot play his accompaniments. sees differently. lessons have said that are taking music My 'own two boys their sister had been favored - be- cause she has always played so ac- ceptably when they were out spend- ing the evening and they could not. | consider, wore given the same | chance as their sister but while she' The boys did not stop to that they both made the most of the opportunity, they shirked their practices, boy- scout outings and sueh., My mistake was in becoming impatient at hav ing to drive them-to practice the hour each day and consequently in giving in to them when they wanted to stop taking music lessons. Had I to do over again I would take more 3 1sly the boys' musical education | rebellion or no rebellion." Of course children do not know what is good for them. It is the duty of the parents to realize what a mus- ical training or the lack of it meal to their ¢hildren in after years and then act dccordingly. Ins on the child's plugging on. His enjoy- ment will come later. Then he will thank those who persisted for benefit, Abont Chinese Music, Chinese music has always been he-| occidental | "neither yond the grasp of the mind, appearing . to have rhyme nor reason to it. As a mam ter of fact, a Chinese musician must be very skilled. indeed, in his pro fession to hold a position in an xntal orchestra. "Ripese musie is not written. The f some of the favorite songs have been preserved but the music has teen handed down from father to son for generations-that go far back before the days of the trouba- dours. . When thé music is played it played according to the memory the musician and his ideas of inter- pretation. A musician performance as his best judgment dictates, and strings, reeds or brass may break in at almost any The Chinese performers are a vival of the wandering minstrels, and "p-day they are the same as they were when Confucius was a boy. A good Chinese orchestra has thirteen pieces; led by a '"deeda,"" or brass cornet with & riat note. This and the "wong--slu," or flue, carry the air.' Why Housewives Choose Oak. To the Mother who is doing her housework without the help of a maid there is more to her piano than musical tones. She must look at the case in mahogany or walnut or oak, whichever it may be, as an article of furniture. And that she is giving just plain durability, a large share of her thought is certain from the in- creased demand for pianos in oak cases, 'or if mahogany then in satin is sur- 1 BRITISH WORKERS EAT THAN CANADIANS DO. YY tiful tome. sell for |. . bargat WARE bi 4 AAA A AAA A A "Grand" Bargian Small Chicker- 1ngGrand Piano In a flue ebony case. . Has just been thoroughly overha I and placed in first class condition. Most beau. Bled Original price $1600.00. a . ! i terms of payment. Come in and see this piano CW. LINDSAY. LIMITED 121 Princess St. v Vv Ria WA CANADIAN UHEESE Canada Food Board. win $450 uaa wv AIAN WALTZES. POST OH, THAT ALL BLUES COUNTRY NEEDS YOU Now. : RECORDS FOR MARCH NOW ON SALE. Selections on Each Bach. MARCH. : WE TWO WERE MAYING. MY LITTLE INDIANA ROSE. MEDLEY x Record--85¢ . SELECT YOUR RECORDS AND GO AND HEAR '0 THE $24 COLUMY.{A GRAFONOLA AT ° THE FOLLOWIN ) I know of a boy himself re-| the own! He is seeing to it} you may be sure, that his own boys| regularly. | his | of} varies the | time. | 2,000,000 FARMER BOYS AIMED FOR IN PRESIDENT'S CALL FOR WAR WORKERS i i $ will ! THE TENTS ARL The government is making a drive for 2,000,000 farmer boys, between the ages of sixteen and twenty-one. it is expected that before the summer is wel advanced almost, if -not quite, the full quota will be at work in the fields as members of the United States Boys' Working Reserve, aiding Uncle Sam to win the war. Boys who are acceptdd will serve six weeks on salary, and at the expiration of (heir term they will receive a special service badge from the government. They will live In small but comfortable tents. AE KE finish. Unfortunately the varnish, that was proof against checking, used in the Cremona violins of a couple of hundred years ago, is now un- | kngwn, It is impossible at the pres- en to secure a highly varnished | | sultace that in the extremes of our | climatic changes will not check. This | fact perhaps more than any other | | nas been responsible for the prefer- ence now being shown for oak and | satin-finighed mahogany pianos. | Then, too, the old jdea of having | the piano placed in the parlor, with | the blinds drawn, used only on rare | intervals when a parson or other { company came, is now almost a relic of the .past generation. The instru- { ment is now placed in the living + room or a used parlor. it is not | looked at but played upon. It was] { bought primarily forthe obhildren to | | practice upon. . Therefore the possi- bility of greasy fhigers, seratchy but-| tons, and knocks from romping! children must be considered as well | as scales, chords and arpeggios, The { mother's satisfactory experience with | | ouk in the library table, book case, { davenport and easy chairs 'overbal ances her desire for something more and influences her to choose the oak- case piano on the