Daily British Whig (1850), 1 May 1920, p. 4

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SATURADY, MAY, 1, 1920. er ------ RALLADE OF THE TRIUMPH, OF | -- Te Nishies FROM CLEMENCEAU j : oa y \ Where are the mighty conquerors of / 4 . w old, 1 : Prom, "The Strongest." By Georges Clemenceau. c ' 9 | Rivals in splendour of the nogn-day-| t : : sky," Whose August looks and gestures | The thing tfat amuses me most is | There is an art of usi: . . R------------ Ri Seemed to hold : [the variety of ways in which people "devotion" a.d "saers > - ron y " | A majesty that might e'en Time | imagine they can deceive life. they call up emotig r wy : \ J - £3 efy ? --~ : -- ) from those that L_edeo [ which few outside the service had | Kidd. The reader is kept somewhere | " T0 DAFFODILS Lofat the last, the base-bora and the we seq, wealth isolates the heart. Win is more h vious knowledge. There are pas- | halfway betwen tears and | | Fair Daffodils, we weep to see igh, | . or © get rich and we're surrounded by'! ortation 16 Tbe = ages which call for the immediate |all the time, With én bamifgtion for) You haste away so.saon: ied Yoo as dh the achr, the uniust aud the seMishness. of those who Lave been {action is mote and serious consideration' of all who | the resourcefulness .o : he y Tit, | AS-yet the-early-rising sun lc fo os coli 3 together li eaten, and the worse selfishness of help, given withow are careful for the Interests of the | venturer and his everlasting grit. | 'Has not attained his noon. "Quiet. ea: in le Eonar ne Those Whe have War gat, Or wo charity avy and the young men who serve in | - e-------------- oni | Stay, stay, | | $ : ; : rganized cha ; \ iia y ¥ IMMIGRATION OF ENEMY ALIENS. Until the hasting 'day dust, A ust word of refusal, spoken in State, sub) " yp Some inibiesting Is da' Immi- Has. run | Where are the knights so debonair Or ith ny - Life; 2 3 Siege -- ne Oroasia, haem THE RED LADY. on the workings of Canada's But to the evensong, . ightss » 50 [vith the sordid beings from another |cuse for erocious egotista of) So -- | | i i { gration policy by the character of the |, having prayed together, we | * bold, jworld; the common cry, "I can't help |all restraint. Blair ¥ " " s | incomers during the first" year or two : ith , | Spurring with lance in rest and everyone," which often expresses p---- a : " Baro ine Nowhn ure Thoma of the war. From April 1st, 1014, to Will go with you along | sword on thigh, lack of will, not lack of capacity, to The rich ave told to give; the poor be dest Katherine Newlin Burt's first nov- [ March 31st, 1915, enemy allens-- | 0 oe short time to stay as you, | Beneath whose charge both horse and help; these sink deep into the at- to be resigned. The former five o h- 5 have an anthorita- | ol "The Branding Iron," is still Austrians, | Bulgarians, Germans, - We have as short a spring, ,. Ian are rolled i tentive soul of a child. meanly; the latter are not resi . of tan cé oh the | among the best sellers and one of the Handyriang, and Tarks--to the quick a growth to meet decay { Upon the plain, 'mid thund'ring | . The rich, often give to prevent the F Sud tntorasting Saount or , | most talked. of recent books, and she | number of 8,864, found entrance into As you, or anything A > i battle cry? | The unhappy cemsole tiiemselves by | want of resignation in the poor from | var continual Jor 'the book has been halled far and wide as a | Canada. This was just four times - "We die : - [Above their grass-grown graves the {showing their miseries. But supreme being fatal; their giving is not the { purposes. The very size of the bool | : { No Breezes sigh, ... felicity shuns display, indifferent to [act of sacrifice demanded bv the Man mament. "The Red Lady" is entire- | men, who Were killeln tae var up| way, | Their scutcheons are defaced, their | the indifferent world. of Galilee, Greed that has been satis- onge. : ly different from her first success and | till November 30th. 1915 ven ike, to the summer's rain, no SEEROUE rust, 0 ide of aT fied is on the defensive against the shows a remarkable versatility on the | more surprising perhaps are the pearls of morning's dew, |" they sleep, the price .. 