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THE JAPANESE, HOIIU (Continued from fat^e 8) recent i T< >ki< i th the sentiment: ■ • ing my bw« I rt, 1 me by kr. :ninj;. ted limitations with the true ire re ■ must lie ■ • Their genius, I itseli ■ - ■ - ed in < irder ■ " uld ■k ' We 0 wing i rificed • ted i' ir Tshe SUPREME CVRATIVE POWERS T. HILL MA LDS ranillari^ Sold by all Dmasisjs, in <he U. S.. Vfl-BJIIId' ■ J>W or by Mail, 50c. bode. M. . . eated an unprt-< • •; • i e^ale throughout the United States without advertising. Hundreds oftbous; flerers from all forms of skin diseases have been triumph .:. i jred after b ig given up as hopeless by physicians, hospitals and celebrated pro ••: . : • : m< dical colleges. -:'v gf^ coughing, sore throat, croup, baby humors, piles, sun by r :i' H % 1 T*l£* burns, cuts, poison (oak or ivy). Stings and bites oi %^<l4.a VvJ including tarantulas and centipedes, are neutralized by 1 ■ • ' -und. ible remedy absolutely controls and positively cures not only the serious *">. « • ' and mucuous membranes, but it is also the one hair mr -f f~\ eps the alp clean, white and cool —in that perfect wlVlil w jjich insures an abundance of soft, luxurious hair. C ,\ ! ' I I^r^Y ?•». will bring rest, comfort and cure to anyone suffering with Salt Rheum, Tetter, Erysipelas, Dandruff, Itching ff* 1 ('..-•.-. Falling Hair and all Face Eruptions, the most insidious C^Ccl-igJ* Diseases, Private and Syphilitic Diseases and Tumorous *^ A w A Few of Many Physicians' Testimonials. •'■ T. UM Mam field. My Dear Sir :— Knowing of great cures made by your " Capillaris." 1 tested its ition, finding it entirely frre froni Lead, Zinc, Sulphur, Cantharides; or anything injurious ; :. ■ it extensively; and concluded that the medical skill of the world, as yet, has not produced its . : ing of Scalp and Ski:. ! >i*ases. etc. This testimonial is given for the benefit ol the public a:.:: ng proprietor. E. C. NEAL. M. 1)., Portland. Me , Manager Deering Hospital. : - ! rainent Physician. Dr. Xeal, has spent a long life in hospitals in Ohio, Illinois and Maine. .-•• T. Hill Man~sjuld.-\ am pleaded to say 1 have used yonr Capillaris with_entire satisfaction in cases . -kin Diseases and Baldness. AMOS M. RICH. M. D., Brooklyn, N. \. • Carillaris " is -n articled superior merit. DR. 0. S. NORCROSS, San Jose. Cai. ■ ised Mansfield's Capillaris successful^, .■■-.:.. does all it is claimed to. I recommend it •■• Very truly yours, DR. F. THOMAS. 118 Eddy St., San Francisco, Cal. ' 7 Mansfield. Esq. -I have used your Capillaris in cases of Diphtheria, with excellent results. It trar- rms the Poison to the outside of the throat. 1 keep it on ha."d for use in my practice, »\^-r<>t iullj IRA B. CUSHINO. M. D., Brooklyn, N. \. X wonderful Production, a great Public Benefit. ! use Mnd re. omrnend it. Use my name all you; its behalf. B. B. FOSTER,* M. D., Portland, Me. ■ •■: Capillaris for the worst scalp disease and dandruff i ever knew of , which defied the best .. It , ured me, also another member of my family. These : .• used T. Hill Mansfield's "Capillaris" personally and as a family medicine, I find it an a-: • Dume merit, and consider any person a public benefactor who plates so valuable an article at th( •: an intelligent public at so low a price ; therefore it gives me pleasure to recommend it. .^ REV. J. L. CAMPBELL, Madison Street Baptist Church; New Vorl Cit>. ng used ••Capillaris" in my practice, Men the effects of its use extensively in severe cases of Skis .:. Uisea^^Calarih, Colds, etc., etc., I can testify to its great value Uk JAMES CARTER, Georgetown; Mo. People in Alkaline and Tropical Climates! "Capillaris" will positively keep your head clean, cool, free from dandruff and itching. Address T. Hill Mansfield. Agent. Glen Ridge. N. J. P-TaTaa BASE BALL I H»]44 : : :j33 outfit liii^i 23 PIECES! 