Daily British Whig (1850), 3 Jun 1922, p. 13

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THE DAILY BRITIS INSO is a new, scien- R tific soap product in the form of fine gran. ules that have wonderful power to loosen and dis- solve the dirt in clothes while they soak. . Rinso is new and abso- lutely different from or- "dinary washing powders. Do not put jt straight into the tub from the package, make the fa- mous Rinso liquid first. IX halfa package of M Rinso in a little cool water, until it is like cream. Then add two quarts of boil- ing water; put it into your washing tub, or ma. chine, adding sufficient cool or lukewarm water. Rinso --}--Made bythe makers of Lux ' R114 DR. MARTEL'S PILLS FOR WQMEN'3" 25 years Standard for Delayed ang Painful Menstruation. Bealed Tia Package only, all Druggists or direct by mail. Price $3.00. Knickerbocker Remedy Co., 71 BE. Front 8t., To ronto. CRUST BLEACH SG WHITE WITH Low Squeeze the juice of two into a bottle containing three of Orchard White, which any store will supply for a shake well, and you have pint of harmless and delightful lemon bleach, Massage this sweetly fragrant lotion into the face, neck, arms and hahds each day, then shortly note the beauty and white- ness of your skin. Famous stage beauties use this emo. lotion to bleach and bring that 80lt, clear, rosy-white complexion, al- 80 as a freckle, sunburn, and tan bleach because it doesn't irritate, SEVERE ITCHING BURNING PIMPLES Over Face and Neck. Face Disfigured. Cuticura Heals, ------------ lemons ounces drug few cents, a& quarter My disfigured for One of our Specialties! Our Motto: "Cleanliness ana Civility," ana We try to live up to It in every way, Frank Robb's BARBER PARLOR 185 WELLINGTON sTREET (Next to Bank of Nova Scotla) The Special Poliey ISSUED BY THR i EXCELSIOR J INS. L FE co'y WIGHTMAN 5 fiLD. - 131 WELLINGTON ST. by Onoto Watanna, eral New Volumes of By Professor Now that world problems seem to [be taking on a Pacific setting, we shall hear more and more of Japaa and China. In view of the fact that We sent 50 many missionaries to the Orient, it seams stran {not teacher or preacher jcarrying the gospel to the heathen | thinks that hig or her time can be |8pent to better advantage than in | weaving stories about the people of [the East. And yet I really believe that the church would be served | magnificently if a missionary of geu- ius should arise to paint lite as it | really is in the Orient, with its joys {and sorrows, its lights and shades, |and the varieties of character to be {met with. in Canton or Tokyo, or |8ome village in the foothill country of the Himalayas. 1 remember some [fifteen years ago that the religious | public in Canada and the United [States was wonderfully influenced by "The Lady of the Decoration," i | pleasant story of Japan. Kipling has, {of course, done much to put us in {touch with the teeming life of India, |but few writers have labored in the [same field, and China still waits for ja powerful novelist to open it up to | western eyes. It strikes me that here I1s a splendid opportunity for some | Canadian who has gone out as a coj- {ese teacher-to-the-celestiat kiagdom. | What a thing it would be to become fthe Charles Dickens, | EB. P. P. Roe, of China!' The Author of "Sunny San" is World-Famous. While reading "Sunny San" by Onoto Watanna (McClelland & Ste- wart, Toronto), the thought occur- red to me that the mission board of the Presbyterian Church might, | with great advantags to itself, offsr |3 heavy bonus to Mrs. Francis p. | Reeve, who lives on a ranch near Calgary, to persuade her to live in | China or Japan for a féw years and [wield her sprightly pen in the in. terest of the evangelism of the east. No one is better fitted by birth or [training to undertake such a com- mission, for Mrs. oriental blood in her veins. father, the late Edward Eaton, was at one time the wealthiest Engligh- man in Japan. Mrs. Reeve was born in that city, but began her lit erary career in New York, where she |achieved her first great success witn | "The Japanese Nightingale." Into I this story she wove