THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG. 3 - FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 86, 1080. In the Realm of Women---Some Interesting Features ) Millions now use it to their utmost satisfaction | nn, n 1892 "We first offered the public ous | "SALADA" 8724 TEA & Intérnal and External Pains mmm, | TODAYS FASHION By Vera Winston. ---- | | | | | 1A Serie of Talks on Music By Prof. C. C. Laukhter, Mus. Bae. rain, The family of the violsis generally considered to be- various sized in- struments played with the bow, by | drawing it across the strings and | causing them to vibrate thus pro- ducing the sound. | The most ancient viol on record is the Ravanastron, an ancient Hindoo instrument supposed to have been in- { vented about 5000 years B.C. The sounding box resembles the bowl of a pipe-and the long neck into which two pegs are inserted the stem. It | has but two gut strings and is played with a bow of hair and bamboo. This {instrument fs still used among the | Chinese and other Buddhist pedple. | | No. V.--~CHEST OF VIOLS. | By the use drain CLEANLINESS IS HEALTH of Gillett's Lye. house cleaning is made & pleasure instead of a the water and cleans thoroughly whether the dirt is visible or invisible. : and infectious germs. removes obstructions from pipes. closets. sinks, etc." Refrigerators are made delightfully fresh and clean by using one teaspoonful of Gillett's ons of water. "GILLETT'S LYE EATS DIRT" Made in Canade. DL Fe er ~T 3 Sa drudgery. It softens 1.3 13 ALI Destroys all bacteria Lye dissolved in two GE GIG IIT) TATA AT ATLATEAT art Sat | | *An instrument of that type that 3 i \ Ve do know more about is the Rupes. {tongue though his friends overlook- | cannot or will not supervise the diners eat themselves into sluggish. | This instrument is mentione: 8~ ness. . Music is an exercise for high- est and finest faculties, and, when en- joyed for too prolonged a period, re- sults in the temporary dulling of the t r I lieved by (1 THOMAS ECL CTRIC olL THAT IT HAS BEEN SOLD FOR NEARLY FIFTY AND (3 YO-DAY A GREATER SELLER THAN EVER BEFORE IS A TESTIMONIAL THAT SPEAKS FOR ITS NUMEROUS CURATIVE QUALITIES, : ort {ed that because they knew behind it | practice, either threes lessons week- torically as appearing in Europe in jall was great nobility of character. |ly should be the minfmum, or a the eighth century, It has a pear -- f practice teacher should supplement shaped body terminating in a slender | knowledge of the history of | the teacher's work." neck, also having three Strings and | pg yq0 'like history in any other field, | nt discrimination that is a mistake." from the rebec we have the viol. { adds zest to its study and enjoyment. | More and shorter musical program- -- : The first viol was originally the | ---- [+ 8 is the trend of the times. ""Con- Few people are gifted with an un- size of a viola or tenor violin as used | "I trust the time has come when | certs are too long,' declares an Eng-| erring sense of pitch. If you do not in the modern orchestra. |all children will be taught. music | lish physician. They are akin to a [keep Your piano well tuned, there: The chest of viols is a hugh Ca8€ | exactly as they are taught to write long ten-course dinner, where the | fore, where are you? with @ family of viols in, compris- | ng spell," writes a teacher, 'but | =~ . ing two trebles, two tenors and tWo | first and foremost, they will be | basses. All we now have left in gen- | taught music in as commonsense a | eral use of the viol family 15 the | manner as they are taught spelling |[® violin, viola, violincello and the |apq geography. All school studies HAVE YOU TRIED THE 50 WATT MAZDA hpw WHITE LIGHT Prices reduced--splendid for reading. Cor. Kihg and Princess HALLIDAY: ELECTRIC (C0. The Home of the "MAZDA" -. Phone 94 Economical Purity In your soap, purity is not: only "desirable but its an absolute necessity if you warit your clothes to last. Sunlight Soap is absolutely pure ~--no fillers or adulterants of any kind : $5000 guarantee of this. | This School Frock of Navy Blue Serge Is Embroidered in Red Blanket y Stitching. This straight box dress for the | schoolgirl is an exceedingly praoti-| | cal as well as attractive mode. On this frock of navy blue serge bright | { red blanket stitching done in red an-| ily have been added from time to | | gora makes a pleasing decoration. This is used around the cuffs, to | outline the rounded neck and algo to | adorn the skirt. In the front where the stitching makes right angles there are small slip-in pockets. | The tam of bright red: velvet gives a gay finish to this effective costume for school, A navy tam might of course be substituted, but, were that done it should be embroidered with | red angora or finished with a gay | tassel, LADY ASTOR'S SPEECH Many Subjects ¥xcept Main One in Four-Minute Talk. London, Nov. 26.