TORONTO WOMAN WAS ON VERGE OF DESPAIR and 1 so much 1 of breath Is Now Enjoying as Good could hardly get n 2 ultered from fadigestion Health as Ever in Life and |, "io stax in Ded a great deal Has @ained. Twenty. Pounds tie time o 10 go to sleep for fear I would never 8ince Taking Tanlac. [Wake up? and I Bad reaited if. ---- it {point where I thought I was just "Tanlac has actually butlf-me up fgoing to have to give up twenty pounds in weight, and 'has "I heard so much XJbout Tanlae put me in as Bood health as. ever [that I decided to try it and I began enjoyed in my life" said Mrs. Jos- [to eat better and pickup in every aph Tompkins, of 91 Bparkhill ave- {way right from the start. I'm now aue, Toronto feeling. as fine as | ever did in my "About two years ago | suffered | life and, as I said, I have put on & general breakdown in' health. My twenty pounds in weight I have appetite-became so poor 1 could only | recommended Tanlae to many of my eat very "Tittle, and" even this dis- | friends, and my husband has start- agreed with me. 1 couldn't eat any- sd taking it also after seeing what {thing greasy at all and after meals I'1it has done for me. Tanlac is the had terrible gnawing pains in my | grandest medicine I've ever heard Stomach. 1 would bloat up until I Advt. se of." uri in rn mae WINNIPEG, BRANDON, 4 REGINA, SASKATOON, - "CALGARY, EDMONTON, PRINCE RUPERT, "VANCOUVER, VICTORIA er ------------------ THE "NATIONAL" LEAVES TORONTO 11.00 P.M. DAILY via 8.7, T,& N.0. and C.N.Rys. -------------------- via Parry Sound and Sudbery Leave Toronto 8.45 p.m. Daily except Sunday eet. . STANDARD TRANS-CONTINERTAL TRAIN EQUIPMENT Tiekets and full information from Resrest Sanadian National Canadian' "HIS MASTER'S COPYRIGHTED. CANADA. I900BY EMILE. BERLINER On Sale' To-morrow "His Master's Voice" Records for May DANCE NUMBERS * Number Rerd Otcliestra | Repa Oreliestra | 316272 10 31.00 Diamond Trio! Size Price Make Believe--Fox Trot ; Now and Then ido Br Por Th I'm a Lonesome Little Rain Dro ox Trot Kiss a Miss Waltz ? Diamond Trio) 216274 1.00 Do You Ever Think of Me Fox Trot Rega Orchestra 216277 1.00 Cuban Eyes--Fox Trot Martueci's Venetian Garden Orch My Mammy ~ Fox Trot Diamond Trio} 316278 Py Coral Sea--Fox Trot Martucei's Venetian Garden Oreh, * Love Bird--Fox Trot Martucei's Venetian Garden Orch. | 216276 " Alabama Moon Waltz Martucci's Venetian Garden Orch. | * VOCAL SELECTIONS Give Me the Open Road (Baritone) Frank Oldfield) On the Road to Mandalay (Baritone) Frank Oldfield | 216273 Sweet Bells of José Lewis James-Crescent Trio{ ay 391 of Your Smile (Tenor) , Lewis James | ! y Bwoet Hortense (Comic Billy Jones! yi 398 Oh ! I've Found the Baby fo Billy Jones) When I Lost You, Mother of ine (Baritone) Joseph Phillips 216289 With the Coming of To-morrow (Baritone) Joseph Phillips RED SEAL RECORDS On Miami Shore--Walex (Violin) Fritz Kreisler Traviata --Addio del passa to (Farewell to thie Bright /isiond, Amelita Galli-Curef ta Armonia (Strange Harmony) Gigh Emilio de Gogorza Edward Johnson Reinald Wetrenrath (Creole 8 (In Spanish) Renato Zanelll indow Frances Alda by Your La Pisanelle Lo al du Port de Famagouste (The Quay of the Port of Famagusta) Toscaniniand La Scala Oreh, 64952 Favorita--0 mio Férnando (Deare.: Ferdinand) (Italian) Violin € . Gabriella Besanszoni Jisse zonetta (From Violin Concerto, ae Eh SR i ip Con Ey 144 9. 33) (Violin) Heiféts Ask to hear these new selections Played on the Victrola at Any "His Master's Voice" dealers Menufectured by Berliner Gram-g-phone Co., Limited, Montreal 21240 4%47 5 i n Old Madrid One H: ror id Roses R. J. RODGER VICTOR RECORDS AND NEEDLES 182 PRINCESS ST. Toy Mahood Bros. 'Agents Victor-Victrolas, 113 Princess St. FW. Coates Agent' Victor Victrolas, J y 138 Princess St. Phone 301J. Marty nents 1 was Rrra "meetings of professional educators in "| drinking, carousing, i / YHE DAILY BRITISH WHIG. OF THE BOOK-TAUGHT Bible The International Sunday School Lesson for May 1st is: Teachings About Education."