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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1899-11-2, Page 7SOCIETY'S QROWN JEWELS. Toe countess et Abertleeres Adornments -- Tar ineeenn style nada tiltVW;441O, After the czaernare erimmar easetee. Lady Lo,adonderry's aiedem is a dia- Mends andpearis. At a recent anagnf- .fioent ft:Motion given in Dublin, her• ladyship ware $aoo,000, or Le60,000 worth of jewels, e 'This included the diadem. ' Square -cut emeralds, surrounded by ,diaraonds form tbe diaderu vshich glit- tees upon the fair bead of her grace • the Countess of Aberdeen. • A. double diadem, formed of dia- monds, is one a several crowns In ,Coneu.ele, the Duchess of Marlbor- ough's, repertoire -why uot repertoire? —a jewels, She also Ovens a crown of rubies, and 'diamonds, which is reserved for extra occasions, say when royalty is 'great- ly in evidence. The Marchioness of Tweeddale ef- fects a high diadem of diamonds in a , 'Greek key pattern. this entirely en- , • onettes her head, and is absolutely (stunning in appearance, as well as De- taining in ITS GLISTENING SPLENDOR. The Duohess of Roxburglae wears a• 'teetering crown of diamonds, whioh adds nearly 0 inches to ler height, Our Countess of Ora-ven, formerly Miss Cornelia Bradley -Martin, wears a coronet 'designed by her mothertWo- men who are rich enough to afford such regal luxuries as ooronets, often have 'distinct individual ideas as to their construction, and, have them made to order. The Countess of Craven's dia- dem of dean:made, each a !flawless gem, 18 n[acle in suoh awaythat eaeli etone Shows to elle best advantage, being niou:nled on a fine spiral ;of gold wire, the whale surmounted on a (crown of filagreed gold. It is said, by kthe Wee, to be worth $250,000. As ino.y lady rapves about the spirals quiver to etad • fro, teeming a wavering halo of light about hey. e Si!ese; things a la Busse ;have become so much, in vogue,. the (grand dames of England particularly, and. of other ',countries also, have ordered crowns Lot their heads fashioned entirely ' in Russian fashion. This is a shape with whiob pictures of the Czarina have made as familiar. It is quite high in front, slopiag to the sides, ,and flares back. This style of diadem is owned by the Viscountess Hood and:that Eng- lish beauty, Lady Warwick, • Sophie, Crown Princess of Greece, has a beautiful.oaronet of turquoise and. diamonds, one a her ovedding pee - tents from her brother, the German • Emperor. 11; is composed of three rows of turaumse, all superb specimens of the gem, each separated. from the other by diamond, a low of the lateer •eluemounting the other stones. The largest of the turquoise is pear -shared and. forms tbe CENTRE OP THE DIADEM. A great coronet was made Tor the Countess of Castellani by a (Neitr York eeweler at the time of :her marriage. It is magnificent, being one fiery and sparkling mass of brilliants, each gem e_lereing been specially selected, •• • Mrs. Sarah Whiting, who resides in Boston, has a beautiful diamond ;tiara of uneoramon form. It is very .high and shaped like a huge comb of an- tique fashion. Mrs. William Astor's tiara of dia- monds is famous; besides this she has innumerable combs set with diamonds, as well as a small coronet fox everyday wear. Mrs. John Jacob Astor's tiara is en- tively of diamonds. She has a string of pearls wh:ch she sometimes lwears toiled in, the bright bands of her hair, aud again you see them either drawn acrais one bare shoulder or 'twisted in and out of the laee in her corsage• . Mrs. Delancey Kane's crown of gems is said to be the most beautiful orna- ment of its kind eeen in New York ball rooms. It CONTAINS 250 FINE STONES. The jewels of Mrs. Leland 'Stanford are fanlaus, but they are !never worn • nowadays by their owner, and it is surmised that tlae lady's will iwill be- • queath them to the university he and her husband have founded. She has, indeed, already sold many and , given bhe proceeds to the oollege. The crown of all, in two senses of the word; is • the tiara of rose -pink, yellow •and white diamonds. ' Mits. Oliver Goelet has a tomb which is quite as effective in appearance as a crown; it is a Roman gold, Set witila five beautiful pear-shaped pearls of great size. The lady is eonstantly adding to the gloriee of her jewel box, not so much for love of gems; perhaps, as a pleasing way of spending some • of her income of e250,000. She has a tiara of diamonds and rubies which ab- sorbed • a good share of a year's In- come. One fortunate woman is said to have four complete sets of jewels, 'earth set having its necklace, tiara, bracelets, rings and, brooches. IE was bought of ex -Queen Isabella at the time she parted with her royal jewels to pay her debts. leers. Marshall nouerts Vivian pos- sesses a. crown of pearls, but the beauty ef her jewel hog :was a triple band of diamonds which was always one of the delights of any function ,which the lady graced with' her pros,' ence, and her diamonds, when she re- sided in New York. Another Anaeri- can lady, Lily, Duchess of Marlbor- ough, of course hag 'gems ,in regal abundance, a tithe, of diamonds and rubies among the.number, • FUNERALS IN PERTJ. One of the curious laws of Peru for- ' ,bids women to atteed funerals, and they do not appear at weddings un- less thee are very intimate friends, When a funeral procession paeSee through the streets, the coffin is• car- riect upon th.e shoulders of the pall- bearers, who are followed by an empty hearse drawo by two, four or six horses atom -ding tattle means of the mourn - ere and their deeire for display. All the male members of the family and Mewls of the deceased follow on foot, with a line of empty carriages behind them As long as they are in the pres- entre of tite dead it is oonsidered a pro- per and neeessarv eViderne of respect to walla After the body late been com- mitted to the grave these who at- tend the funeral axe brought hoine lil MAU FOLKS THE MAID OF CATHAY. Once upon a time In far Chinee There lived a maid By the twinkling sea, :As fair a maid As maid can be; Unsling in swig, unlota in item% Tito' fairer far thaa the Ulises nine Helen of Troy or Venos divine. Her eyes were of celestial hue, Her looks were drawn • in a shilling Dainty of foot, in eeooden shoe-, Poor unfamed To Wit To Woo. leare in beauty, rave in grace Of tigure and feature, form and face, Fit to burn another 'troy Or itny number of towns destroy, But Masi she lived by an unknown ' sea, In a far gone past, in far Chinee. BALLOON SPIDERS. The ord.nary California buzzard, and the singular ravens of Sante Catalina Island, often give marvelous exhibi- tions ot soaring or rising into the air without moving their wings, and. when it is rememberedl that their bodies are reduced to a minims= et weight, and that..evert the bones are filled with air, it ia alinost scientifically and literally true that they are living balloons. As a stroller has desceaded the bank by a little trail, crouched low in the slut - Light, on one of the Feriae Islands, eft the ()oast of Englaod. One night a severe steam drove a nese!, on the rook e of one of these is- lands and almost out it to pieces, The poor sailors, nine in number, clung to the stein and made a desper- ate fight for their lives, all through tbe night. Towards morning, when they were all but exhausted, they saw a little boat coating to them from the shore, tossing like a shell on the angry waves. Lio their surprise they say a young girl alone in the boat coming to their rescue. Wills great skill, she guided her boat to the wrecked ship and was able to carry the ealeere, in eafety, back to her fa- ther's lighthouse; for it was 'the light - keeper's young daughter who had done this brave deed. Grace Darling's noble act was soon known throughout England, and numerous letters of congratulation and many beautiful medals were sent her, But our young heroine was a true girl and said, "she had only done her duty," and that she was glad she had been taught to row and swim and so was strong and fearless on the water. GOLD PLATE IS RARE. An A.:erotism:Is Inspri..stion That There Is • Lois or A popular impression prevails to the effect that there is a,• large amount of solid gold plate for table use, or for table ornament, in existence. This • is altogether erronectus. The term "gold dor of a wild lilac, he saes- agaunst plate" almost invariably means silver the daale green bank df the oepesite gilt plate, and nearly • all the so- nar:lime a cobweb afloat; then another, gold services are of this silver • I called drifian.g down tne aerver obaunel on the gilt metal. wend, Others foilowed-a procession ee webs \Vela passing; some were long and farmed of a single thread of silk;- othere had a delicate mass of fabric attached. Presently one of then:lean:le • P • e In Great Britain there are not more than a dozeriepieces ol solid gold plate all told. Two of these belong to the Duke of Marlborough. They