local color and descriptions of native life, which she had at first-hand fro er and mother. This book had a sale of over 200,000, was translated into French, German, Swedish, Italian, Spanish and Japanese, and Was pro- duced as a play .n New York, Paris, and Berlin. Since then this talent- ed author has produced hundreds of short stories and several scenarios, one of which captured a $10,000 prize offered by the Chicago "Trib- une." In 1915, Mrs. Reese's second big success, a story entitled "Me," Was published as a gerial in the Cen. tury Magazine, and later in book form. For several years Onoto Wa- tanna has produced almost nothing in the story line, but has now return- ed to her old fleld with "Sunny San," another Japanese tale. Although it has Just appeared in the book stores, {Its success in other directions is re- | markabe, for it has been Accepted for stage production in New York nekt fall, and Mary Pickford will play the role of its heroine on the silent screen. Seldom has a book written by a Canadian secured such substantial preliminary endorse- ment, : | ---------- Sunny Syndicate Limited, y was the half-caste orphan geisha dancer, The Sunn; of a famous Japanese Madame Many Smiles. The little girl had been trained to dance and per- form on a tight rope, and after heér mother's death was ordered by the owner of the House of a Thousand Joys to make her debut. Although her heart was very sad, because of the loss of her mother, the fragile geisha girl had to dance and smile {her Sweetest. Her charms attracted j& halt-drunk Japanese lord, who threw her a handful of silver coins: she caught them on her fan and Cannot Be Without Them in The House WHAT ALBERTA MAN SAYS OF DODD'S KIDNEY PILLS | { § and In Dodd's Kidney Pills. Red Water, Alta., Juns 2nd (Spe- cial). --"I cannot be without Dodd's Kidney Pills at home. I have found them a sure reliéf for neuralgia backache and rheumatism ** That is the statement of Mr. Tkachuk, a we No stronger standard remedy Spoken. » found relfef in : That Mr. Tkachuk his neuralgia, back tsm in Dodd's Kidney Pi natural. All of them are caused by Poison in the blood that defective kidneys have failed t Ask your neigh ney Pills do not kidneys. Alberta Author--Sev- Verse. W. T. Allison, t |s Ib ult to a patron | beating her, he w { four American coll u Barrowe: The indignant boys Birl"s bonds, smashed her cruel ow ler into unconsciousness and car her off to their house. It {yery well to rescue but they soon found. that they had a problem on their | had to negotiate through the Ameri- jean Consul's office with her owner and had to pay hi sum for the loss person. Even w the students were should do. They take Sunny back and they did not continue to ly, on { Hammond, Syndicate $10,000, a sum s to keep the gir] i rest of her days. [tn 2 missionary, | Sutherland, enjoin: [form Sunny into a | they f Long before the arm tish Sunny-San. | Sunny Syndicate, English gave im men her "gentlemens." Amusing Rendering of Missionary | hrew them into his face. rought swift punishment for the maiden, but while her master ege boys who were | hen this was done be a dancing girl. suggestion Limited, ufficient in Japaaq | n comfort for the | tion girl, and entrus money for her boar She called herself | Heart Would Beat LIKE A TRIP HAMMER 1 Heart trogble has of late years "i | come very prevalent. Sometimes al | pain catches you in the region of the | (heart, now and then your heart skips | beats, Palpitates, throbs, or beats with such rapidity and violence you! [think it is going to burst. You have weak and di spells. | |sicking sensations, are nervpus, irri- table and depressed, and it'you at- +3 tempt to walk upstairs or any qis- This in- | tance you get all out of breath. We know of no remedy that will do | 80 much to make the heart regain 'strength and vigor, regulate its beat and restore it to a healthy normal | condition as will Milburn's Heart and Mrs. Chadwick, Delhi --*I had palpitation of the heart, and the least exercise, such as going up- stairs or up a hill, my heart would | mer and at times and had a einking timé were near. d