8 FRIDAY, APRIL 27, 1923, THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG kas Hondo of a Jomily benefitted from Zam-Buk some time or another," writes Mrs. W. Campbell, of Bonny River : ' Y 3 Station, N.B. ' My little daughter had watery eruptions on her face and arms which afterwards broke into nasty sores. We used everything we could think of and at last heard about Z7am-Buk. This effected complete heal- ing where ointments and all other homely remedies had completely failed." --Soneliue ot Quollien "Since Zam-Buk removed the child's skin disease," continues Mrs. Campbell, "my buother-in-law has come to realise Zam-Bak's wonderful power. Hehasa hip trotble that periodically causes a gathering which breaks open. For heal- ing this sbre he finds Zam-Buk most tive, + "My husband (a railroad man), often needs Zam-Buk. Last summer his thumb was bad through getting it caught in the metal fastener of a box-car door. When the thumb end was almost 'severed Zam-Buk prevented complications and healed in a week. We would not be without Zam-Buak at any price, and every fam:ly should know of its" value." Night's Tonics -- fresh air, a good sleep and an NR Tablet to make your days better. Nature's Remedy ( Tablets) exerts a becefcial io} uence on tne digestive an oative system--the Stomach, Liver and Bowels. a Jun --taks an IR Tablot--its on is so different you lightfully DR. H. A. STEWART Dental Surgeon Wishes to announce that he has resumed his practice, cor. Wel- ington and Princess Streets. Phone 2092. Dr. H. A. Stewart Corner Princess and Wellington LOOK YOUNG, PRETTY Sage Tea and Sulphur Darkens So Naturaliy That Nobody Can Tell, Hair that loses its color and lus- tre, or when it fades, turns gray, dull and lifeless, is caused by a lack of sulphur in the hair. Our grandmo- ther made up a mixture of Sage Tea and Sulphur to kéep her locks dark and beautiful, and thousands of wo- men and men who value that even color, that beautiful dark shade of | hair which is so attractive, use only this old-time recipe. Nowadays we get this famous mix- ture improved by the addition of other ingredients by asking at any drug store for a bottle of "Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Compound," which | darkens the hair so naturally, so evenly, that nobody can possibly tell it has been applied. You just damp- en' & sponge or soft brush with it and draw this through your hair, tak- ing one small strand at a time. morning the gray hair disappears: but what delights the ladies with 'Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Compound is that, besides beautifully darkening the hair after a few applications, it also brings back the gloss and lustre and gives it an appearance of abun- dance. Classified Adages | wish it done. And better fifd the opportunities among the A-B-C Classi- fied Ads than wish ydu'd found them. Read them to dayl Jemma. 1922, by Basil L. Smith) , |£ince February, SOVIET GIRL JUDGE ~~ | GIVES DEATH SENTENCES | Nonchalantly Approximates | Her Impositions Since February. April 27 Citeize the Lwenty-tare judge pf the fey 3 An. -year- Moscow days ago Mo&cow Gluzman, old presicing {district court, gent seven nien to ther {robbery, informed a corresponuent | {that she had imposed the death seni- i ahout twenty-five persons arid had not lost a by oY who a deaths fo ence on Imoment's sleep or been troubled {her conscience becaute of them With a cigarette held firmly be- | tween tight lips and the fire of an entnusiast in her brown eyes, the | {girl judge spoke of her court experi- { |ences. She is and short, not | lat all pretty, her brown wavy hair is | |tobbed ard parted on the side like a man's, her jaw is stern. A pleasant smile saved her from rositive ugliness, but was no | {Innt of feminine finery in her rough | {Fign boots, black skirt, workman's blouse buttoned high' at | ithe neck and an old brown sweater | which she wore. ller only ornament wus the red enamelled badge of the | {Communist party. slim Te | "Since February I have tried eight | ban- jor ten capital cases, mostly i ditry and theft of public property {she said. 8he paused a moment to consider when asked how many per- sons she had sentenced to death, and {answered, "I think about twenty- {five since February." These includ- ed one woman convicted last Thurs- | | day of assisting a gang of robbers. | 'No, I have never seen an execu- {tion,"" she continued. 