consist caughe it. less than 365 °lames, and were pre- , gno se near thrat he put out his hand and o a pair ek was a perreet balloon and. Lim seated by Qraeen Anne, to the first aeronaut -a small sp:der-sat' ocanplao- Duke of Marlborough, the victor of Orally en its basket, a fluffy mass of Blenheim. The Queen has TWO great of solid gold at Windsor Castle, weer( half an ince in length, light as salvers a feather, and supported by a ecog and there is likewise in the royal plate - thread w.hich reached away, .undulat- room a third and small salver of ling and (nerving upward. Scores ei pure gold, made during the reign of theee aeronauts passed by, drifting up King William IV., from the presenter - the little canyon borne aloft by the tions rings of the sengeants-at-law. upward current Of air. The stroller Exeter College, Oxford. has a solid noticed: a number of spiders on the gold cup and cover of seventeenth Leaves and branches in singular atti- eenelleY work, presented by Bishop Hall Ludes, and then it occurred to him that to the college. The corporation of the f these was a spider megratran, and that instead of walking or crawling away, th,e insects, were going, like Andree, by balloon. More on the leaves of the wild lilac were preparing for the jour- ney across the chasm, farming, build- ing' and lawaohing their balloons. A spides that had actively been climb- ing up a branch of a neighboring oak, now stood on an outer leaf and pre- pared tot make its balloan, It had a wonderful arrangement of spinnerets in wthich the a oon-ana ing zee eria , whitch is also employed to constrtiot plate in Great 13ritain. and it is as - nets and traps, is stored. serted by experts that they are quite Some a the spiders raade little plat- as rare on the continent. forms of fluffy web as they went; oth- ers merely clung to the thread; but PLAGUE SPREAD BY RATS. in one way or the other scores of them crossed the canyons and traveled through the air; aeronauts in all the Dr. Newton Coutes a seueatton Among ancient city of Yonit has a cup baluster stem, which was presented to it in 1672, and which is of solid gold. Mr. J. W. Walrond, a cousin of the baronet of that name, has a similar cup of about the same date, while Lord Derby has in.his possession a. chocolate oup and cover of pure gold, which were found in the lake of his country seat at Knoweley about one - hundred years ago, on the occasion of its being drained. These, we believe, constitute the only pieces of solidi gold name implies. THE BUTTERFLY. There is something really pathetic in the way a naother butterfly builds a nest for, her children, In the first place the little home where the eggs, are deposited represents a great deal ot sacrifice, for it is lined with several layers of down plucked frora the moth- er'si own soft body. The eggs, having been laid carefully upon this luxuri- ous, pretty•couch, are protected by an equally pretty coverlet made of the same material. These butterfly bed- clothes are often arranged 'with an in- tricacythat is quite curious and per- plexing. Sonnetimee a bed Ls made so that each separate delicate hair stands upright, thee: giving the entire nest the appearance oe a little brush of downy fur. Them again the eggs are laid spirally rowel a tiny branch, and as the covering follows their course the effect resembles the bushy tail of a fox, only the nest is more beautiful than the 'brush" of the finest for that ever roamed over country. The earthly, labor of the mother butterfly, building of this downy nest is the last for by the time it is completed her °wilt delicate body is denuded of its natural obvering, and there is noth- ing loft for her to do but die -a sac- rifice which she promptly and heroic- ally makes ita the interest of the com- ing butterfly generation. SKATES. To "necessity's sharp pinch," not to a desire for amusement, we owe the f invention of skateis and their early use. !elk -Aland, is conceded to be the home and birthplace of skating, and tt was undoubtedly first practiced there and in the far North. Ie a ceu.ntey of Lakes and canals the necessity of walking and running on the ice must: have been fele from the earliest days, and, iiideed, they show in Holland bone skates whidh were found 10 one of the mounds on which a Fries- land village was built. The skates were fastened to the feet by straps passed through holes made in the bones. A Daniell bistorian mentions The bone, ekates were also the kind feet used in