I try M:iburn's ls, so I procured | using Story of the tea-house | wa as interrupted py | Nerve Pils nder the care of | » Ont., writes: ¥, an antiquarian. | soon cut the | n. ried | was ali ion as if m a forlorn maiden, Agniaslion as y A friend suggeste Heart and Nerve Pi three boxes, and by the time the first one was used I began to improve. rh €8, and now gj. year 1 feel like a no dizziness or heart. an walk miles with. time of sickness now I weigh 159° Price, 50c. a box at all dealers! or + | mailed direct on receiot of price by Iburn Co., Limited, Toronto, hands. First they m a good round ! of her beautiful [ung six; o - out fatigue. At weighed 120 1bs., puzzled what they did not wish to home with them wish to have he | of Jerry | verse entitled. "Mocnlinr one { ormed the Sunny | Yerse entitled, Moon ight and Com- | capitalized at |™02 Day" (The Macmillan Co., Tor-| onto). A number of these poems he | 27® vers libre, but all of them show 'a decided gift for melody, imagina- | Then se sulled | tive sympathy and lively fancy. One| ed him io traps. {of the best poems in the collection Is] the following: i respectable Chris. | Sea Lavender | | | 8 | ted him with th {My Puritan Grandmother--1 & { d and education. now, ee her college boys get | |W w a they were faseinat- |". (0 Placid brow, {Always so sure 8 of the coquet- | wnat no things but the right things | ro} shall endure!" and her queer | Sombrely neat, so or 8¢ amusement 0 | Always a little grim | Austere but kind... . |Smooth-haired and Smoothly ed m'nd, derly and prim | band-| Hymn, The chapters { lanna describes Sunny's studies the American st collectively are ful She referred to th "over croes those n grade flag of striped stars.' tionary was overjoyed when ¢tlared her conversi he end of the Kirlshitan.-- Ohbristian girl. gospel song; Bospel praye, cattykussem [fiime her hands dropping her jthrough stanz I and I r, and In thi "What thon, He biow sof' on ze Though everything And jos those man In vain with large The gift of these g Those heath Bow down ¢ her peculiar En | 0 wood Sunny. h leave her behind wi but it was im take her with the course of a fow the "Cattyku time an architect arrived from J, C. A, and th Wanted to know if her or if "she sh to his address, told the superin longed to Mr. the Y. W. C. A then, but he would to do later. He Phone tke one galvanic shook an 8. 0. 8. call they assembled they were all * Sunny San, New York! sible! "It wo said, one to the apan and up uld lavizhed her Il known resident here oo room enfation of a 00L be surprised if 43 popular as P New Verse by n second week of {n- 57 er sea-beach treasures--: One day, at Mr. Suther- | Sa-be at I am tum thos like __like-- her fingers, she murm a from the well-known om Greenland's Icy Moun 8h those joy breeze, eh In blinds -- San's Trium Possible for them to them, home, however, the se; of life soon engulfed But one day Jerry H message that a Miss e lady Superintendent ould send her over Miss Sindioutt hag tendent that she be- Hammond, Jerry told. . that he was busy just Who had received a to his friends, for a council of war STOWD-UD now, was in It was fanta, other 50 danged impossible the other showed that it the question to receive | which Onoto Wa- | the progress cf | d her talks with 1 ktiow it fiow-. ents severally ang That deep in her there wa 1 of excellent fun. | at play ® US.A: as being 'Beneath that brow West Water, wi; The blue-grey eyes sought The me found it too e 3 | ' Most often by the ocean's passionate on to Clhiristfanity | ™ e is P But let me whis day-- per it to you to- sa flame | beauty, f u shells and | colored weed ered and hoarded with glad hu- man greed-- They warm my heart to sight new, How vividly I sce her, frail and old, clothed figure on the - | ~day with in-| can sing those-a- | 319 speak those-ah |, "yyy bik I know those cat- | beach, Then | | her, and | FOBALY | pay; ured a hymn, tains." went like Compactly wrapped against the sea- wind's cold, ently waiting till waves 1 reach Some sandy strip, where amber, green, Her lacy sea-weed be seen, 3 (She pressed ang 'mounted