straight basis of durability, Songs That Live. i More songs are being written to- day than ever beRore, but few eof, them are destined ty live. Of course, there are such esta favorites vas Neyn's "The Rosary," and oc-| Sion one like ~"Litile Grey Home in the West' or even "A Pers fect Day," which might be said fall into the "enduring" catalogue. As a rule, however, the songs writ ten in these {imes are not of the kind that deserve to last. Ragtime ditties i and mere jingles too often reach the | largest scale. "There'll be a Hot Time in the Old Town Tonight," for instance, being credited with a sale of 750,000 copies, But it is the song "with a tear in! ji" ~80ongs such as "Listen to the | Mocking Bird," #which promises to' last forever, and which was com-| posed by a Rhiladelphian, Septimus | Winner, who, during his life wrote | many successes under the nom plume of -"Alite Hawthorne' --that goes on and on from year to year. And it is because of the tears that, are in it, the responsive chord which | it strikes in the liearts of those whbv | are "growing old," that 'Silver Threads Among the Gold" is one of! the most popular sentimental songs | éver written, and it is 'because of thed poem of this song that the name Eben E. Rexford, though he wrote many others, will be remembered. SUCCESSFUL WORK. to Have 20,000 Boys As Soldiers 'of the Soil. Ottawa, March 27.--Announce- ment is made by the Canada Food Board that as a result of the enrol- ment week for the Soldiers of the Soil, over 20,000 boys have been secured in Ontario and the . four Western provinees. If Quebec and the 'Eastern provinces do as well, 35,000 boys. would be available workers on Canadii(h farms. fa] Sight vases in Ontario alone 100 per Flag 2 of OntaPo returns show thiaf there that og alone. - The .enrell- ment will proceed in Quebec during the first week in April and i the ond week. The Late Jonas 1. Hoyt. After an illness from gancer, from which he died-al his late home on Wellington place; mityvilie, L.L. last Sunday, Jonas Lane Hoyt. married Miss Georgia Gillson, of Kingston, Out., there on August 15th, 1892, was laid to rest yesler- day in the family plot at Syracuse. N.Y., in the presence of many rela- friends. In addition to his irvived by two § a p---- { on Tuesday. , firm to the north and forced the Ger- attacks, "y {tomary assistance of artillery. the High school andj Col-| ys enrolled. © The Province l will be a total of 16,709 boys fer) Maritime Provinces during the sec-| i th a a an en Er AWAIT THE COUNTER BLOW | FIRST SIGN OF LOST MOMENTUM | SHOULD RE SIGNAL. i The British Moving Nearer Their | Base of Supplies While the Ger- | mans Getting Far From Theirs, Away | London, March 28.---In s of tremendous exertions and losses, the German efforts to widen the tip of this salient were defeated | The British lines stood ite mans to turn southward toward the | point of least resistance. : With the slackening of the Ger-' man pace there come as indications that the Alliesgare ready to strike yack somewhere « along the front. | Just where this blow will be launch-| ed will not be known 'until it is struck, but it may be expected thar its impact will be terrific. It is known that the Allied War Conneil at Versailles created a great strategic reserve of men to be used in just the contingency which confronts the armies which have borne the brunt of the fighting since last Thursday morning.. This force will prebably | be launched when . and where it is believed it will Bredk the force of the German onslaught and send the enemy reeling back over the -desert from which the British have slowly withdrawn. The situation as it stands seems to | be a repetition of the dash of Gen. | von Kluck on Paris in 1914, when the German artillery and transport could not keep up with the infantry, | and the French were able to turn! batk the invaders at the Marne. Re- | ports from various sectors in the past two days have indicated that the German infamiry, relying on its mass fought without the cus- To bring up heavy guns requires time, and the German advance will steadily become more painful and costly, i While the German line of commu- | nications has been growing longer, {\ | the British have constantly moved | de! nearer their base of supplies. -It is} nr r-- Where Quality 1 Does Count! ECALISE an egg. 'aged in cold stor- age, A wi is flavor; has not ing todowithi the eggs which the farmer brings resh from the tier bo rr ET Ee re eo ears Jou can make with Ten Days in Jail Sentence For Un- sentence of ten days in jail for, as terrible ard, of Barryville, by Mrs. Leonard i the revolution | coming~fiblication of a decree for {universal | called --enenen | despatch to Reuters, | the German terms, on e { the withdrawal | man troops and non-interference in | the internal affairs of Ukraine. .yRed Cross A AA tN probable that the line where stern battle will'be given is got far away from the present position of the al- lied armies. "KISSED HIS OWN WIFE. usual Offence. Barryville, N.Y., March 28.