Belgian& teitzetephen, in him account of the arnusemeets of the youngereople on the ice in London dur- ing the latter part of the twelfth een- twee notes that it was usual for them Lo fasten the leg bones of animals une lhe sport. in 1134. der the 'eoles of their feet, by tying them around their ankles, and then taking a pole, shod With iron, into their, hands, they nestled themselves forward by Striking against the ice, end moved with great rapidity. GRACE DARLING. It ie a brave thing to risk one's life to save that of another -and that is ‘Vhat s Yeung girl, Grace Darling, did, twiny years ago. Grace Derling's father was a light - the eaveiages. hottest keeper arid kept the Folkstone London Gledhill! Men. Dr. Manson, in the coulee of his ad- dress at the inauguration of the Lon- don School of Tropical Medicine, ca,used a sensation by the emphasis he laid on the declaration that the ordinary rat is responsible for the majority of plague outbreaks. He says that in the fact that rats are peculiarly subject to this infection lies the present dan- ger of the British Isles. If one rat, he says, arrives at the port of London on a ship hailing from a plague port, the rat .would die; its body, teeming with plague bacilli, would be eaten: by other rats, and so the -plague would get ii. foothold, Or the fleas infect- ing the sick rodent would transfer themselves to other rats, which in turn would become infected with the plague. Thus, we would have, before long, an underground epidemic of the bubonic pest in London. " At the present juncture," Dr. Man- son concluded, "were 1 the responsible sanitary head of any town in Eur- ope, in anticipation of a possibility compared with. which the horror and PM PENURY TO WEALTII THB ROMANCE OF WILLIAM MICH- AEL GALLWEY, OF PORTUGAL. once a Boy In Hie Orphans' Home la To- ronto—Now a Very Wealthy Iblati tit 4)11111.11, PO rtugai—PropohOS to GM III$ nenenietor a Trip A rotund the World. "Truth is stranger than fiction" is ati adage oft quotee and frequently veri- fied In every -day existence. It; is stra,ngly emphasized in the life story of Mr. William Miehael Gallwey of Cintra, Portugal, a gentleman of wealth and distinction, whose earlier life, spent in Canada, was Marked by hardship and misfortune. The story was recalled lately by a letter from Gallwey to a gentleman in auto who who had befriended him:, and in which the writer prroposes a trip around the world at his expense. To- day Mr. Gallwey enjoys, rightful pos- session of vast estates and great wealth; years ago he was an bamate of the Orphans' Harmon George St., in Toronto, and later worked as a farm hand in Collingwood Township. For- tunately for himself, persous who did not dream that he was an heir to mil- lions or was anything but what he ale- . peered, to be, friendless and deserted, became interested in him, and through their devotion he attained his own. The chaixi of circumstances leading up to this happy result were nothing less than remarkable. In March, 1875, a Collingwood Town- ship farmer offered to adopt one of the boys at the George street home. The offer was accepted, and the farmer's choice was William Michael Gallwey, a bright, HANDSOME LITTLE FELLOW, the,n eight years•of age, who had been placed in the home by. Rev. Mr. Cart- wright of Anoaster. The lad, who had always displayed the greatest fondness for horses, was delighted at the pros- pect of living on a farm, and once set- tled in his new home this partiality developed to a degree remarkable in one so young. Between sehool terms he proved of great assistance to his adopted parent:, and at ten years of age could handle horses as well as a man who had spent his whole life on the farm. He also displayed a great desire to master the details of agri- but when apparently on the high road to fortune was BRUTALLY MURDERED by ono of the laborers on the plan- tation. Having gone so fax, the effort e ele those engaged in making the seareh seemed to be baffled. Several appareet- IY eeereet stories were traced to their Sourer, without result. Tben ears, Mo - Ea, recalled the name of a Philadel- phia lawyer whom Mr. Gallwey bad mentioned to her as being a friend et his family. Mr, Hartman was re:Alfred et this a,nd wrote the lawyer, who re- plied, statiog that Mr, Gallwey had eorae from Lisbon, Portugal, and had a wealthy uncle there. To this gen- tleman Mr: Hartman wrote, giving as clearly as possible the facts of the case, and !enclosing a certificate of Mr. Gallwey's