thém--- frail tangled things! dled by her, fit to trim fairies' wings). Dr. O"Hagan's Collected Poems, over thirty years since Dr. O'Hagan published his first volumes of verse. In all he has pro- Phs in New York, [duced four books of poetry. He has y broken [BOW gathered the best of his lyrics essor and | from these earlier before et her purple, glish jt treasures could isle he pleases he's wild, kind ods are gown, | Han and stone." written during the war, an is not a great poet, b 4 gbod deal of verse in Which will please the ave er, especially those who enjoy pat- riotic songs. The author divides his poems into half a dozen groups deal- ing with the following themes Canadian patriotism, love ang at' fection, the settlement; Irish patri- otic poems, poems of heroic days, commemorative poems, and memory, meditation and fancy. This poet of old Ontario 1s a great admirer of the pioneers of the early days. He Celebrates one of them in the fol. lowing poem which is a fair sample of his homely style,-- . A of the Settlement. ; The wind Sweeps through the for. est aisles, In requiem notes of grief and woe, For the great strong heart of the pioneer Hushed in death, as a low; Chinting a dirge at every door--. Dirge tor the Oak the Storm-King tore: "Here at rest 4s our pioneer In his little log cabin beside the 111-- The stream flowin, heart be still; Here at rest is our pioneer, Wake not his slumber with sorrow's tear!" | to th the missionary, ut there is this Book On returning rageé read- rious business them, ang in Jears they almost in far-off Japan. ammond, by this lving in a hand. Studicutt, newly + Was at the Y. W. he would call for ax Ye ham what n oak laid then he sent out in the air." She, stic, impos- | * be funny," they "If it were not !" One after Was out of Sunny at hi ® | Where shall we bury man Who toiled in the héart of the forest wild? Out in the field that gs Writ with his name, Lay him down as a dream-tired 8 on though his this good, great complete ; Success stand behind it a trial. ears of it. Give -- | tures of a T H WHIG. f | our pioneer e the i child: "Here shall we bury Ia his little clay cabin besid rill-- ! The stream flowing on though his | heart be still; Here shall we bury our pioneer, Break not his rest with sorrow's | tear!" | What would ye build on his narrow | fame | That knew not glory, mor gift, nor gain? His life touched God in a simple | way--- | This be Ms column on Judgment | Day: 1 "Till then shall slumber our pion- | eer In his little clay 'cabin besi rill-- The stream flowing on though is | heart be still; | de the | Here Break not, his rest with tear!" shall we bury our pioneer, S0rTow's Contemporary English Poets. J. E. Wethereil, B.A, of Toronto, | has selected over seventy poems by! Georgian writers and, along with! valuable blographical and bibliogra- | phical notes has Published them un-| er the title, "Later English Poems, | 1901-1922" (McClelland and Stew. | art, Toronto). In style and arrange- | ment this is an excellent volume and | will no doubt enable many Canadians | to make the acquaintance of some | of the best poems written during | the present century. Judging by the | rich variety of this anthology, poetry | Is certainly not in decline, Mr. | Wetherell tells us in his preface that there are over a thousand poets In Great Britain at the present day | and he has been embarrassed with | the wide choice of material from which he has had to choose the con- tents of this volume, He confesses that he has excluded coarse or fan- tastic poems; moreover he has re- fused to admit any poems '"'which set at naught or even sneer at the established doctrines ang traditions of the past, whether In the region of ethiics or in that golden demense | 'Which bards in fealty Apollo | hold'." to --W. T. ALLISON. -- Literary Notes. In a summary of the "really no- ticeable books" of historical bio- graphy published during the past | year, the Londen "Times" divides | first place bétween Lytton Strachey's "Queen. © Victoria" and Frederick Chamberlin's "Private Character of Queen Elizabeth." There ig nothing like being