0 "Really," she asked, "what more [greed that demands to be satisfied, wins the interest of the reader at [bright new star in the literary fir- | the number of Canadians, ~Mcers and As your hours do, and dry \" .. OH, YOU TEX! is talented writer. It is an | figures as to naturalization Ne'er to be found again. _ chivalry, > could our parents do for us if they |and thé war of the classes is let loose. -- jne. Thome htt tale of the mysterious ad- | November 30th. 1915 the tou - un, Quiet beneath a little scattered | were our bitterest enemies? When | By William MacLeod Raine, ventures of an attraciive young wo- | nadian casualties of all rank . Jt. : , dust. think of the lies at school and at| The comtesse was. more of & as Allen, Toronto. $1.90. is the [man in an isolated country house. 13,017. During ihe approxi vay 4 '| Whe . + ir of home, falsifying our souls and cor- | spectacle to the factory tham the Willlam MacLeod Raine v at There has been 'a mysterious death ifl | parallel war period of 1514 and 1915 | , wr Where now is Helen, with the hair o rupting our hearts, I wonder that we | factory could be to her. She passed ice of #tory-tellers of Sen the house, and other weird events fol- | Canadian naturalization was given to Notes of In: vst gold? : {have any sincerity and honesty left. | with. lowered: lids under the ironic v_-Jiis earlier Books. Stove You low it. The heroine's red hair seems | 13,066 incomers from central and ee {. Where the fond lovers of the days Tell me,. where are the beautiful | silence of the distant creatures at ," "A Man Four-Square, 8 to have some uncamny connection, southern Europe, of. whom 8,938 Booklovers. | | ., gome by, : things we are taught about the family (whom she would mot even look. She erift's Son," and 'The Yukon which, she herself is puzzled to un-, were avowedly Austrians, 1.396 Ger A | Troilus and Cressida, Tristan and and Society® It seems we are to dis- | went along; with little movements. il," all ave dealt with the adven. derstand, with the web which weaves | mans, 521 Hungarians, and 5801 ---------------------------------- | Isolde, 3 cover the Higher Will in them. Then | among. incomprehensible things of 8.0f Tel-blooged. out-of-door bes itself around her, It is a remark- | Turks. Truly we have a Canadian J. Thomas Loon#y has discovered | Or those who lived and loved at why do I see, instead of the adver-|iron or of flesh and blood, vaguely , and have been so popular o ably good example of a type of fic- | melting pot, These figures are from | who it re lly was that wrote the Rimini ? . --~ -|tised beauties, nothing but a battle- | consoled with the thought that such 8, magazines, and moving p ° tion which has an irresistible: fas- | "A Study of Canadian Immigration, | dramas of § akespeare and has w rit- | 1", the vain hope of immortality, ir (field in which the desires of the [things had to be in order that she 'that he now has a large an ciation for many readers. {Ly W. G. Smith, shortly yo be pub- | tep a book revealing the secret, which | In Love's eternity. they put their strongest triumph ?" Li might shine in her glory. What, to r audience Vang for Sal now a } lished by The Ryerson Press. | the Stokes Company will publish this | ne trust. : el tre; ' | --_-- her, were 'these men begrimed with . "Oh, You Raps Is one ot a THE ISLAND SHEEP. | ment month under the title "Shakespeare | Bere ate they Nic? Creamed | ww); would have thought that | coal or with paste ?