--Lady Astor went to the Central Hall in Westmin- ster yesterday to open a sale on be- e half of the church army. She an- | nounced she had only four minutes to speak, but, according to the Daily | Chronicle, she managed to read a | selection from the New Testament, to {touch on Ireland, Armenia, educa- | tion, temperance and the. efficacy of | prayer, to quote from Newman's double bass. ! Viol da' Gamba is an instrument about the size of the violincello, but is no more used as the violincello dis- | placed it. The gamba had six strings | and bars or frets across the finger | | board. Another instrument was/ the Viel | ai Bordone, also having six strings but below the neck lay sixteen metal strings which were plucked with the 1eft hand. Many instruments of the viol fam- | time, but were short lived. { The Viola Bastarda was an instru- | ment a little smaller than the bass { viol. This instrument fell into dis- | use about the seventeénth century, | An instrument called iolo da Brac- {cio was another instrument having six strings and was known as the arm | viol, as it required to be held in the | bend of the arm when played. Viola da Grmba mentioned above | was called the leg viol. Owing to the | sige of the instrument it was held | between the knees when played. It is now obsolete. o < An instrument called Viola Pom- Poso was a five string viol and meas- ured four feet in length, said to be invented by J. 8, Bach. This instrue mont was played like the violincello. The violin of today takes predom- inance in the formative period of modern music because it has such op- portunities for brilliance and melodic expressiveness. , Sir John Hawkins tells of the ear- ly viol thus--"The viol was in use only to accompany the voice and when madrigals and singing was-in must be perfectly learned or rank is not maintained; that explains the presént problem of the plano teach- er. Children. study music and prac- tice alone) there is no competition, their music study. Music will al- | ways be the most difficult study for children for as long as it is done alone. Class lessons, and class work is the ideal way for chil- | dren from seven to nine. When pri- | vate lessons are givep, if mothers Crazy With Corn Pain? Get Wise! Use Putnam's Not another day to suffer. Grand prospect to think of ridding out those pinchiag corns," those sore, aching foot lumps, those hard patches on the heels. Once you apply Putnam's Extrac- tor, once you feel it's soothing, heal- ing Influence, you'll realize all you've missed in not buying this safe de- | Dealers everywhere sell Putnam's Corn Extractor in 35c bottles. Get it to-day and to-morrow your misery is mone. The Telgmann School of Music Piano, violin apd other stringed instruments; elocution and dra- matic art. Pupils may begin at any date. Terms on application. no comparison, no companionship in | pendable and sure remedy before. | Engagements for concerts ac- cepted. ™ Christmas Not Far Away One short month more and C hristmas will be with us. Are you buying a Piano for this Christmas? Since, in Pianos as in many other things, "the best is the least expensive." You should come and see the following Planos before fixing your ch oice: Heintzman Co., and Lindsay Pianos and Player-Pianos If you wish we will store free of éharge the Piano selected now, while ours tock _is complete, and de- ler it on Christmas Eve. Time granted for pay- ment, CART TTT UTS REIT TA Sunlight Soap | greas hymn in reference to her seat | in Parliament, to include various oth- washes elothes beautifully clean" JES i | er little odds and ends and to finish frat 21 he ithaut tie wear : | up by forgetting to declare the sale and tear of the wes rd. 7 | open, Referring to the companion- Insist on EY ship of the House of Commons, she ee said that when she looked round at LEVER BROTHERS LIMITED | her fellow-members, she was some- TORONTO | times tempted to say, 'the night is ! 1 Pill a Laxative, | back and sloping shoulders. | dark and I am far from home." -. A Pipeless Furnace is a heating system, which, instead of [2 Pills a Cathartic, | attased orn Lsell has remained ap using pipes as a means of carrying heat uses one central Regis- | 3 Pills a Purgative RO Yurther improvement seems pos- ter. With every advantage of ecomomy and convenience, the This is the Way Milbatns Las. 8ible, HECLA PIPELESS FURNACE will give you heating satisface Liver Pills Work. tion to a surprising dégree. Let us gaplain it to you. Sole agents. LEMMON & SONS 187 PRINCESS STREET : : KINGSTON the decline gentlemen began to ex- cell on the violin and substituted in- strumental music in place of vocal. The composers therefore framed compositions called fantazias for the violin, these compositions having six Parts answering to the number of viols in a set or chest. We have now traced the violin kind and noted