'Sometimes [the law requires the presiding judge |to attend these, but always I have {teen busy at other things at the jose. ana detailed someone else." | This new figure in Communist ae- | {tivities a native of Xishinex, { Bessarabia, of Jewish parentage. She had to quit school and go to work when thirteen years of age, but | she managed to educate herself and studied law at Odessa University. {8he joined the Commuuvist party in {1£18, and served two years as judge is jot local tribunals in Kharkov, but | never had a capital case until she | | came to Moscow. The Supreme Court of Russia or the central executive committee only ean reverse or miti- gate her decision in the Moscow dis- i trict court. | |8ays Cost of Clothing Must Be Brought Down Chicago, April 27.---How to get «lothing to the customer at the low- |est price, or in other words a les- ison in the reduction of overhead ex- || pense similar in character to an ab- {of the same sign, and the limit of | i breviated university course, will be {legibility for attends | {offered to everyone who | the tenth anniversary convention and | exposition of the National Associa- |dashes and spaces are differentiai- | Part II [tion of Retail Glothiers which will {be held here during the last weak of I} | September. According to the arrangements ll made by Charles E. Wry, executive | |director of the association, every one who "addresses the convention will | piace particlilar emphasis upon this important subject. Fairly Good Sugar Season { Camden East, april 26.-- I | Despite the cool weatber tne bright | {little May flowers are commencing | to bloom. Mss Lena Kennedy, Wil- | | ton, is clerking in C. Skinners |store. Mrs. Claude H.nch spent a few days at Mrs. Percy Scott's, Bick-| i nell's Corners. | { R. J. Glover has gone to King- {ston for a short time. Mrs. (Rev.) | Spencer, Reggie Spencer and a lady | friend motored out from Ganancyue | {on Sunday last and visited Miss L. | Martin. Mr. and Mrs. Reeves, Com- fort, and little son have ieit for jher parents at Carthage, N.Y., for 'a limited time. | | Percy Scott loaded a car of po- |tatoes on Monda, at the station here | land Clayton Cranston one on Tues- {day. Mrs. T. B. Wilson, Newburgh, | {spent a couple of days at the home| lot George Riley. | Mrs. Sherlock returned home on | Tuesday evening after spending the! !pasf month at Montreal with her] | neice, Mrs. McNaughton. All are] | glad to see her home again and in| 'geod health, The W. M. S. met at | il |the home of Mrs. Stover, on Wea- inesday afternoon. The annual e:ec-| tion ot officers took place. I - { The best philosophy is to do one's | | duties, take the world as it comes, | submit respectfully to one's lot, bless | ithe goodness that has given us so | {much happiness with it, and despise | { || affectation. B zrren do it than i He who would have no trouble in! | this world must not be born in it. | ARE WOMEN OVERWORKED Yes, hundreds of thousands of, them are. This applies to the house-; {| | wife and mother who struggles on! a small income to make both ends meet by doing all the washing, iron- ing, cooking, making and mending for a large family. There are others who not only support themselves) working in factories, shops, stores and offices, but often have an invalid | father or mother to support, there- fore do housework beside. These! are the women who break down early and are afflicted with various forms! of female weakness. Ninety-eight| out of every 100 women who have | tried Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound have proved that it is a ful remedy for woman's ills. RA tri ee ere er ---- Arrogance is the obstruction of wisdom, + For nearly fifty years it has been re-| storing women to health, and it will pay every ailing woman to try it. ] blue denim | The | [sugar season is over for this year, | {ana all report a fairly good season. | tp > speech are formed. In fact the | principles of the new alphabét serve tto bring telegraphy in lire with tele- :e { phony and base the two arts on the reodulation. { Cent Worth $10,000 | Bears the Date 1783 New York, April 27.--It ceems {ridiculous to speak of a cent wort {$10,000, yet such is the case. Junius Guttag, 52 Wall street, has the cent {and he places that value on it. "It is {the first coin to bear the ['U.8."." said Mr. Guttag to-day. | "The first coin upon which the de- Comparatively few people realize to what extent Gillett's Lye can be used to advantage in every home. For instance, with one can of Gillett's Lye and five and a half pounds of lard or grease, ten pounds of good hard soap can be made. Use one tablespoon Gillett's Lye in gallon of water for cleaning and disinfecting refrigerators, sinks, garbage cans, tiled floors, baths and toilets. Useful for over 500 purposes. it is the size of a dime, valued it is 1783, metal silver, {about three cents.' | Howland Wood, curator of statemeng of Mr. Guttag as to rarity of the coin. " existence," said Mr. Wood. é FRIDAY, APRIL 27. WGY (Schenectady, N.Y.) 12:30 p.m.