death, which had been for- warded from Cuba. In return, the uncle, after a few further inquiries, sent to Mr. Hartman a check for fifty pounds witla the request that the lad be properly eduoated and cared for, lame the tyrannise that moire money would ba forthcoming at regular in- tervals. This promise was kept and the request was complied with. The uncle died in 1889, leaving the boy heir to estates in Cintra, Lisbon, and else - ether° in Portugal, VALUED AT $4000,000; a large portion of the Island of Tens- reff, one of the Canary Islands, be- sides several millions in sash and bonds, old family plate, diamonds, etc, William Michael came into possession of the estates at once. He has visited Anerica and Canada severat times since then and has always kept in con- stant. communication with those who befriended ham in his early days. In 1890 he was ra.arried to a Chicagoeady. Tbe GaIlweys, as stated, are the descendants of a family of that name, and enice one of the most powerful families in Ireland. They took the side of King James II. in his attempt to regain the English croern, and several of the faraily fought against King Wham at the battle of the Boyne. The result of that contest meant to them, as many other Irish families, exterm- ination or exile. They ohose the latter and made their way to the continent. One of them settled in Lisbon, Portu- gal, and laid there the foundation of the fortune now enjoyed by Mr. Wil- liam Michael Gallwey. urv A r MIT itadidll REPORT. City of Toronto Showing Narked Decrease in -Deaths Froin Bright's Disease, Not Only Bright's Disease Rut All Kidney Diseases liverensing—hodd's Rhiney cultural machinery. This trait of his , nature cost hem dearly, his left arm be- Pills the Cause ot neeeeeee-lle Cared. ing so badly crushed while he was at- nerrand tempting to oil a horse -power thresh- I Toronto, Oct. 23. -There has been a er that it had to be amputated. De• I marked falling off in the number of Hunt of Clarksburg, since deceased, • deathe due to Bright's Disease in the p.erformed the operation, and after the city of Toronto of resent years. This arm was healed the lad returned to decrease is asoribed solely to Dodd's the George street horae. He was , Kinney Piller, the nurvellous medicine, then eleven years old. I which has perforraed so many wonder - Mrs. Dr. Hunt, who had' been very ,eat cures throughout the couatry. kind to the little fellow during his ill- , Fonmerly, within recent years, flees, persuaded her husband to give Bright's Disease olaimed a constant and aWhilmliaemIvitwilatshwemen 17trheisatwedas, being sv•herever it struck, death was sure to clone, sacrifice of unfortunate Adotinis, and sent to school, and lacked nothing of , follow. Now Bright's Disease itself is the essentials necessary for the 'eel- comparatively rare, and deaths there - fare of a healthy, growing boy. He from almost unknown in this city. was Dodds Kidney Pills have come into BRIGEte AND INTELLIGENT, universal household use and disorders and a great favorite with all who in the kidneys are rectified early, so knew him,. Not long atter his adop- Bright's Disease is seldom allowed to Lion by the Hu,nts, namely, in the year develop. 1878, Mr. C. W. Hartman, now a pri- vate banker of Clarksburg, commenc- ed business as a obemist at that place. Mr. Hartman was Mrs. Hunt's broth- er, and consequently often visited his brother-in-law's hame.. Her he met young Gallwey,and, like everyone else i who had come n contact with the lad, grew to be fond of him. • Mrs. Hunt died in 1879, after a short illness. Be- fore death: she asked her brother to make an earnest effort to find Gall - way s parents, if living, or his rela- tives. She said he had once or twice told her that he could remember liv- mg In a beautiful hOdiblle withl his . . par- ents, who seemed to have everything that money could buy. Mr. Hartman promised to carry out his sister's wishes, and after her death took Wil- liam to his own hoase. • t mina, then hi Ancester, New York, Wb,ere Kidney Disease has been ne- glected, hawever, owing to ignorance, prejudice or carelessness, and Bright's Disease has ensued, Dodd's Kidney ,Pills are id the and called into requisi- tion ninety-nine times out of a hun- dred. Doctors thenaselves prescribe Dodd's Kidney Pills in their own boxes or in. bulk, so Bright's Disease with the aid of Dodd's Kidney Pills is held com- pletely at bay in Toranto. Mr. Fred Borland, 677 Markham Street, writes: "I