--Deut. 49; Prov. 3-13-18; Luke 2:52, = myllllam T. Zils. liruth. honor, daty, patriotism = ahd quietly at the'news coming -out-ofibe Lae rete amd "elteve them implicitly. r {A supreme moral purpose moves them. Their powers are all trained to serve these great ends. > Some years ago 1 was talking with the head of one of the three largest universities in the United States He fairly startled me with the tensity of his earnestness as be told me of the Old-fashioned folk are chuck:DNg | the past few mon'hs. These peda- | Bogues are apparently waking up to | what the rest of us, not.so befogged iin book-born theories knew all j along, that the modern school fash- | fons, with all their frills and fads, do | not really result in cdueation Cram- ming boys and girls with a great va- | confidences brought 'to him by sta- | and of his owa absolute con- riety of. "uf-to-date" subjects, espe- |dents: b that Christianity, applied, 1 efally of a "practical" character, does | viction not produce'educated men and wom- | personal, fen. These new ideas in school work, | was the greatest need of these young which range from "manual training" | men. He said that to put the power {in burnt leather and beaten brass |of Christ into the lives of these thou- | to the devastating of natural retici- sands of youth was more important | cences and reverences by instmuctien | than any or all of their "class-room | in "social hygiene," have not worked | Studies; and he was outspoken in his out into brain power or strength of | eagerness that some special measures | character. Such innovations, which | might be taken for the promotion of have supplanted thc teaching of the {a revival of Christianity in the stu- Bible and religious ¢aercises in many | dent body | places, have not borne fruit in a high- | / | | er grade of education. ] Getting Down to Bed Rock As a simple matter of everyday | Is it not evident {hat education observation, modern education has | which does not make the student | got far away from the root signifi- | wise toward God may be more of a cance of Yhe word "education" itself. | bane than a boon? Its meaning, every schoolboy | education goes deeper than memory; knows, is to 'lead out." True edu- [it has its roots in the subsoil of life, { cation is a bringing forth of latent [We are now witnessing in all the | powers, a development of what is {world an education that has nothing | within one. It implies giving life a [to do with books; it may be called chance to grow. Its real aim is to {education by cataclysm. The past six | ripen capacity into ability and into | years of awakening and upheaval of wisdom. Education'is not something life over all the earth have been | added on--after this mad fashion of {more of am intellectual and social introducing almost every conceiv- | [ able reform and hobby into the pub- schooling. { lic school system---but it is the sym- | Undoubtedly there is new metrical maturing of inherent pos- {ferment 'Bnd Pawer enough sibilities . as among {all of our inherited clyilization, un- Pedagogues. [less it all be guided by a spirit of Mttle | reverence and responsibility, There about | is no hope that education can avert | wisdom: . modern pedagogy says this possible calamity; many univer- | much about education and little | sity graduates are lcading the forces about wisdom. In the scriptures we | of" unrest Into extreme radicalism. {find none of the modern heresy that mere book-learning can transform | tions and inhibitions of Christianity life. {can meet this: universal emergency. Our "highbrows" have gone daft |This is a day to remember that "If over the power of education as a | any of you lack wisdom, let him ask panacea for all {lls. Now no man {2 God, who giveth to all men libet- of sense would belittle the advan- jally, and upbraideth nct, and it