Daily British Whig (1850), 17 Jan 1919, p. 12

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PAGE T TWELVE VEINS EASE | | AGENCY, | | fre "WORTH A HUNDRED DOLLARS A BOTTLE" Missouri Pacific Fireman Praises Tanlac For Wife's Improvement. FOR ALL _ STEAMSHIP _. LINES Special attention will be given | your family or. friends, going to or from the Old Contry. ken three bottles of 1 3 has been worth ¥ Lif A indred dollars a Bottle to her," 54 J. G. Nichols, a well-known rail- ad man. now employed on the Mis swouri Pacific Railroad, and living at $711 Summit 'street Mo 'For three years," he contihged. "my wife had saffered a' great deal on. account of the condition of her stomach. Her appetite was poor ahd the little she foreec down disagreed with her and caused gas to form an § her stomach, and she would be 'mis: erable for hoyrs afterwards. She was very mervous and hardly ever got a good night's sleep and would feel so tiréd and wornowt #1 the morning she could hardly get out of bed. 1 couldnt find any medicine that would holp her at all so she just continued to lose in weigat she----was hardly + feet, "I fully agree with her when she says Tanlac has been worth a hup- dred dollars a Softle to her. 1 don't think 1 ever ta anybody improve like ghe did after slo got stapted tak- ing . Her appetite came back in a very short time and she can now eat anything she pleasés and ad much as she wants and it never gives her any trouble at all. Her stomach seems to be in a healthy condition and she Keeps sound and the nervousness has loft her entirely. She goes about her housework now with her old time strengith and energy and says she is in better health generally than she has been in a long time. We are very glad to have this opportunity tg recommend Tanlac Tanlac is sold du Kingston by A P. Chawn,"in Plevna by Gilbert Ost- ler, In Battersea by C. S. Clark, in Fernleigh by Ervin Martin, in Ar doch by M. J. Sculon, in Shavbot Lake fy W Y. Cannon For information and rates apply to J. P. Hanley, C.P. & TA, G.T. Ry., Kingston, Ont. s RD ™ CHOR YL HOR. DONALDSON Regular Passen oF to all British Ports CUNARD, LINE Hi Me, Commenwenlin . ian 2 Portland, Me, Valuela Feb, 1 New York, Pannonin . . 4 Feb is TO LIVERPOOL ¥ PROM New York, Caronia Jew: ork Reinses Futana ie to" Kéep on her oll rd Feb § aes Feb 12 cian Feb IT TO GLASGOW FROM Portland, Miu Saturnia .., ,. .. Jan 21 St, John, N Po Casgandra Jan 81 ANCHOR ie 0 GLAS Gow PROM New York, Oriana ... .v Feb, 8 For Further. Jntormation Apply te Agen © ™E ROBERT REFORD COMPANY, Limited, 50 King ay Kast, Toronto, nt. . Sor -Advt, a ~, OF STOVES For the balance of this month we will sell: our stock of stoves and ranges at greatly re- duced prices. Every one guaranteed to work satisfactorily. Call and inspect these Jnient is, no doubt, alluded . When you have money to invest you can get full information from us on all Canadian securities. The services of our Statistical Department are at your disposal to enable you to secure all particulars, Our Market Circular will enable you to keep in touch with the elopments in the financial organ on request, world. It will be Thornton Davidson &-Co. Members Montreal Stock Exchange ol Kansas City, ! and strength unti | he chief beauty of pipe music The. Bagpipe, 3 bagpipe is a at antiquity, rope and Asia. incient Egyptians common to and As bréw use To the ancien it was known a " whilst the the bagpipes inger-pipes ant horn One proof from the fact that during some exca- vations in Pe 1, & number of terra feottl figures were found dating from the eighth century, two of which are playing on bagpipes with curved chanters. The history of the bagpipe is traced by reference to literature, by the! monuments, and remains which have been discovered from time to time, andthough it still retains a forenioss position in the Tyrol and the High- F his temple services. ks and Romans of goatskin with two! L- lands of Scotland, it is not distinetly | Tyrolean or Scottish, though assoecl-| ated so long with Scotland in song | and story; possibly it was introduced by the Romans, when it spread through the British Isles. We learn from Suetonius that the bagpipe was known to Nero,who used it himself, and who promised his peo- ple shertly before his. assassination that he would appear before them as a bagpiper, while the instrument ac- tually appears on a coin of his reign. It is also mentioned by Chaucer, who In his poem represents a miller as skilled in playing the bagpipe, and Shakespeare:in I King Henry 1V., al- fudes to-thé "drone of a Lincolnshire Bagpipe,' while in Ireland it was cer- tainly known as early as the filth sentury. The bagpipe at first probably con- sisted of 