8 BASE BALL CAPS, 9 BASE BALL BELTS, 1 BASE BALL, 1 FIELDER S GLOVE, 1 CATCHERS MITT, 1 CATCHER'S MASK, 1 905 B. B. RULES. p' f"\ VO * * « Ivr «"l-'«' <™t«t Krer for trllinp 2i L -» •-' • O J'«- t« F . ■<■ Itlui M «t Klc. Kvrry boy - -ii in tnif.™ \»u la th« rhimf. G<x-<J |r.■.<^^. v--:-tu. Cv ..n. ni» <,n«- <).y. ** •• lru«r <•■■• BT«O trj. We Ukr lai'k all viA K.ld. - ::■ aI- I m tend J'.iuin* |« -ij.Birt- Mhrn uM. wnd money ' ..:,'. arc win -ni :h- < ■...,,.(. I. Itsl»<-It»ll " ■-■'»< ■■. '■•-. lx»y. ivrii. to-day. 11.. it now. TRUE Blue Co.. DEPT. 907, Boston. Mass. SUNDAY MAGAZINE for MAY 28, 1905 sustained flights. They could have pro duced long poems, strewn with exquisite thoughts; but n- >t an Iliad nor a "Divipa i " They found their own best path of development. < >ne of the most remarkable of the many ■inns the Japanese have placed upon their poetry is thai it must not treat of \.-.r and bloodshed, <>r. indeed, of any ugly or revolting themes. Homer would not have been listened to had he tried to sing "Achilles' wrath" in Nippon, and Dante could not have been born in the Japanese air. Some forms, as the itsu. are restricted to a single theme, and. others, as the hokku and tanka, are lim ited to the expression of a solitary senti nt or thought. But the new martial ipan, and the desire and neces for fuller poetic expression, have led to the development of longer poems. The naga-uta, or "long song," has been in vogue for centuries: but it is trinj " i and is in< tted as a vehicle • Make Ice Cream in ten minutes ™ Jell-O \ Ice Cream Powder Everything but the lee and milk in the package. 1 Does not have to be cooked, sweetened or flavored. One package makes -I qnartfl of the t»._-«t Icecream ! m ever ate. Costa very little. Quality the highest. i run- and wholesome. Keceived Highest Award, • GOLD MEDAL, at the St. Louie Exposition, IS* >4. i If your grocer can't euj>t.!.v yon «end »c. for I package*. Four kinds : Vanilla, Chocolate, Straw berry and I'nflavored. Send for new illustrated Ke en*} Book issued Aprii IMb, I*»s. Addict*, The i Gcuebee l'arc Food Co., I* Koy, ■X. thought. Another form, the ima-yo, con sisting of verses of four lines of 7-5-7-5 syllables, lan too restricted in theme, is being developed under the name of shin-tai-shi, or "new form poem." This is similar to the English ballad measure. and in the hands of masters may be fash ioned into an effective, beautiful and noble medium of poetic thought. But the h <kku and, in less degree, the tanka are still the favorite forms of Jap anese verse. Their curt lines and their few but well-treasured words are ad mirably representative of the genius of the Japanese speech. No other language is more compendious, and not even the Greek has such power or such wealth of suggestion. This is due largely to the under-depths of significance in all Japan ese words - the accretion of lon.u tradi ti< 111. Indeed, the hokku is the exaltation of the phrase. It is of course much more:' but it has developed the phrase to a I height and beauty not attained in any other language. It is the perfection of phrase thai makes poetry quotable. We do not remember poems or verses, but felicitous phrase . The enchanting har mony and linked beauty of Keats' "Nightingale" linger in most minds as a delicious though blurred memory: but the "alien corn," and the "foam of perilous seas,"' these we bear in our bos oms forever. A great hokku embalms a; single sentiment or impression in an | rtal phrase, and ii finds lodg ment for all time in all the hearts of Japan. A comparison oi th< h kku with of the briefer forms in Western poetry is inevi table. Tocontrast such a measure as tlie sonnei with ' makes the how to great advantage, j rt) m ;yllables seeming a mere guard of honor in presence of the 1 cohorts of its rival. Hut when the sonnet :-'• b\ sid< « ith the lv kku, the ire seems elaborate and Wordsworth fell ii necessary to de fend I occasional self-limitation to "the • und," and did so m an immortal sonnet — "nuns fret not at their convent's nar- His plea is that many souls, liki his own, "have felt the weight oj too much Jiberty." But the one hui 'and forty syllables • the sonnei ifTord almosi unrestricted freedom, compared with the seventeen syllables of the 1 \\ ii li :he i |uatrain the i n< >t till less striking with the heroic couplet; bui the latter is not a poem, and even when used as the - iif an epigram, i!