shall tages of education; but -neither |pe given him." would he impart to it functions Getting right down to bed rock, which it does not possess. This fool we cannot overlook the fact that the Ish, wicked and wandering old |Sunday School, and all that if rep- world is' not going to be made right |resents, stands for an education merely by more secular education. which relates human lite to God dnd If 1t were, Japan would be the mor- {to tie eternal verities. It awakens al model among nations; and uni- lang implants the Divinest impulses; versities .would be assemblies of 80 that it is a matter of simple ob- saints. That going to school does not {servation that often the one hour a necessarily make young people more | week in Sunday School has meant moral and noble and patriotic, as more to a young life than its week everybody who is intérested in real- {of secular teaching. For while edu- ity 'rather than in theories under- cation is a matter of years, wisdom stands perfectly. : lis a matter of illumination. That there exists an unmistak- able tendency in education to de- part from the bible ideal of 'wisdom {$ apparent to ona Who will take a square 100k at present as The Bible Versus . Strikingly, the Bible says about--education and much Carrying on the Torch. In "An Epistle To Stephen." George Mason. Whicker catches a Bible idea of education:-- "Little hands, 1 leave to you All the deeds, I could not do. Little feet, 'tls yours to fare In the paths I did not dare. The world's colleges are crowded as never before in. history, and in them are a countless company of nohls young men and women who are our hope of human leadership for fo-| : morrow. Nevertheless, those who | "When men's lips shall praise thy know colleges best say that there is | name, a slump in idealism. A few daye [1 shall slake my thirst for fame; ago, 1 laid down the most popular | When love dawng in tho:® dear eyes | student publication - of One of the [[ shall know all of Paradise, great American universities with a feeling of heavy-heartedness; it was | "Thou wilt answer what I ask, filled with cheap sophistication, | Finish my unended task. vulgarity, cynicism, disrespect for | I must pass, and thou wilt be | womanhood and a genergl pose of Henceforth my immortality." | "See what roystering, gambling, | Modern life is too contemporary; gay blades we lit is thinking overmuch of the pass- | students are!' Of course, the conduct ing hour. With the wisdom of the [ot the student body does not squa.e | East, the Bible is ever looking ahead | With their own portrayal of it; the to succeeding generations. Vita) edn. latter was merely an immaturity pos- | cation is of the family line, the na- | turing as worldly wisdom. Neverthe- | tion, the race. The Law of Moses was | less, the effect was depressing. to be taught to children's children, The old fashion of electing clergy- | and kept always in remembrance. The men as presidents of institutiong of | truly educated pegson holds in his | higher learning is rapidly passing: | thought the conti ity of life. Each |a business man who is a money-get- {of us i8 "'the heir of all the ages." ter is preferred. This is less import- | Today is to be lived in the light of {ant than the fact that the condition | yesterday. We are ourselves, plus all | which" the old order implied is alto | who have gone before. In some stirr- | passing. I'liere ire some colleges to- [ing lines, "The Phantom Caravgn," | day that seem to be without a spark | Kendall Banning gathers up this {or a flash.of inspiration or idealism [thought of responsibility for all who or religion. Avowedly, they are |are to come after us: -- | merefy training young men for Pro- | "The flames of a million sires and | fessional positions; they are frankly dames in the blood of your pul- |on a commercial basis, The crave | ses run: | tor "vocational training" has swept | Of a million flames | educators