'he pipe or pipes 'without the bag. the player's cheeks, lips and lungs, taking its placeand it is said 'that the Strain wis so gredt on those parts that he had to bandage up his cheeks with a kind of muzzle while playing. In this form, the instru- to in Scripture, cf. 1 Sam. 10, 5; Isa. 5, 12, and Je, 48, 36. It is fron the double and triple pipes used by these players that it was derived, with the addition of a #ind-bag that some genius made | from the skin of a goat or kid, and fitted it to the pipes,~with a valve, so 'hat the strain on the lungs and rheeks would be relieved. In the varions nations there is lit- tle differénece in the bagpipes, for es- sentially they aré the same, the de- seriptinon of the Highland pipes will =erve for the rest, for all have the srincipal part, windhag, chanter or melody pipe with double reeds, and the drones with one sound that can be tunadP®however, by a sliding pipe. The bag is made of greased leather covered with wogilen cloth, a vaived mouth tube by Which: it is inflated with the player's breath; three reed | drones, one long and two short, and 2 reed ehanter on which the tunes are played. I'he longest drbne is tuned to A, an octave lower than the lowest A of the chanter, while the two short ones are tuned to A above the chanter's highest A, or in uni- son with Re low A 'of the chanter. The scale chantér possesses 9 agtural Rates: the range being from in the tickle stave to A alt; but the? actes dn wot correspond to 'the dio- fondle scale, and are not strictly in thune, the same note being difficult of sepetition, the player therefore in- troduces a number of rapid notes called "warblers," and the difficulty Heing overcome by this means, farsa Wrilliance in the "warblers" is the distinguishing mark of the good Mayer. i The bagpipe Is eminently suitable "or fineral magehes and laments, for 'he Hyeliest dances or festivities; {age It | { time, > the early He-| he "leathern bottle- | Parallel lines, Arabians emiployed | they rise in the scale. that it displays J holes tipped ./ with phe | long afterwards, Among the simple ones of the tune We can, of course, hazard a guess as rates of to-day, are but that is all There 'is this to be said, however, that the music of the most primitive of peoples the world over, runs in and that it is only as marked individudi characteristics. At bottom of the scale, music 18 pretty much alike in all, as has been f its antiquity is shown | Poted in races, the most remote from each other, Vocal mugic is common to every. tribe, every nation on the earth. Man ! fisectively gives expression to his' emotions and passions by his voice, in common with the 16weér brite cre: ation. He makes his first real ad- certain specified circumstances, and endeavors to repredu from which they arose. evolved from the natural cadence of the footstep, which was rhythmic first and melodic when a higher plane had been reached. The threp classes of musical n= struments, percussion, wind, and stringed are possessed in some rude form by every tribe on the earth. Any hard substance makes a drum} the reed or horn makes the wind ins strument; while any eord or fibre in: tension (a bow for instance) pro- dwtys a sonorous note, as in the harp, flutp, sultar, or what not. it is from these elementary forces in/the production of mugic--the vofee, stretched cord, reed-pipe or horn, the clapper or rattle, these pri- mary means of proditeing sound, that all our lovely music of to-day has come, | From what we have gathered as to tlie various Kinds of primitive'instru- ments it is not sp very difficult to form a rough idea of what music was like in the world's dim past, though of its history we know absolutely nothing, the earliest records giving usé but a glimpse of an art that.was {old even when the records were made. - From four sources only, the Assy- rian sculptures, the Egyptian wall paintings, Homer, and the Old Testa- ment, do we obtain any information as to tlie music of the past, but this information is without sequence, sys- tem, or chronology. We see four distinct races, all of them in a state of high eivilization, - whether their systems were develoged one from the other, or whether they were derived from some common ancpstor of a vet earlier civilization, or whether éach race achioved its own particular mu- sical evolution from the very com- mencement of things are mysteries we cannot hope tp solve. Alliwe do know is that music was highly developed in: the Assyrian, Egyptian, Irsaelitish 'and Greek na< tions, at a very early' period, heyond thig all is guesswork. +H. H. Kinzett. When some women go downtown and loaf all afternoon, they call it shappine: 4 diy STRENGTH ~--the -unususl combination that is the basis of Zam. Buk's world-wide reputation. Strength, which enables Zam-Buk to overcome gkin troubles that have defled all other treatments, and Purity to such a degree that. Zam-Buk Is suitable for even the most delicate skin. Mrs. Fothergill of Bousman River, Man. says: "When only two days old my baby developed a bad heat rash. Know Jog the purity of Zam-Buk, wé rub bed the child all over with it, and" it entirely cured the rash." The reason for Zam-Buk's wun- ing clusively of Berbal extracts and egetabla olls. 