--these fellows yarns dud 1 lL dbp a .. ' | AEN! books. They identified." Mr. .Looney is very sure Qui ut Sou i no little scattered + Paris would make you a poet of he | disgustingly stained at jhe strainer 5 range : God be thanked for books. They | that the i dw Til le "neath a "Tec fields?" he would say to Henri. | or fouled with motor oil; these Wo By Uadmus and Harmonia. Thomas ) ey | tha immortal bard was not Wil . y,\0, know n to his legion of Ieee Yr Toronto. Price $1.65. | are the voices of the distant and the | iam Shakespeare, but Edward de dust. Si] . "That's the punishment for idleness. { men, so prematurely aged; the girls, of [88 "Fox." Seldom has a story Ba 2 For an illuminating interpretation | dead, and make us heirs of the spirit- | vars, seventeenth Earl of Oxford. acy | : Envoi. ; that | Instead of going into ecstasies over the children, stupefied with the: faane hutractive hero, and the boo of what England thinks of peace, the | ual life of past-ages, Books are the | he sets forth a hookful of evidence to! S% 12dy, let us.grasp the hours that an oak tree, get into the stream of | mechanical grind, twisted into an 18 8s Vivid and realistic aé it 18 ab- League bf Nations, America, labor | true levellers. They give to all who | prove it, | fly, oL action in the world, turn back your [eternal repetition of the same gesture SDEDING tense with gun-play, stir- and economic questions read this | will faithfully use them, the society, ---- Love and be happy now; for son we cuffs, make me a roll of paper out of | by which they made their living. No, f exploits, and with a Sharing | book, in which these and other prob- | the spiritual presence of the best and | Prince Wilhelin of Sweden, known must this tree, bring up your ignorant they were nothing to her, They were : fice interwoven with its stren- lems of the day are'discussed 'btil-|.the greatest of our race.--Channing: | jn his own country as the Poat Pri ce | Take our repose for ever, you and L |workers to seme conception of in- | at opposite poles. uous fhe book ry Prince he i : h | a oe Wie Ba the wild, | llantly by a world-famous English- YT has recently finished a volume of | Quiet beneath a little Brattered dust. dustry, increase the substance of ---- : - e' 0 ' , 9 ™ : : : " a --E. H. iss. | il AT a . os ais . or' Ul says" i % man and his wife under the -pseudo CORES PE ES EFI ISP ib dab aae | Short stories entitled The Old Pine : mortal man; these are worth more To love is to suffer,' Uncle says. 3 life of the oid-time west. nyms of Cadmus and Harmonia. The * : Tree and Other Stories," 'which will IIRC Tr POETRY + than plain living and high thinking." "Ah, yes. But he will also tell you 5 . feelings of these nations are -skilful- | 4 MAY. * translated into English by Edwin PUSSY IN * . | " : that it is to know the highest. hap- 7 ly brought out through the mouths | 4 Dawn of pearl and of mist Bjorkman, The American fights o . oi : { The most beautiful sentiments must piness. The egoist is afraid to suffer, THE GUNROOM. y broug 4 ghts of Paw Her P entin ¢ Gs ------ of the characters in the story repre. 4 From the ii gd the book have been secured by. the Few Sing Her Praises. | be translated into action, into every. and so loses his chance to be happy. A Morgan. MacMillan, Toronto, | senting them. Interest does not flag # Morning stained with rays orei ress Service, This' is Prince . ay haranc | 42Y movements, and must be realize | ---- J _ 2.50, " ! for one minute. The story is told in [# Of chrysoprase-- | Wilhe m's fifth volume, the previous a 1s a Signintant fact that shes as {by activity in full daylight. ~ "The qnly criticism I accept is from i 4 is claimed that this fs the only |such.a way as to throw a light on | 4 Midday veiled with gauze { books having been poetry, sketches of | ©I€ Praises o (og, wan MHenc o - , experience. A dress must dress you. pok of its ki d@. It throws dn en- | the important questions of the day | # Spun from 'turquoise -- | travel and translations man," have been sung by poets ing Grief has no-words, the heart no at are all our frocks but a con- re mew light upon the navy and |and the different attitudes taken to- | 4+ Afternoon sapphire | -- numerable, the harmless, noe Siary | sobbing, for irrgparable disasters. | cession to the infirmities-of the mas- kes knows for the first time, the | ward them, without in the least los- | 4 Skies to admire Margaret Deland is about to revive | ¢at has had but few minstrels, cup. | The consoling, peace of the tomb is | culine heart which refuses to be con- Sitment to which junior naval off. | ing its charm or interest as a narra # Eve a chalice full, + | the familiar figure of Dr, Lavendar in Bape It 1s thought that pussy joie {the temptation fer helpless weakness. | tent with a beautiful soul?" may be "wbjected. The Gun- | tive 3 na sn & moonstone, Light. 