> les m>l in one as a < 1 i -- 1 i t ; measure, as the invariably does. The quatrain is, indeed, the only frequently employed m p< ietry thai may endure ;i comparison, in respect to brevity, vi'.h But even the ■ |uatrain < ■ >rre s]K'ii(]^ more nearly uiili the tanka, both as regards length and thi ent >>f ■ raid's ,u r "l<lfii ■ |uatrains in which li<- melted down the "dross ed" " Rul >ai) at" of < >mar, and Landor's famous one <'ii hin cli ! strove with none, for non< rth my are more !ikr tanka, and are too full and varied for ' ; which de compression and unity. I: is not the purpose here to consider the comparative excellence <'i the Jap anes< ■ i d the ■ uatrains or sonnets ci the West. As one star differeth from another star in glory, it is sufficient to know thai in I v th< world ther form of beauty. Int< this tiny cup a nation has poured its ■ ■ • rtisi I ive lai >t 'rt-i] ntly and lovingly, \mtil tli<- cup has wrought into a rare and resplendeni The outside world, in all its ries "f song, ha ' el found tlu • or the art of putting so nnul: beauty into such small com] Hall's Vegetable Sicilian Hair Renewer. Always re stores color to gray hair. The hair grows rapidly, stops coming out, does not split at the ends, keeps soft and smooth. Sold for sixty years. For the whiskPrs and mootttacbe we makp a Dy© known as BUCKINGHAM'S DTE. It colon in st.int I y a rich brown or a soft black. li. P. HALL * Co., Nashua, N. H. PARIS MODEL $2.45 Hade on a nilk covered Order by No. 14 E «D? win* frame, and the frame is covered by all »ilk chiffon, tacked very clone; lower facing is a hi«h grade, imported hair braid, a combination very pretty and deHiruble. Edgeofhat trimmed with silk and velvet roma, laid very clone, and inter min lid with foliate. On center of crown i* laid velvet ribbon in strap effect, held in place by a fancy ornament in the center. Black, Navy, Krown. Pink, Light Uluo, Champagne, White or Light Grey. Would cowt. STi.dDto $7.(1(1 in any first claaa milliner's More Our -p. .■lul Price $2.45 Order by number and atiit<- color <l. -ir. il. Our beautiful 1906 Catalogue of Millinery and Ladies' Clothing shown all the latest Mtyl.-s for cummer ,1 ■.-•tit FKKEnpon request. Writ.' fur it day. First National Co- Operative Society I>t-Pt. 1023-AT CHICAGO 111 your hrur is j;ray or lailrd, rciturc it to any color ana its youthful eloss by simply combine it"»ith the ■ IDEAL dV^'So COMB I Most practical devicp ami only n.rth...i ri.iion.ril 'y ■ I-hysi.ians. I-a>;ts a lifetime. Application cuaranlc^l not ■ lnjurluuii and ins I be dete ted. Intcrcitmj: t,m,kltt, ■ valuaMr information and testimonials 1 KM*. Write to-day. ■ H. P. Comb Co., Dept. 65,35 W. 21st St., New York, J 1 A dry cracldy skin is an abomination; and 50 unneces sary. Woodbury's Facial Soap acts as a balm while cleansing. You'll remark the difference instantly. Send 10 els. for samples of all four preparations. The Andrea Jcrgens Co., Sole Licensee, Cm. 0. Special Round Trip Rates Daily to the Pacific Coast via Chicago & North- Western Rail way beginning May Xi, account Lewis A: Clark Exposition. Round tnp Chicago to Portland, via direct routes 556.50; via San Francisco and Los Angeles in une direction $C 7 "»(». Send 2 cent stamp for illus folder and full information as to extensive choice of routes offered either via < >maha or via St. Paul and Minneapolis. W. B Kniskern, Pass. Traf. Mgr., 21 Fifth Aye., Chicago. 17