--Stock market tations. 12:45 p.m.--Weather forecast. 2:00 p.m.--Muric and talk, "The {Child In the Home," by Mrs. E. P. | Pressey. z | 6:00 p.m--Produce {market quotations; news Sa p-- SemLLesl | baseball. results. . 6:30 p.m.--Talk for the .children. |UNIVERSAL ALPHABET TO | 7:40 p.m.--Health Talk, "Insects REPLACE MORSE CODE 2nd Disease," by Dr. E. P. Felt, New | | York State Entomologist. |Advance in Science of Coma| 7:45 p.m.--Concert programme : {by Commercial Bank Club of Na- munication Greatest in |tional Commercial Bank and Trust Years. quo- and stock bulletins; Company, Albany, N.Y. | (Late Programme.) 27.--A Instrumental selection; from cal Comedy, 'You're in Love" Washingion, D.C., April Musi- new and wide vista for extension of | . communication by radio, land lings | .. ++ +e +... Friml-Schirmer {and submarine cables opened with | WGY Orchestra. ihe announcement n:¢ the invention |Violin solo, "Valse Bluette" |of a new universal alphabet hy Gen. | .... .. George O. Squier, the chief signal | jctficer of the army, at tha {megpting here of the National Acad- | {emy of Sciences. | The new alphabet, hailed the science of | Collector'* as the |Pat O'Flaherty, the Income Tax Col- | greatest advance in lector. . .. Walter Swanker communication in many years, iz {Tony, an Italian with a grouch .... | 12.65 times faster than the inter- | . ..Chas. M. Rangey national Morse code now universal |Mrs. Parish ly used. It is designed to supplant §Marie the latter, which was invented eighty |years ago. The Meese erin "gon. | Eleanor Renick, accompanist {Squier sa.d, is entirely out of date [Instrumental selection, "By and unsuited to telegraphy as | Side of a Streamlet" . . Boisdeffre {known and practised to-day. | Orcaestra The principle upon which the new [Cello solo, "Elegie. 'alphabet is based is that the dots | Ernest Burleigh |and dashes occupy equal lengths of Instrumental selection, from | time and no consecutive signals are | cal Comedy, '"'Maytime" iw ..Romberg-Schirmer Orchestra A Comedy Sketch, "The Tax Collector." . Pearl Swanker Musi- each letter of the | alphabet is practically uniform. ! { In the new alphabet the dots, | "Scene . . Bendix Instrumental selection, Ballet jed by different intensities of the Isinuscidal wave employed in exactly ithe same manner that music and | mann Orchestra Durherque. pA Boulogne ® \ "a dill A \ iy S\ NY. ~~ . ah ~~ 2 7 -- We Leave. Le US Reven ox Reims Sony Arras as ~~ a ~ ALS e- te Jen . F RA NCE Dijon, ___ To elentes » Imogen { 3 Jah \ Lyon Claman ) ShEbenoe all -- a iit ~" ~~ gpl Motpetiis { NIN Morsellle ~~ -- Nor A CANADIAN TOUR IN FRANCE. The route indicated on the map is that to be taken by the Made-in-Canada exhibition, which is to travel in a convoy of forty huge molor lorries. The lorries, which are to be provid- ed by the French Government, are used in preference train because they can be located in the heart of each town or city, instead of being kept on a railway track around a station, usually not a desirable part of the city in which to see an | exhibition. House Agent (to inquirer): "I'm afraid that's about the nearest I ean do." --From the London Evening News, letters ¥ cimal system was based. The date «tf | intrinsically | ths | {American Numismatic Society, 156th | Istreet and Broadway, confirmed the | the | "There are only two of them in |To-day's Radio Programme. | | SCHOOL CHILDREN annual |A Comedy Sketch, "The Income Tax | . . Robertson | the | . .Czibulka | Income | as | to af | | Laura Secord Made to-day for pound. IL made of cream--real cream-- and creamery butter, and sold Fresh Every Day Jdawnasdocornd Canby SHors 4 candies are to-morrow-- no wonder they are so whole- some and delicious. Try a box to-day. There are over eighty varieties to choose from -- ALL sixty cents the & FORM MUSIC CLUB Meet Once in Two Weeks For | Programme by Their Own | Members. Some little time ago the writer | | listened to a very practical address | {by a teacher of music in the | | schools. In preparing her talk she | | said to her pupils, "Do you like your | ! music hour? If so, give your reasans. | | If not, why not? I assured them," | she said, "that I wished them to tell | { me truthfully and that I was - anxious for the negative os affirmative reasons." { Four "nd's" were: | "I do not like music because. wea | | have to learn many songs by note, | | which is very hard for me." | "The reason why I do not like | music so very well is because we | don't sing enough songs like 'Old | | Black Joe' and others." "Because I cannot read notes and do not like to sing." '"Becaus3 1 cannot well." Some of the "yes" replies were: | "The reason I like music is be-! cause I like the kind of songs