the development right fror its rude beginning to its present perfection. It certainly makes one of the most Interesting subjects in | the history of instrument making. Only one of the remaining bowed instruments used In the modern or- chestra has retained the viol model. ~~ | This is the double bass with its flat 216 Frontenac Street. Phone 1325;. "a| Hove good authority far the news Lyou circulate, my friend. "They say | 80," nine times out of ten, is not good | authority. : If the watched pot refused to boil, { you and [ might be better off from a | business standpoint. pr 3 Value of Effective Advertising. Probably one of the greatest, if not the greatest thing in modern business is advertising. Probably no other thing is so little understood or So often abused and misunderstood by managers of musical attractions, local and otherwise. Advertising is everything, provided. you have the goods to back it up. Among the managers of the great artists, artists with real, not al- leged box office drawing power, the value of advertising and its use is well understood. They helieve in big advertising, in advertising on a large scale, and in kegping ever- lastingly at it. They know the sec- ret that many men will never guess, that it is the constant hammering, not the occasional spurt, that brin results to the advertiser. The man who can distinguish be- | tween the good and the bad in publicity (another name for adver- tisinz) end who has an attraction that will deliver the goods, yes, de- liver even more than the circular, billboard and reader sets forth, and who has the courage to "hold on." is coming out upon one of the many highways that lead to success. Educate your public. Make them feel "that they 'know' your artist, create a desire for first hand know- letige, fof it is the curiosity to hear and see the great omes, the celebri- ties of the world, that changes the money from thgir bank to yours. Correct' handling of types and typefaces, the use of white space, or colo™ of design and proportion, of vhotographs and cuts are details of the business. that count for wore than most people realize. E To watch the steady and fruitfal results of well placed and well | agndled advertising is a fascinating game. You will never 'use any of the old griping, nauseating, sickening, purg- ing pills, containing as they do calo- mel and other drastic mineral ingre- dients, once you use Milburn's Laxa- Liver, a pill that is purely vegetable. | Owing to the great care used in procuring the highest grade of drugs | from which they are manufactured, they are as near perfect as it is pos- sible td™get a laxative remedy. They work gently and effectively, without a gripe or pain. " If you are troubled with constipa- tion, biliousness;, driven to distrge- tion with sick headaches, if your tongue is coated, your breath bad, your complexion muddy, your eyes yellow, have floating specks before the eyes, jaundice, itching, bleeding or protruding piles, stir up your slug- Boys' . gish liver with a few doses of Mil- { burn's Laxa=Liver Pills, lg S| "Mrs. Roy Mackie, Orillia,' Ont. \ writes: -- "I desire to express my thanks for the relief I have had by "at Cost Something Good A delicious dish that has rapidly gained public favor is-- Rose Brand Sausages and mashed potatoes. These dainty morsels of rich, lean, deli- cately spiced pork have a tempting, appeal- ing flavor that never'grows tiresome. With Rose Brand Sausages a tasty lunch or a hearty dinner can be economically and quickly prepared. Thoughtful women everywhere have added to their weekly menu -- Rose Brand Saus- ages and mashed potatoes. - mm ee eee AL using Milburn's Laxa-Liver Pills. 1 had been suffering for some time from constipation and bad headaches. I tried all*sorts of cures, which did me no good, until * was advised to try your pills. I got great relief after taking only a few doses." Price-2b¢. a vial at all dealers, or mailed direct on receipt of price by | he Milburn Co, Limited, Toron- H 0, Ont, : | Tn -- : I < Boys' High Cut Boots with Buckle and | Ladies Be Attractive il Strap -- good and water tight -- just the thing for the sloppy weather. How many women 80 through life caring little or nothing about their hair, beautiful hair makes beautiful women. If you will use Delmays "Vitalene" French Hair Tonic, your tt hair will become attractive, full of \ at Cost Price. ; life, you try it. Sald in Canada at - \ $1.00 per bottle. One agent in every 'H. JENNINGS |e Drug Store. KING STREET Boys', Youths' and Little Gents' oy y Musical Briels. There ig no more certain way of spoiling a good voice than by sing- ing loudly. ' . -- . } co an to sing a simple pas- | k ------ f music at sight, Without any paniment is something that choir member should strive quire. Brahms and Boethoven both had a2 brusque manner. Brahms had the: misfortune to have a bitter