'The medicinal pro- vance in the scale when he becomes i conseious of the sounds arising from {i them, though ili he may not experiende the feelings H "The-sonse or ¥WyThin was probably I Br either in walking oR | dancing; from this sense of rhythm jj was invented the musical instrument fi hidissts AND PURITY, Records ! musical jnstry. to its evolution a8 we study the say« for what these § to-day, the others were at one {y covers this field of music. Quartette, wonder sing tette, singing their Popular Quartettes * When it cemes to vocal quartettes the Columbia again complete. There is the Famous Columbia Stellar ing all the Tamilar melodies, the Pesrless Quartette, ers of popular music, interpreting gospel hymns, and jong ist of hegro galaxy as Bronskaja, Freeman, Constanting there 18 the Columbia Mixed Quariette, and gather combinations af weil Known Columbia artists, the C hautauqua Preachers Quar- Fiske Jubilee, Male Singers, melodies and such an operatic and Blanchari. Also a Double Male Sustelic. ajl contri buting to such spiendid quartette selections as the following cares fully chosen sample lst. ' There's a Tong, Long Trall--Hroadway Quartette A2058 Can't Yo Heali:-Me Callin' (Caroline) t--Brondway Quartette 10 in 90¢ The Torpedo and the Whale from ' Columbia Stellar Quartette Noah's Ark The Larbonrd Watch~Columbis Stellar Quartette Bring Back My Bénule 20 Me--Columbia Stellar Quartette 10 in. 90 You've An Dear to Me as Dixie Was to Lees-Avon Clmedy wi Yeh rs Get Back to Loveland and You-Avon Pomedy Al Erin Ix © Ning Mavourneen-~Columbia Stellar Quartette A2407 AN thao Colmmit Stellar Quartette 10 fn. Doe A2504 2433 ® in. Doe Carry Me Back to Old Virginia-<Columbin Stellar Quartette A 1820 od Maken Buecket--Columbla Stellar Quartette 1 0 in. Be A2534 » 10 In. DOe "Olivette" Columbia Stellay Quartette Home, Sweet Home--Columibin Stellar Quartette Santa Lucia-~Columbin Stellar Quartette A240 10 tn, Se Way Down Yowler in the Comuficld--Columbia Stellar Quartette 8B. Heurys Barn Dame olumbia Steller Quartettd Old Grey, Mare--Colling and Harlan oy the Rhine--Peeriess When We Wind up the Wateh Quariette s Baill Dog--Rrond way Qua rtette Limited My Last -Cigar--froadway Quartette C. W.LlI A427 10 in. 90¢ 2 4 assse 10 in, 9c A142 10 in. 90¢ SAY -. 121 Princess St. =" Levellers, Not Uplifters, . (Buffalo News) Leibkneckt and his followers are pursing a mirage. No stable and enduring government can be created out of the flotsam and jetsom of hu- ri bE in of Boys' Bi. BOYS' CLOTHING We have a lovely assortment 'Winter Clothing in pinch-back and norfolk styles in grey and brown = mixtures; also in blue serges; sizes. 24 to 35. Prices from $6 to $12.00. munity. The Spartacans. are autocratic than the autocracy _ that has afflicted humanity for years. They do not recognize that liberty gone to seed is license. They are le- vellers, not uplifters, more At a remarkable price for Saturday. Thess suits are made from all-wool worsteds and tweed materials. = The styles are pinch-back and semi-fitting; the patterns are greys, 34 to 4". Prices from $1250 up to to $25.00. X Yr Xi true values. "PROCRASTINATION is THE THIEF OF TIME" Don't let it steal your sense of Call i in to-morrow. | | agate HAASAN. The Telgmann School of . . usic Plano, violin and other stringed Instruments; elocution and dre- matie 'art, Pupils may begin at any date. Terms on application. Sagitemonts for 'concerts so cel 216 Frontenac Street, i diag dh da a a G. and Wo still have space for & Tow t more cars. Atitoimabite repair work » browns and blues; sizes hdd All kinds of frésh vegetibles a specialty. rn 210 Division St. Phone 545 hahahah hrs AND ALL OTHER Table uries GLOVER'S License No. S-4838 000 OO a * RAI A AN EXCEPTIONAL OPPOR- TUNITY For men and young men pre- sents itself Saturday in a decided repricing of fashionable Over- coats taken from' the best grades in stock and marked down to § $12.95, $15.95 and $19.95, in all sizes and shades. Ph a ' MEN'S BOOTS vhile it is. most marvellously inspir< 'Hag in war 'th I~ Made from black or brown : calf or ki skin; also patent lea

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