we | | sing. And another thing, we don't! have to read the notes always as we | did in the lower grades." | "Because we have learned to sing | so many new, beautiful songs." | 'I lke music because the hour is] read notes 690 King Street, West gno CLEAR AS A bELL (4 Ie i) a Hear the Sonora Tone Tone is of supreme importance in the phonograph you buy. Here Sonora stands unequalled. The tone that won highest score at the Panama-Pacific Exposi- tion has been steadily improved until today it is more resonant and bell-like than ever. With countless other superiorities added, Sonora is certain to be your choice. Dealers Everywhere SONORA PHONOGRAPH, Limited Toronto a period of relaxation." "I didn't cave for music last year but I do now, because our teacher | ! takes such an interest in us and ex-! plains the songs so well I have a new | | idea of music." ! 144 'Because it gives me an hour to|{ ___. forget everything else. It's one en-!schools have already made conces- | joyment everyone can afford." {sions in this regard, and there can "It helps me to enjoy concerts | e little doubt that there will ulti- and good music of all kinds, and it mately come a sweeping reformation | also is a pleasant pastime." { which will recognize music at ita "Lest 1 be misunderstood," con- true value, both for the professional | tinued this speaker, 'let me state and the amateur.--Musical Courier. before going farther that the pupils | Mpsicians have unfortunately plac- in my classes do intensive work ined music on a suppcsedly superior { notation a portion of each period. | nigne, to be worshipped but neve: My contention is for a division of the |approached by the people. This is a | time between the study of songs by rong. To promote a wider love ol { notation and other forms of musica! {music, the art must approach the activity. Music appreciation and | musicians ust descend {reople; i the Rudy of archunral jusruments/ rom their level and mingle with the i i | people.--S. L. Rothafel. Clubs an 'excellent plan. Each class | Of all sublects after reading, writ- i so organized has a resident vice- ing and arithmetic, possibly instruc- 8 pros ' {tion in music ought to be freest of president and secretary-treasurer, | In order that the bx 4 iF | two others acting with those consti-1_ = pioal genius De "= and gi rs i he properly | ting - Prograte Somumitioe: Toa Ba there should 8 i | club meets once in two w , dur-| * | ing the class hour, and after a brief |POTtunity for them to begin early, business session, a twenty or twen- |URder competent instructors, and ty-five minute programme is given have many years of continuous trhin- by members of the class. These var-|In&. This would require a conser- {Rory of music of the best charac- : iations in the type of recitation not C. W. LINDSAY, LIMITED KINGSTON'S EXCLUSIVE SONORA DISTRIBUTORS PRINCESS STREET \ ter, where tuition should be free and living provided at a minimum cost. --Dr. P. P. Claxton. The English comic song is full of nonsense of an excellent kind, Con- sidering what the modern world is like, I think there is such a relief to be found in the ordinary music hall song. But I think it is a pity that the music: hail type of humor is overcoming thesold local tradi- tional folk-song. It is a pity, be- cause, like the big theatres and music halls, it has a tendency to be come cosmopiltan, whereas the old song was always national.--Gflbert K. Chesterton. { The misprinter fis still at work. | Recently a West of England paper, in describing Elijah, mentioned as cne of the numbers, "Ye people, nend your hearts, mend your hearts and not your garments." When it is considered that the text has "rend" in place of "mend," it will { be seen that this was centainly a new ' rendition." i onif serve to maintain interest, but nd ni also to develop an eagerness to do intensive study when required. "Not all the children mentiond the use of notation as the reason for liking or disliking the music hour, but that subject was noted in enough cases to give proof that from the pupil's standpoint the theory ad- vanced is true. And I contend that the music lessons must be made at- tractive from their standpoint if we expect to maintain their interest. Psychologists and many of our lead- ing educators agree with me in ex- pressing the belief that if we are able to retain interest through the adoles- cent perdod, we can, in a large ma- jority of cases, be assared of an in- terest ino music for the balance of their lives." | | Postscripts. More and more often we hear the {question discussed of the introduc- {tion of eredits in our public schools 'for outside music study. Some «I Had Bilious Attacks and Stomach Weakness" Tran must feel ar me