have been a sufferer from Bright's Disease and impure blood. I could not get anything to help nee until I had taken two boxes oe your Dodd.' Kidney Pills. I am, now cured of this disease which I am told has always been con- sidered incurable. Publish this letter. It may help others." Inquiries wale set °afoot. flea in To - Philadelphia, Cuba and Lisbon, Porta - destructiveness of a general European : THE BICYCLE FOOT. gat, and slowly I The "bicycle foot" is a complaint war would be• a trifle, I would do my THE,WHOLE STORY, ! in which the ligaments are gradually Utmost to have every rat -and, if pos- of the lad's parentage and childhood stretched by the shock and strain of siblg, every mouse -in my district came to light. IL appeared that his freentdownward motion until they promptly exterminated." father, uI the favorite son of a Por - qu In view of Dr. Manson's position and, guese family, whose forefathers came tease to support the arch of the in- replutation-for it •tr ay; he who first from Ireland, ha.d married a Protest - suggested that mosquitoes were re_ ant laity againsl the wishes of his peo- sponsible for malarial infection -the pile, whose religion was Roman Catho- London papers seriously discues the lie. He was given a portion of the idea of starting a universal raid on family property and immediately went the rats in all the large seaports. to New York, entering a business ven- ture in that city, which was not suc- cessful and by wealth he lost consider- able nioney. Following this experi- ence he went to Toronto, and taught 'Ewe Mot advice -remote With Moder classics in a school there, residing in tion and Not Inc Cheaply. the meanxn tee, with his wife, and two • children' the boy William and a girl, Tobacco certainly seems to satisfy on Church street. • Mrs. Gallwea's SMOKE IS COMMENDED. some physiologic need in. certain con- health failing, a relearn to New York dition,s of the system, for persons who was made, where, however, she died. The children in the meantime had been are unable to smoke at certain times left with a Mrs. McKay of hamster who, not. hearing from the parents for can do so with pleasure and .benefit at some other period in their lives, tie a long time, coneulted Rev. gr. Cart - was the ease with Huxley. Certainly weight, with the result that the boy t no habit is so common or so generally was placed in he Home and the girl adopted by people near Guelph On ha,rraless, says it writer in the Phila- reaching womanhood Miss Gallwey delphia Medical ,Torumil. Comparative- married a well-known Guelph business bsequently it Wa g ascertain- ly few• arse tobacco in suet excess as man. en ed that after his wife's death Me. Gali- n, stiffer bad effects, no doubt fewer wey went to Cuba fled accepted a posi- than suffer from the overuse of coffee and tea, and inethitely fewer than those who suffer from overeating. No ode will questiou the harmtulaeas of the use ot tobaoco in the yung be in excessive amounts, particularly with nervous people, At no time is the ef- fect .of the 'weed' more pleasantand soothing than after dinkier in the evening; it helps one &eget it hard day's work; it is an aid to digestion, and Makes one feet at peace with the world; then, in the seeltieioo of nne'S OWIl quarters 11 darinot offend the non- usot and the one or two t3igars or pipes ea.o Week no great personal in- jury Two bite et advice ebould be follow - ea it ofte is to etejoy tobaceor Smoke 3vieh modeiatiou and do trot sirtoke tore elempiy. . Lion with an owner of a large sugar plantatioa, He Seetaa to have met with considerable success in this work, step. The bones, thus deprived of their natural support, press upon the nerves, causing intense pain, and in- flammation of the muscles frequently follows. The trouble Is often caused by wearing shoes with too thin soles, and therefore women are more frequent sufferers then, men. The treatment for " bicycle foot" is rest and an artifi- cial steel arch constructed to fit the instep. This is worn inside a thick - soled boot until the strained tendons regain their normal strength. CALLA LILY CREAM ensures a youthful complexion. Senr125 cents for trial bottle, or post card for circular on skin and oomplexion. Address W..1. traqinta AT, 489 Queen SC W., Toronto, MISSED OPPORTUNITY. Did you know there is a earner -a that will take pictures at e distance of thirty miles? Why didn't 2 know that ? What a lot of battle scenes T. would have pho- tographed if 1 had known