3 pony aAeuinE with Old Chester | BIY her own minsirely. Or perhaps | the temptation for heipléss weskn ~ POM {8 the scene of John Lynwood's - . * And as a moonstone, ght... # [Spon Jrhich she is now at work. It Will mpanion of the fireside has bred [an object of fun to the greatest of Fair as flame, and fierce as fleet fe, the background to his services in SWATTY. 3 With dim lustre, Night. 3: { Son i gn its serial appearance andl} oC ething not far removed from con- (our nineteenth-century parodists, As with wings on wingless feet he Atlantic and in the China seas, * ; will later on be published in book hats WV. here a | Cowper, who loved all living things | Shone and sprang your mother, free, Th Al dd dedddeodedodedtod | form by the H tempti-Cats are cheap. Were ther pe r his love. . Bn Ee puriey Batter, oo Omag Al. | Sbdddibddiedinbid : ™ Dy the Harpers. tax on cats, as there is on dogs, we (--and cats not least among them-- | Bright and brave as wind or sea. § s served as'a en, . +00 » . : A = ats, ask 3 phorgan. Who as = navy has The hero of this story is the same Under the 'title "Learning tof. The American Booksellers' As. | should probably value them more, rite a comp ve and faithful | human, impish, humorous boy as | Write," a collection has been made of | sociation will hold its next meeting in hud of naval ions. The Gun- (Mark Twain's Tom Sawyer or Huckle- |'all the remarks Robert Louis Steven- | Philadelphia the middle of May. botob bd dbp wrote a poem about his own cat. He en describes her as Graham R. Tomson--alone among . poets, I believe--has considered the A poet's cat, sedate and grave, eat worthy of the dignity of a sonnet. {been silent about the cat. Even when As poet well would wish to have, That quality of mystery which is they have "condescended to mention : ; , | more characteristic of the cat than of | vs and let- her it has been generally in a spirit | He is careful to avoid hurting Pussy's | any other member of the animal of supercilious disdain. Here is Cal- | feelings; yet his language is scarcely creation is emphasized in the eom- ' that of enthusiasm or of affection. cluding lines: . The Silent Poets. : } = 15 in hi is FOTKS Spa vi i ave, for the most part, om i, but the shad- | berry Finn. The book makes a de- | son made in his published works on | Spargo will deliver 'an address on|, The poets have, Ce aat A. ov E Mesearor and | lightful companion to Mark Twain's | the art of writing and the Scribners | "How to Reach the Alien Resident hn, and their lives are caught up | works. Swatty passes-tirough a se- announce the volume for publication | Through Books." the network of competitive ambi- | ries of adventures, some of them | this week. His novels, essa t Bhs of which open War " screamingly funny, others pathetic | ters have been searched and all his The Johns Hopkins Press an- pe manifestation. and almost tragic, wnich would have [observations on the subject have been | nounces for early publication "Mar- | verley, for instance: "Fhere is much in this bog of | done credit to'the famous Captain | culled and breught together. tial, the oh a 2 Riner They tell 'me T am beautiful: they | Swinbiirne's. Worslip. Sphinx of my quiet hearth! who y i i raise my silken hair, | Swinburne, on the other hand was _ deignest to dwell, : folower, mith, edited by W. fus. My Fite feet that silently slip on /a confirmed cat-worshipper, ? His Friend of my toil, companion of . tard; "Foreign Rights and Interests ; Bree " "at," is ib i 3 in. Ching n + fr stair 'to stair: | poem, "To a Cat," is a noble tribute. _-mine ease. AK, WATERY BLOOD EER BRE SRS fr Te | TfL fee L 9 : Kat bic i Tiote ae and innocent grey eye; domestic pet, but the decendant of an Rameses; Cinese BE 0 Fond hands caress me oftentimes, ancient, proud, and awe-inspiring | That men forget dost thou remember . : "58 Repu ry of of Fmight die! ano ell, , ; USE OF MANY bo the Td of J 3 i yet would that Ranight di Tce i Beholden still in blinking reveries NR , . ! pr - , ¥ Health and ir American Ad- An Object of Fun, Wild on woodland ways your sires With sombre sea-green gaze in- dresses," by Sir Arthur Newsholme The cat, you will observe, is merely | Flashed like fires; serutable. ] AA AA A A nr ee re ---- rr ------ ERIOUS TROUBLES »: vc: cores w= | Hartford, 'Conn., is being converted ' ' : 4 k into an apartment house and another - _-- : big apartment building is soon to be 2 crected on the Clemens estate. 