--A he asserts, Kissing his own wife, was imposed to-day on Myron L. Leon- when she was virtually made the judge of his case im Unadilla yill- age. : Leongrd and his wife were separ- | ated a year ago by a decree of se- paration she. obtained in the Su- preme Court, after, she alleged, he beat her. He tried twice lately to! be recongiled, but she spurned him Findlly when he called a& thitd time she ordered him away. She alleges he tore her waist in a scuffle and kissed her. Leonard told the police justice that he only kissed his own wife and had not been guilty of as- sault, as she alleged. He said he only tried to persuade Mrs. Leonard | to go to live with him in Barryville. She retorted that he was only trying to rejoin her to escape the military draft The judge told her he would let her suggest what punishméntito give Leonard, who admitted tearing her waist, "Lock him up for ten days," suggested Mrs Leonard and the judge made that the sentence Y TO RAISE ARMY. Bolsheviki Plan Compulsory Military Service to Defend Revolution. Moscow, March 28.--The Bolshi- | viki organ Izvestia publishes an ap- peal signed by Leon Trotzky calling upon the people to co-operate in the organization of an army to defend and announeing the obligatory military train- All former officers are to be to active service In the ca~ pacity of instructors, under control of the pational commissioners ing. « To Batify Peace. Toadon, March 28.--A Petrograd Limited, says that the Tauridian Council of Work- men's and Soldiers' Delegates has proclaimed an independent Tauri- dian republic. Therssecond Ukrainian congress of local councils has declaged itself pre- pared to ratify the peace jreaty on ufaiion of of the Austro-Ger- ) Bolsheviki Fight Enemy. London, March 28 -~Resumption of fighting in Ukraine between thg Germans and the Bolsheviki is re- ported in a Reuter despatch from Petrograd. The Bolsheviki are said to have recaptured the eity of Kher n. The Bolsheviki, it is sald, have also captured Nikolaiev, while the Germans have occupied Krement; chug. - we Sh aL § - Soa Made Kiss American Flag. Lima, Ohio, Mah 28---Five busi- ness men of Delphos, a German set- tament id" western Allen County, ear here, ' accused of pi rman-: , were hunted out by a volunteer committee of 400. men and 8 women of the town, taken into a rilllantly lighted downtown stand, forced tp publicly salute and kiss the Amer flag under pain of being hanged nearby lele- phone poles. Red Cross Gift. New York, March 28.--An appro pristion of $1,193,125 as an addi fonal contribution to the British ! Was. announced by the war council of the American Red Crosa here to-day. The original con- tribation to the British Red Cross, amounting. to nearly a million<dol- jars, was made last October, Why Suffer with Rheumatism--Hirst's stops the pain! It is always effective, and acts quickly. Buy a bottle and follow simple directions on the circular in the packgge. Hirst's Pain Exterminator is the same old family rqmedy that has stood the test of 40 years, It should be in every household--it relieves lame back, lumbago, neuralgia, sprains, fame joints and muscles and all similar troubles. Get it today. HIRST REMEDY COMPANY, HAMILTON, CANADA Also makers of HIRST'S Family Salve (50¢), and MIRST'S Pectoral Syrup of Horehound and ElecamBane (350), for coughs and colds. Ii Once vsed--always bought 35¢ All dealers=-or write us! BOTTLE ------------ 'A Dominion Bureau of Statisties is to be Created in connection with the' riment of meive. ; : ' . . BABY CARRIAGES --- SULKIES Large Line to Choose g ~ From eh Carriages .. $18 to $45 Sulkies, $5.50 to $7.50 R. J. REID, Leading Undertaker Phone 577 D7 J. Collis Browne's THE ORIGINAL AND ONLY GENUINE, fl The Most Valuable Medicine ever discovered. The best known Remady for CouGHS, COLDS, ASTHMA, BRONCHITIS. Apts like a charmyin i DIARRHOEA, DYSENTERY & CHOLERA, Eftectually cuts' short al' attacks of SPASMS, Checks and arrests those ton often fatal discases~FEVER, CROUP and AGUE. ~ The only palliative. is NEURALGIA, GOUT, RHEUMATISM. Chlorodyne is a liguid taken in drops, graduated according to the malady, it invariably rdlieves pan of whatever kind ; creates a calm vefreshing sleep ; allays irritation of the nérvous system when all other vemedics fail; leaves 10 bad effects and can be taken when no other medicine can be . INSIST ON HAVING CONVINCING De. COLLIS BROWNE'S #EDICAL TESTIMONY CHLORODYNE. WITH EACY BOTTLE. Sold by sll Chemise. Prices in England: 1k. 2/9, 4fs Sole Manufacturers: 1. T. DAVENPORT. LONDON, x Ey The immense sweccess of tds Remedy has gives rine + © many imitations. B.--~ Every otic of Genuin « Chlorodyae bears oo the ata the aame of 1 inventor, Dy. J. Collis Rrawas. v Wholesale Agents, Lyman Bros, Co., Limited, Toronto --~-- ST TEER RC ARR Easter Footwear In Exclusive Designs = ing that you like in good shoes. "Our new s i very latest at ring footwear styles are the ations of the shoe makers' a ' pe We know you will like these shoes be- cause they combine all the good points in hoe making. : : : "\STY , QUALITY and FIT pply that dressy, springy feel- JH. Sutherland &Bro. | The Home of Good Shoes. Trade and Com- :

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