there was a safety camera I tti AhrinettiZi 41404:44, &IAA/0 , , *0 if/ 40t4t.41., 40 it, • dcafilA44/f.4.4 Ac -e, 444/2 44601,4" eh" 4 imuzzx eada TUE QUALITY OF LuDELA LA Lepon Tea speaks for itself. A trial is the most convincing argument in its favor, Lead Peokages. a r .ze, eo, 4o, so & 6eo. • The kissing -bug has poinse awl but the humbug is ever with us. It is as Earn/ eel Love aeighbor is a pretty girl. It is jUSL IY:usza.snyetigohebuorroays07:serself, when Your If of Caterria Broncbitie or Asthma, it you use Cle- tarrhozone, the new medicated air treatment far all disesases of the meal and respiratory passages caused by germ life. Catarrhozone cures by inhalation without darager or risk to the sufferer. It goes wherever air ean go and never fails to reach the affect- ed parts. This is wty it excels treat- ments requiring the use of sprays. douches, powders, ointinents, etre, which cannot reach the seat of the disease and are therefore useless. For sale at all druggists, or direct by mail, price $1.00. Send 10c, in staraps to C. Poison ee Co., Box 518 Kingston, Ont., for sample outfit. When a woman is in love she' arself- appointed detective, FOR OYER FIFTY YEARS MRS. WINSLOWS SOOTHING SYRUP has been • euithe.dernamostohtetrev.f4orththeeigrucuhisil.drauenutrplinng...uIrtosoowthineds collo, and is the best remedy for diarrhoea. 25a. a bot. Ile. Sold by all druggiste throughout the world. Be suns and ink for" Mrs. winsioe%Soothing Syrup. Sorne people are equally as dis- agreea.ble as the truth. TO CUBE A. COLD IN ONE DAY Take Laxative Brom° Quinine Tablets. All druggists refuna the money 1± 11 fails to cure. 25c. re. W. Grove's sigaature is on. each box. The stereopticon man is always changing his views. L. 1.,1 BY' Sold by all druggists. soc. a bottle. hair. It makes it grow and restores the emor. Gives neyr life to the A dog is never a hypocrite; when he wags his tail he always means it, "Pharaoh 10c."P8rae, or Granby, Que. gar Manufacturer • Some men seek foreign shores for a rest and some to avoid arrest. ' La Toscana 10e. RELIANCE CIGAR FACTORY,MonLreal If properly managed one good oppor- tunity will last for a lifetime. O'KEEFE'S LitaF MALT Invigorates and Sta =then LLOYD WOOD, Toronto, GEKER3AL AGENT. Sometimes a girl refuses a mten In haste and repents at leisure. Therein 'more Catarrh in this section of the country than all other diseases Tut together, and the last few years was supposed to be incurable. For s.greet many yeere doctors pro. houneed iG meal disease, and prescribed local remedies, and by co sternly f siting to aro with local treatment, pronounced it incurable. Sci- ence hmfpreven (latent to be a constitnooesi disease, and therefore requires constitutional treatment. Hail's Catarrh Gaye, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Cy., Toledo. Ohio, is tho only oonttautional tare on the market. It is tat, en , iorwaalttised= fyr:T the biro on an nrisloGouns- sureaces of the system. They offer ope liund- red do lart for any =Fe It f Ile to cure. Send for oirculars and I estimonittle. Address, F. 5. El Se GO., Toledo, 0, Sold by Druggists. 750. Hall's Family Pills are the best. 1111•••=••••••• The hidden hand in politics is the band that fools the world. MONTREAL HOTEL DIRECTORY. Rai moray, FreeBut3 3,111 el le kJ: r 4.• UP' Hotel carslatcw1.-Efer-urrroapenc, Plan, RbOrn$ G.T.R. Station, MO. : eGeoatltk ea fed4CYo P.P r 0 's. AVENU E 0 USE-1141011-0ollege Aventle. Family ttotel rates $1.80 ST. JAMES' ROTEL—g° ghtg.T,Auillt! Railway. Pirst-alass Commercial Douse. Modern lin provemonts—Rates moderate. .•••••.• All men are not born equal; only twins are born that way. W5F.C.995 CALVERT'S OarlooliC Disi refectants, Soaps, Oint- ment, Tooth Powders, etc., have been awarded 100 medals and diplomas for superior excellence. Their regular use preven& infecti- ous diseases. Ask your dealer to obtain a imply. Lists mailed free on applieatIon. F. C. CALVERT & CO., MANCHESTER, - - ENGLAND, Music Teachers anted To send for Oar complete SHEET MAID CATALOCRJE and SPECIAL RATE OF 81500UNT. We are equipped to supply every MUSIC TEACHER In Canada Whaley, Royce 8 COIF 158 Tonga St., TORONTO, ONT. Carter's 001.0 CURS 10c. 0 wes in t jilly, Om mark & Co, Agents, Montreal. IMMINON SENSE RILLS Roaches, Bed U BugS, Rats and bile°. Sold by all Druggists, or 381 Queen W. Toronto. Religious Pictures, Stattisry, and Church Ornament's, Catholic Prayer taigas, Soapulare Educational Works. Mail orders receive prompt atten- tion, O. & J. SADLIER & CO.. Niontrold. FIMMS riog SALE — 1311.UOR COUNTY — KA ST EIVAftr Gresb ;13148t41°CiilitiLrtiP"IY to JA Ta148 ne P.O., Ont 110 for 10 Cods !CMS book oniatiina Inc hundred and ten id the liest bun:wrens recitattene, nobraalke,the Xagro, Yankee, Irish Mal Diaoh Mideets, both in proaa and vorNe, as 0IU Re humane eonipositione 95 livery Mod and character. Snit, pod, Paid, With our alvistratsd catalogue of Poole ind novelties for only ten seide• Johtiatoa EleMarlane 7E1/W*408A Totente,CASta Solid Gold, „,$2.85 Best, Gold Fill 1,50 6 yreGoldFill 1,00 • Bost Glasses... 