3 Pale, Weak Women and Girls, Easily Tired Men and Boys Are Victims of Rr a vi : Anaemia--Sound, Robust Health Can Only Be Had By Enrich- explin tyes Hygiene™ attempts to : . readers of "The Education of Henry > : It 3 ed and P ure. Adams" have noted running through : _ Ing the Blood and Keeping R the volume, and by which they 'have < : been puzzled. The psychoanalyst thinks that this pessimism about him- NDITIONS OF THIN, WATERY BLOOD CAN BE EASILY COR- self was the result of what psychoan- | alysis calls a "inferiority complex," THE USE OF DR WILLIAMS PINK PILLS. due to an attack of scarlet fever from RECTED THROUGH . which Henry Adams suffered when a = child. Tt slightly retarded his de- bc ' v rrlopment and made. him seem 'to : * 2 TRS TX NCE | himself inferior to his more robust | Anaemia is so prevalent, particu- BLOOD WEAK AND WATERY A TEACHER'S EXPERIENCE brother and sister, and this feeling, | . A % g¢he psychoahalyst explains, must among young girls and growing Another case in which Dr. Williams Nervous exhaustion, fiearlg. always have is pr mubeonstional, 8, that every mother should know C0 0 have restored a weak, de- brought on by anaemia, is one of the through life. . to fecognize its symptoms, for spondent girl to good health is that most serious troubles affecting men ; 'trouble makes its approach so of Miss Jessie McLean, Trenton, N. and women of to-day. The only way A new novel by Mary Austin ally and sofféhithily that-ft'ts S. who says: --"I was as weak as if to bring back sofind, Vigorous health | wpywenty. Six Jayne "Street," which a hess res was possible for any one to be, and is to feed the starved nerves, which | gouohton Mifflin Company will bring "Tar advanced before it 18 mno- yet be able to be about. My blood are clamoring for. new, rich blood. out- next month, will tianafer the Anaemia literally means blood- (0 © have turned almost to wa- This new blood can be had through scene of this author's fiction, which 1 -and It is thought to be due ter. I was pale, the least exertion the use of Dr. Willlams Pink Pills, | jo heretofore dealt with the--Cali- lack of sunlight, improper nour- would leave me breathless, and when which fact accounts for the thousands | fornia coast or mountain region, to nt, and insuificient out-of-door I went upstairs I would have to stop of cures of nervous diseases brought { New York City. It is described as a It is most common among those and rest on the way. often had se- about by this powerful blood build- | ta1a of 'radical thinkers, artists, lead- are confined indoors by their oc- _ headaches, and at er and nerve restorer. Through a fair | op' in social reform and others who Hons and among those who do heart would palpitate alarmingly. A use of this medicine thousands of de- | gather around the personality and in at regularly or do not select a good friend urged m@® to try Dr. Wil- .spondent people have been made | the apartment of a young woman in Ir diet. liams Pink Pills and I have reason to bright, active and strong, 8mOng | Greenwich Village who has be grateful that I took the advice. these is Miss Bibiane Chiasson, South | hing her the conventionalitios and YOK FOR THESE SYMPTOMS oo" 0" beginning the use of the Beach, Que., who says: --""I am af prejudices of a luxurious home up- ge i ; pills I began to get stronger, and by teacher by profession, and probably | town. Mrs. Austin's last realistic ftom Of anas- .41o time I had taken seven boxes I due to the close confinement and ar-| novel "The Ford," was a graphic por- oks gradually soi that I was again enjoying good duous nature of my duties, I became | trayal of ranch life in Califorgia, and the lips . become health. I think Dr. Williams