off their feet; although, | serve, how can | happtly, the leaders are now turn. one? | ing back to the earlier, saner ang | Theig prides are yours; their loves, more scriptural ideals, | their lusts, their hopes and their hates are your own; are the fruit that their loins -------- How m Bux * Banished v i Mr. James Ruddy, of Killaloe, Ont, "the pain at times was unbearable. Ih fried one aftet another of the so-called pile-remedies, but continued every bit 2s bad as ever until I commenced the Zam-Buk treatment. To my joy this hérbal healing balm speedily relieved the burning irritation. Perseverance bane ishad the piles completely." For piles Pp y Zam-Buk af aight ad let it act why, you sleep. Zam-Buk' refined herbal essences speedily socthe/ and heal the inflamed Sages: ake axa} the d in and a: itching 1 DN fala Zn -Buk is also the finest possible remedy or eczema, uicers, ho. Dap Cates bras, scaidhy an and ot spring s troubles 50c. box3for$1.96. Alidealers . or from Zam-Buk Co., Toronto. to feed and you serve. but You | What The College Prk Sala { The bible idea of education is not | the acquisition of a mass of facts |#nd theories all soon to be forgot- jten. °t is rather the development of | the spiritual aspeef® of man. Clear Iy, from the days of Moses 0 the | letters of Paul, the scriptural con- ception of human growth is that man should know that God is, and that | His nature relates Him personally to | the affairs of man's life. In other | words, to be God-wise is true wis. dom. God's existence and God's win are the supreme factors in the train: ing of the human spirit. That there is a living God, and that He means something, and' means it tremend- ously, to every mortal lite, is the heart and height of the Bible teaen- ing about eddcation. To know Goa is not only essential wisdong; it is | also"lite eternal. All of that sounds like Sunday school moralising doesn't it? Really, it is the most practical truth in the whole world: it is-the final compend- ium of the uttermost wisdom of the teachers of the race, The truly wise are they who Sea "straightest and hold steadily to the great simpliciti:s and integrities of life. They believe the, . fundamentals of reverence, life-chaaging Christianity, | Obviously, true | qiiickening than centuries of formal | stir and | mankind in the mass today to wreck | Only the tested impulses and inspira | ny Noy FRIDAY + AEN. ee ------ -- | | { | ONE DAY SPECIAL SALE I f Extra Specials For Saturday Featuring seasonable merchandise in demand right now. item is below regular value. a2, dy Every NEW GINGHAMS--50 pieces new American Ginghams: pretty Plaids and Checks. . . 25¢. yd. Special at WINDOW SCRIM--20 pieces of Fancy Colored Floral Border Window: Scrim; reg. 40c. yard. 3 yds. for 98c. HOUSE DRESSES -- 1.adies' Print and Gingham House Dresses; all sizes: big assortment | to choose from 1... _. $2.98 | Big value OVERALL APRONS large Print Overall Aprons; wash well. ".:. $1.00 each LISLE HOSE -- Ladies' fine Black Lisle Hose in Black and Brown. Special at | . . 50c. pair special lot CHILDREN'S DRESSES __ A Print Dresses: sizes up to 10 | years. Special value 2 for 9st. of small Children's MEN'S UNDERWEAR Men's Balbriggan Vests and ' Drawers; reg. $1.00, for 75. ea. ren's Lace Tan Lisle. CHILDREN'S HOSE Child. Hose in Black and Special at 15c. pair. . MEN'S SOCKS --50 doz. Men's Black Cotton Socks; extra value at ........... 40... 25c pair | h ment at CHILDREN'S DRESSES made of strong Print and Ging- am; all new styles; nice assoft- $1.50 and $1.75 LADIES' CORSETS--For this sale we offer attractive lots of " Corsets at special low prices $1.49, $1.98, $2.50, $3 and $4. LADIES' at BRASSIERS-- a big * assortment of new Brassiers -- plain and lace trimmed; all new . .65c¢., 75c¢. and 85¢. AN IMPORTANT PAR The newest in Brogue Oxfords in Pumps. both formal and informal. lll Prone 159 | | have bred, the flower of the seed | seen in Sunbury. The deceased leaves | théy have sown. [a widaw, two sons and two daugh- Their lives are spun as the threads | ters: John, of Pittsburg township; of your cloak, through the warp | Duncan. on the homestead; the and the woof of your Whole; | Misses Mary and Agnes at home. hands are theirs and your ----g éyes are theirs, and your mold | At Bedford Mills | and your Self and your Soul. | Bedford 'Mills, April 20.