100 We guarantee nerhet satisfeetion. GLOBE OPTICAL CO.p OR Tong° $treet, Toronto. ATOAvaeriZsmoto‘av: tah,retl)l ul r6O)hl BiNb crai nifile laoeoliflur. Att.:tiftai hoeall:stkPo:ItiL0411 ant remedies. Absointely tress, DE. GRANT, 3$ Seneca fit„ BMW% New York. T t.DRELMa nOdll,H.E0 sole tralltlifAoTr tOrnllaue jacrud, nahertl3ect piamp tor catalogue. 373 St. Paul Street, Montre4 English Sheep aril" Am- erican Bog Oasings—teliabla goods at right rice Sausage Casings -- PARK, BLAMMELL Mile, Mill. Httboi0 tTiresley ligs„ Blob. liarriaters;ip..remoyed o mond Ht, TOrMete, e01.11 055 S arnmer re ea'u-rnol where, Wr •-• Dr. Arnett, Berlin who will aonvinceyon he ems cure you permanentlY awe* Catarrh of nose, me es MI throat, stomach and bladder o ,k al a box. Write for partioulars, The Indian Catarr Cure Co„ 141 St James -at, Montreal. HARRIS 'aLE.133"53 irAS. 4P° whoica.le only. Long Distti° nCeeTPIfPelepho'.11n20,5 WILLIAM 8T.1 TORONTO. The Dawsoq Commission Co., Limited, Cor. West -Market & Colborne St., Toronto, Can get you best prices for your Apples, Butter, Egan, Poultry, and other produee, If you ship it to therm Wan fax duMen (farmers' sous preferred), wibla iecation, to work in an °Zee ; q per month ; steady work; must be bandy wiGh too s . over 21 years and able to give 0.100 annuity. Pereoul4 iuterview necessary. Apply in writiag, giving full par Honiara, TRH 0. !Brine PORTER liENCE OGDO PANY, London, UM. Dying! CI Ming ! 'For the very best send your work to the " BRITISH AMERICAN DYEING 00." Look for agent in your town, or send direct. Montreal,Toronto, Ottawa, Quebec. Cereal Coffeelfealth Dr air, Pure,Wholesome, blourishi lug. 15o85, or 23.1is. for 25a, ROTC.CQ is equal to 40a =gee, =Icor Sale by Grocers, or send 103 for i•lbpaokagS to the ROKCO MFG. 00„ 154 Queen E., Toronto. Agents wanted in every locality. SHOW CASES. WALL CASES Office and Bank Fixtures, Modern Stoi e Fronts. Mirrors and Plate Glass. For low prices write TORONTO SHOW CASE CO., 92 ADELAIDE W., TORONTO, CAN. Michigan Land for Sale. S000 ACRES GOOD FARMING LANDS—ARENAC t Disco, Ogemaw and Crawford Counties. Title per, feob. On Michigan Central, Detroit 4s Malone and Loon Lake Railroads, ab prisms ranging from 12 to 53 per acre. These Lands are °loge to Enterprising Nevi Towns, Churches, Schools, etc., and will be sold on most reasonable terms. Apply to It. M. PIERCE, Agent, West Bay City, Mich. Or J.W. CURTIS, Whittemore, Mich. 1 BOYS AND GIRLS L 11 . ,,,,, ,...i.vwelnARcb.,e zelvt.eltiti,....1%,W.:.Ad; ria ' , gi re • e: ze...; aris.,,771,57.ex..1.:tin.r...:11 reux..?Leil. ; 00112.1tiKrig ItUpPLY HOLISM amnia* Ont. i aroma. Nona= • t; s mon5 '1 1ICIVAL MAIL tg V sea STEPASSEIIPe Montreal end Quebec to Liverpool. Large and fast SteamerS Vancouver, Dominion, Scotsman, Cambrorna.n. Rgtespf passage 1—First Cabin. 00 upwards; Second Cabin, Si.; Steerage, 02.50 and 30 - For fanner Information apply to local agen, or DAVID TORRAN08 kW., General Agents, 17 St. Saaramern St. Montreal. THE MOST NUTRITIOUS. GRATEFUL—COMFORT1NG, BREAKFAST—SUP,PER. GO TO alfriovrani Pereortaey conducted Euese ihrefing California Excursions Lfill Via MISSOURI PACIFIC IVY and MON MOUNTAIN ROUTE. THROUGH TOURIST SLEEPERS LOWEST RATES. For full Information and reservation of sleeping oat bertltare:CT°18END',G,.eerA., Stt:L1101110,tS, Mo °psr1w0TPA.,7W. Forte,Deroit, A.li nissWILSON bP A ill Adams -at, Chicago, Iol%k MEL R. ARNETT, Manager, JOHN J. MAID, Supt. and Treas. The Canadian Heine Safety BOILER Esplanade, Toronto 00P. Sherbantne St, "ugh ekes Water Tubo steam • Boilers, to AO Pressalreep Duties and Fuel. tease POR DESCRIPTIVE( CATALOCRAEL ' t re°1,1t°11 1° - 00 IrtittlY a' 'ed. E eh% 1, 8844e Lahti {‘ illitigligt toya,,Ihtt 60, r!litta. ',' The Wilton Pub eh lig 0., Linillti . . , Got ei reren litte'llrw Mfg. Of LAN eligkerinto, *lives 1411080 151 80 stover:dna