cheer- ful in diffieult circumstances. Har. ry L. Foster, author of "The Adven- ropical Tramp," ig a prince of optimists, Recently "enjoying chills and fever on Moy- days, Wednesdays und Fridays from 11.38 a.m. unti] 6.17 pm." and is ays want- ed to curse his villains with this ma- lady at psychological moments, but has hitherto refrained through jg- norance of the Symptoms. The latest recruit to the anti-8im- fan army of General Ww, J. Bryan is - W. McCann, has k with this i » "God--or Gorilla", Here is some 800d news for book- lovers. Countess Russell, better known as "Elizabeth of the German Garden" {s just putting the finishing 0 another long story which we may expect next fall, In England everybody is talking about tHe Psychological teachings of Professor Coue Coue has much to say of the mind's curative power. "John O' London's Weekly" has giv- enn first prize to the author or the following limerick, -- "A young highbrow on Coue intent His time to Some purpose had spent, When he found that his Had holes that were shocking He said they were 80ne, and thay went." | IN YOUR HOME? Is there a baby or young children In your home? It there is you should not be without a box Baby's Own Tablets. come the ideal home late the bowels; ach; banish cons: gestion; break tevers--in fact minor {lis remedy. They regy- Sweeten the stom- tipation and indi- up colds and simple they relieve al} the of little ones. Concern- ise Cadotte, Maka- : "Baby's Own Tab. now she is in Tablets are sol or by mail at 2 Williams® Ont. 5¢. a box from The Dr. edicine Co, Brockville, an Increase ghty-two, making A total for the district of 4,097. Con- tributions have been Jmeintal der trying financial The Meeting went on record as approving of Hon. W. E. Ra ney's efforts in en- b find that we have comfort features in You will ided ae frovided Hosiery. : : And the foot comfort is lasting--for we use nothi but permanent dyes and materiel, silk, cotton, mercer. ized, lisle, silk and wool, fancy mixtur. DELCO LIGHTING mer home. See F. GRACE Phone 1545 115 Brock Street ee ee hee Modern Optical Science Embraces Two Functions:-- FIRST, a thorough, accurate examination of your eyes. . SECOND, the prescribing of correct glasses best suited to your individual features. . We perform this DOUBLE SERVICE. R. ARTHEY, Ro. Kingston's Up-to-date Optical Parlor "Phone 2108 for appointment 148 Princess Street. for your Sum. Montreal. Orphanage Will Be Sold. Some time during the present year the Picton Orphanage will be Placed on the market and sold to the high. est bidder, but Possession can not be given until May of next year when the be transferred to the Richmond Hill, Late William Nicholson, The funeral of the late William Nicholson took place from his late residence, 1839 Mance street, Mont- real, to the Grand Trunk Railway Station on Friday morning, and was very largely attended. The deceased, | children will formerly a resident of Kingston, and | new home at a valued employee of the Canadian | Locomotive Works, had for the past! Sixteen years been a blacksmith fore. | man for the Canadian Pacific Rail- Way shops, Montreal, and was high- Iy respected. The remains were ac- companied to Kingston by members of his family, and the burial service was held at Cataraqui cemetery im- mediately after the arrival of the 30 pm. Rev. Dr. Thomas officiated, er -------------- report of the Picton Methodist chureh showed that $10,- 286 had been co for purposes of the church, The national campa'gn fund had 98% per cent collected of the entire amount subscribed. The church owes less than $5,000, and has 925 members, ana the parson ridnisters to over 500 families. The and The annual The Latest Developm. Washing Machines eat in Bileetrls ---- Called to St. Andrew's, Picton. Rev. Frank Harper, Hillsburg, was the choles of the congregational meeting at St. Andrew's church, Pie- ton, and will recelve a call to the pastorate of that chureh.: Eight men appeared before the lington and Princess Streets. Phone 2092. Dr. H. A. Stewart . of on Smith's so to use tractor,

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