--Mr and | The dreams they dreamed and the | Mrs. Laurence Botsford have return- | fights they fought and the pray- | ed here, after their honeymoon trip : ers that their lips have prayed. {and are taking up residence. Mr. | Shall be your dreams and shall be Botsford began his duties in the fac. L your. prayers; your fights are | tory this morning for the summer, - the fights they made. [Miss L. Good. arid Miss H. Yates The lives they lived and the delihs | apent the week-end at Opinicon, | they dfed you shall live and die guests of Miss Yule, teacher there. Moulton is convalescing after his . again; 13. In you is the seed of a million | serious. fall from the store hill. Oth- | hopes of a million maids and [er convalescents are Harold A Eagle, | men. { Clifford and Ross Gorsline, also Mrs, {God grant, my fon, that you fight | Kenneth Gorsline. Jack Kirkpat- : the fight and hold to 'the faith. rick's horse broke loose from his X Amen!" buggy in the shed and came home, {leaving the driver and vehicle unin- EE -------------------- The Late Andrew McCallum: | fured. The farmers here are: busy There passed away at his home in | sowing grains and planting potatoes Sunbury on Tuesday, April 19th, one | a0 garden seeds Harold Eagle is Of the best known farmers in the | Working on his boat, which he ex- county of Frontenac, in the person of Andrew McCallum. His death took place very suddenly and unex. pectedly. Mr. McCallum was widely and favorably known throughout the distriet as a public-spirited man who took a keen interest in everything pertaining to farming. He was a good friend and neighbor, and hig passing away will be genuinely re- gretted by a host of friends, i The deceased was 76 years of age and was born on the farm on which he lived all his lifetime and on which: he died. . His father and mother were of Scotch Highland descent and were: among the earliest of the numerous Scotch families that settled in the district, 4 Mr. McCallum was identified with the A.O.U.W. and the Masonic order. He was a great fisherman, and enjoy- €d nothing better 'than a day's fish- ing in company with a Priend. The funeral services were conducted by Rev. Taylor Dale, of Cook's Presby- terian church, Kingston, "and Rey. Mr. Codling, of Battersea. The fun- eral was ome of the largest ever Your Ma says one of the Seven Wonders" appetite for | POST TOASTIES (Superior Corn Flakes) OF YOUR ATTIRE Shoes made over splendid fitting lasts, Shoes and Let us show you the correct Spring styles -- The Sawyer Shoe Store 184 Princess St. || Pecls to use carrying freight or the Rideau this summer, Gordon Gors- line hag been helping at the mill this! last week. At the recent election there was one of a majority ia tavor of having liquor importation prohib- ited. There were fewer votes this year than ever before was known. There are no new cases of smallpox. A play, "The Village Lawyer" was given in Bedford Mills school Friday night. The actors were members o the Presbyterian church, Westport. ------------ McLean Quits Leadership. Regina, April 29. --~Withdrawal of Donald McLean, K.C., of Saskatoon, from the leadership of the party in Saskatchewan and a decision to cone test many of the seats in the next provincial election were the princi- pal features of/the Conservative pro- vinelal convention here today. Mr. McLean has led the opposition since 1917.-Nomineés for the next election will run as straight "National Liberal and Conservative" candidates, it was announced. N Is my