Pink much run down and suffered from of the struggle between the owners this loss of color there Pills are a blessing to weak girls, and extreme nervousness. The least noise of the ranch and certain interests in \ ' tendency to fatigue, palpita- | on always warmly recommend Would startle me, and my heart would | large city whose p if ach- ' ibe heart and breathlessness pon : A beat violently. Indeed my condition | ieved would destroy its value 4d) SAL oY % I it exerti with occasional ' was an unhappy one. I had often In ordifary an heard of Dr. Williams Pink Pills as a : . hud! "= WEAK AND RUN DOWN cure for nervous troubles and decided | _ "Foster's Russian Bank," which E. 4 I - p . > * : Is in their teens, Dr. : to give them a fair trial. Iam happy | P. Dutton & Co, have ready for im- Y Srl are all the medi- There is no eight-hour day for the to say that this medicthe completely [mediate publication, is by the card or 18 a easure al d. These, with fresh air, woman in the home. Her every wak- restored my health, and I can con-| expert and authority on bridge; R. F. ! pi oper food and a little rest ing hour is filled with household du- fidently recommend it to all suffering | Foster, and describes and explains a 2 4 ° a) recove - cares, ten, the f troubles." new card game which has been de- : : wil Wake a ry Som Hew i ares, aT, often, ander ang T9M Rervous toubles . | veloped to meet the demand for an in- : en 18 "a - 7 % {EEP YOU STE) VED UP | teresting game for two people. Mr. > s nd thebe hd Bp omallste KEEP YOUR SYSTEM TONER hd Fofter masa thet Ruvor orie, Mr. : | development from various forms 'of ri i : in ceding to the blood the elements nervous troubles have Pine . Pil Be tia Yat = Dr Wliear Pink TL od ll solitaire, especially one known dur- "hy "es ion of Hob: i ig Toro f Dent blood is formed Dr Chase's naen WE is She says: -- 'Some two that once distressed: will be harm- | 1N€ the last few years as crapette, ks Je msleries and veins Ay Em d bui th i wn ystem 3 liter- health crisis. : me two essed you will be | that it presents such infinite possibil. nervous vigor and muscular strength, there Nerve Food builds up the run-down s !l t when 2 Hod 3 ---- oan 352 1 sot weak iy Fun mspoaare wil Hug Jo Joais of | ities that no two games are evar alike, isa joy in living and work becomes an actual in th natesal end rational way so thin that my friends germ diseases need hardly.be dread. | 27d that it provides more excitement * pleasure. zondnchon. Wher the. mec to Same that ed. ty vy id |e herent oe fuck than pinochie 'If tired at times, healthful natural sleep rough the blood stream new vigor and . B Dr. Williams Pink Pills assist di- 2a mt In eral intere soon restores the wasted energy and you energy is instilled in the nervous system 'gestion, correct the lassitude, the pal- | © : '| are happy in being able to accomplish and he benefit is felt throughout the whole itation of the heart, shak ila ings-- oroughly Ta the Pailor of ue tase and Mos SARE. the late Sp t- Hi ® do Jour work th Aly and body. functions of the vital organs are Poca" {1 TeMuIt OF thin, Impure | Noulte Torte mint in Sacer of It is only when the blood is thin, the resumed, digestion fs improved, you glee Try Dr. Williams Plak Pills tor-an- to pare the 2 beth peared in system run down and the nerves starved and rest and regain gradually aemia, rheumatism, neuralgia, nerv- Story of Austro-German Intrigues," and exhausted that work becomes irksome certainly the vigor and energy of health, r. Joseph i Fuses. Take them s23 tonic it you by a February! | and you get down-hearted and discouraged. ing Dr 3 Nerve Food you tion and cultivate a resistance that Hie 1 In this condition ee of ih keop you. well and strong. Get bd ed: 71 the mornings . 50 cta, from the nearest drug store 5 Wor - " ] ee ae rament sow... | tis under theo circumstances that Dr. "You can get Williams A » . Alls through any dealer in medicine . a: out bu Chase s Nerve Food can be of inestimable br by mail at 50c. a box or six boxes , ; .¥ ue you. or $2.50 from The Dr. Williams " « [ici

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